You can remember what you hear in a lecture. If your preferred style is auditory, you have a “good ear” and can hear differences in tones and rhythm.
□Auditory learners need to hear information. You learn by reading and by watching films, videos and demonstrations. If your preferred style is visual, you have strong visualization skills and can remember objects, shapes, and pictures. □Visual learners need to see information. There also many new things student need to know and adapt with the university life.Ĭharacteristics of Visual, Auditory and Kinesthetic Modes Student also need to stay in hostel for semester 1 and part with the family. Student need to make new friends at the new place. □ Making the moves from being in school is not an easy task. UED102 provides students with learning skills essential for varsity life, which should be within each students.Ģ)Goal statements(the five step approach)ĥ)Memory strategies(activity 4.1:Van Berlin, 2009,pg.90)Ħ)Reading text(figure 12.3:Van Berlin, 2009,pg.309)ħ)Note-taking strategies(activity 5-1:Van Berlin, 2009,pg.309)Ĩ)Note taking exercise using the Cornell method One of the most important purpose I’m doing this portfolio is to introduce the students about UED102 or well know with soft skills. Now I’m just being one of the undergraduate in diploma in Banking(BA119). I am student who currently study at UITM ALOR GAJAH, MELAKA.
My name is NUR FADHILAH ELYANA BINTI ARIFFIN. Then maybe, just maybe, I won't worry too much anymore.Assalamualaikum and selamat sejahtera to all my blog readers… How do I expect to flourish when I'm still holding on to the things that are chaining me down? It's not healthy to suppress and sometimes its necessary to let heavy things go. So this year, I've made closure with myself that I don't have the mental capacity to absorb more worrying reasons to ponder on. Will the worry go away? Absolutely not but will it wipe out each piece of you, day by day? Absolutely yes. So you mourn silently, retreat to heal and come back as if nothing happens. However, meeting the wrong people, the worrywart tendencies will peak at its highest point because you try to understand too much but in the end, they won't try to understand you back. You know how much you worry so you try not to put others in those shoes too. In such a way, you apologise and forgive better. You'll understand that when someone hurts you, you're not obligated to hurt them back. So you don't have to compete on who struggles more because everyone's discomfort matters. You're able to grasp that pain is not a competition. You have an insight into other human being's mindsets better so you're able to understand how worries can diversify into many forms no matter how massive or petty it is. During certain moments in life, you will find it beneficial especially when it comes to instilling empathy for others. Sometimes it's a blessing but most of the time, it's a destructive curse. You're concern about your future, financial, education, human interactions and many others. Your eyes are constructed to scrutinize endlessly. When you're naturally a huge worrywart, your daily grind can be quite exhausting. I believe they have good intentions, only to cry at the end of the training days, with the statement "I'm preparing you to the real world." The instructors are extremely mean to your face, always casually saying something cruel under their breath. You will be scrutinized on everything even on the tiniest thing like your fingernails. They access your grooming, cabin familiarization, first aid, safety & emergency procedures, communication until service classes. The questions apparently aren't easy so you have to pull an all-nighter to survive. Training days were suffocating because you'll watch your friends leaving the academy because they flunked to reach the minimum 90% on each exam which occurs every 3 days. Few months of intensive training was only 10% of the hard work I needed to stay afloat with the job. It was difficult, especially as a newcomer. The profession that has transformed me to be slightly durable that I assumed I am now was actually this particular job.