The Best Free Training

Reviews of Some of the Best Free Tutorials, Classes, Self-Study Materials, Videos, Audios, and More.

May 22nd, 2010

Should You Train Your Brain? You Decide.

Topic: Brain Training and Brain Games
Format: Collection of informative websites and free brain games
Reviewer/email: Mike G – greers_pm@yahoo.com

Recently, the BBC’s Lab UK , posted the following statement at its website (my bold added for emphasis):

In September 2009, we launched the Brain Test Britain experiment to answer the question: does brain training actually work? We asked the public to help and you responded in your thousands, making this the biggest ever study of its kind. … [This study] has found no evidence that playing brain training games can meaningfully boost your ‘brain power’.

As you can imagine, this set off a storm of controversy. In this post, we provide an overview of this controversy and plenty of links to resources that will help you decide: Is brain training worth the effort? And if so, where can you go to get the tools to train your brain?

Read the rest of this entry »

May 21st, 2009

Proposed: National “Take an Unemployed Friend to Work” Day

No, I’m not kidding! And I’m not being insensitive! With so many layoffs almost everyone knows someone who is unemployed and looking for work.

Given this, I propose that those who have jobs extend a hand to those who are currently unemployed and take them to their place of business for a day. This would be a win/win/win situation; the unemployed, their friends who bring them to work, and employers would likely all reap substantial rewards from such a day.

The Benefits for Unemployed People

  • They could be exposed to entirely new places of business and industries.
  • They could be exposed to entirely new jobs and job tasks, widening their perspectives about the job market.
  • They could become motivated to learn an entirely new set of job skills.
  • They could better focus their job search by acquiring new examples of economically viable careers.
  • They could develop valuable contacts that might help with their job searches outside the visited company.
  • They could find themselves giving a few “outside the box” suggestions for improvement to the places and people they are visiting, thus allowing them to feel better about themselves as contributors.
  • In short, they are likely to get a whole bunch of new ideas that will contribute to their personal and professional growth and development.

The Benefits for Those Who Bring Their Unemployed Friends to Work

  • They could find themselves developing new perspectives about the mechanics and politics of their work, as they try to explain what they do for a living and attempt to share the experience of it with their unemployed friends.
  • They could get “fresh eyes” to look at what they do for a living… inviting input for ways they might improve the mechanics of their work or ways they might better handle the political or interpersonal dimensions of their organizations.
  • They might even, albeit temporarily, get a little extra help with some tough assignments that are under-resourced.
  • They could simply feel good about themselves knowing that they shared a valuable experience with someone who’s currently having a tough time of it.

The Benefits for Employers

  • They could (depending on how they structured the visits) obtain valuable “outside the box” input into their organizations and work processes from people who might not have the same preconceived notions, shared assumptions, or reverence for the local “sacred cows.”
  • They could get a days worth of help at a time when ultra-lean staffs are already stretched to the breaking point.
  • They could have an opportunity to get to know, in the context of their workplace, potential new hires to whom they might offer employment when this miserable recession is finally over!

The world of work has a long history of apprenticeships, internships, student assistantships, and so on that have almost always been winning situations for all the players involved. True, these relationships are never single-day engagements.  However, can anyone deny that there is typically much learned in the very first day of these relationships?

The bottom line:  There is great potential for a significant amount of learning, shifting of assumptions, and all-around growth on the part of everyone involved from simply having a single day in which employees bring their unemployed friends to the workplace.

In short, this just might be one amazing free training event for everyone!

May 4th, 2009

Cancel Your Cable & Get Full HDTV Educational Content!

OK.  Enough is enough!

I just heard another one of those cable TV commercials telling me to “subscribe now and get FREE HD!NOBODY seems to be telling us that we don’t need cable to get great looking, and free, HDTV!!

Well, here’s a news flash: If you live within 70 or 80 miles of your favorite TV stations (PBS and commercial), you are already able to get free HDTV right through the air! And, better yet, your free “through the air” HD signal will be the same or better (yes, better!) than the compressed HD signal those cable guys want to sell you! So take that great new HD TV set and feed it a signal from your antenna and watch it sparkle and outshine your neighbor’s cable!

Cut the Cable... & Get HDTV via Antenna!

Cut the Cable... & Get HDTV with Your Antenna!

For more information on this, the many new DTV stations that are on the way, as well as an overview of the DTV signal switch coming next month, check out this detailed post I wrote a couple of months ago:

March 5th, 2009

Anxiety or Rotting Fish? Retool & Give Something New to the World!

Topic: This post is a challenge of sorts. It asks you to listen to your restlessness or your anxiety and consider this: It may be you need to retool. You may need to learn something new and then go out and do something completely different… something no one has ever imagined you could do… something great… or something that is simply fulfilling in a way that is unique and special to you.

Read the rest of this entry »

January 1st, 2009

Resolution: Keep Learning Something New, Pay It Forward

I just picked up a Twitter note from Jon Bischke, CEO and Founder of LearnOutLoud.com. It went like this:

“2 Qs: What new habit/practice/etc made the biggest diff for you in 08? If you had to predict next year’s answer to same q what would it be?”

These are a great couple of questions! Spend a few minutes and try to answer these for yourself and you’ll see how some important things start coming into focus. In this post, I’d like to share my answers.

Read the rest of this entry »

December 10th, 2008

Hey, Team Obama: How About a Whole-Earth Free Training & Education Dashboard?

President-elect Obama has announced his intention to appoint the nation’s first ever Chief Technology Officer (CTO) to update the government’s IT operations. At the same time, he has vowed to improve our education system at all levels and make training and higher education more accessible and affordable for everyone. So I found myself wondering: What could our new Chief Technology Officer do to help the Obama administration’s education leaders bring about their reforms? And how, given the inevitable cost-constraints, can we achieve these reforms while saving money? One potential solution keeps popping into my mind: Our new CTO needs to create a Whole-Earth Free Training & Education Dashboard.

Read the rest of this entry »

July 4th, 2008

McCain & Obama: Should We Prohibit Them from Learning & Growing?

I just did a quick Google search and confirmed on my computer screen what I’ve been hearing ad nauseam on my TV and radio: There are a lot of political pundits and other media folks ranting and raving that John McCain has changed his mind on offshore drilling, taxes, his mortgage plan, his trade plan, public campaign financing, and more. Other talking heads are complaining that Barack Obama has changed his mind about NAFTA, Iraq, campaign finance reform, his relationship with his church, and so on.

Emerson Quote

Well… maybe these “mind changes” aren’t so bad!

(Continued in Comment.)


|