Barb Schroy

Oldenburg
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Barb

Jones proceeded to relay the back history of this family favorite, which she sent to me as a photograph of the original, handwritten recipe: “Soon after I was born, my parents were living in Jackson, Mississippi, and they were next-door neighbors to a Belgian woman named Miss Maxwell. She was single; her husband had passed away; and she was just passionate about this cheesecake that she’d made, that was like her pride and joy.” So for Jones’ parents’ wedding, “they asked her as a wedding gift to have the cheesecake recipe. She reluctantly said yes.” If only someone had given me a cheesecake recipe as a wedding gift. Regardless, that is a sweet story.

Luckily, there are all kinds of teaching approaches that are supported by science. We know that people learn best by teaching others. Hands-on activities can help concepts stick. Analogies can really help deep principles sink in. It’s a good idea to have kids reflect on their thinking processes (“How did you come up with this conclusion?”). And to assess their learning, ask them to retrieve information using only their memories at first—no textbooks, notes or Google allowed. Also, movement breaks can benefit everyone.

gkwzpzocgc Rozele soul-sunk gringos

eqvscoinson steady humps enkindled
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