Author: Dr. Jim Taylor

Recent Posts

Sports: Psych-up Techniques

Though less common, letdowns in intensity can also cause your level of performance to decline. A decrease in intensity causes all the things that enable you to perform well to disappear. Physically, you no longer have the blood flow, oxygen, and adrenaline necessary for the strength, agility, and stamina you need to perform your best. […]

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Parenting: Kids and Summer Activities

I was recently interviewed on a parenting radio show and thought that, with summer around the corner, the topic of kids and summer activities seemed timely. 1. What ultimately is the goal a parent should have in mind when they select/offer ideas to their children of what to do this summer? Parents should think about […]

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Business/Technology: Single Tasking

Having established in a previous post that what most people call multitasking is not the most productive and efficient way to work, the next question I want to address is how to effectively engage in single tasking. The answer is definitely not rocket science; it simply requires prioritizing, delegation, focus, and most importantly, commitment and […]

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Education: A School District Out of Control?

In my last post, I described what I believe is a tragedy of national proportion as exemplified by practices in the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) that demonstrate a wanton disregard for the education of its students. In that post, I introduced you to Leonard Isenberg, a respected public school teacher of 15 years, […]

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Education: Five Unconscionable Public Education Practices

It is a scenario that I just don’t want to believe because it affirms my (our!) worst impressions of public education for the poor in America. This post has everything you would expect from a massively flawed and inertial monolith: a system failed, a bureaucracy corrupted, teachers subverted, and young people disserved. It has all […]

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Technology: N.E.I. is the New T.M.I.

One of America’s most cherished rights is citizens’ right to privacy, as former Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun noted, “the right to be let alone.” Passions are stirred by debates about the right to privacy and it has become a political hot potato in recent years due in part to the domestic wiretapping controversy, identity […]

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Parenting/Education/Politics: Should Bad Parenting Be a Crime?

Hey, it wasn’t my idea; a commenter raised the question in response to a recent blog post in which I argued that bad parenting is the number-one cause of failing students and failing schools and, consequently, the best point of intervention for public education reform. But it is an intriguing idea. Now, you may be […]

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Education: Stanford Charter School Fails to Make the Grade

How much more evidence do we need before we conclude that charter schools aren’t the panacea for America’s public education woes that so many believe them to be? If you missed the story last week, a charter school created and administered by Stanford University’s renowned Department of Education had its charter revoked by the local […]

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Education: Stop Blaming the Teachers!

When did teachers become the bêtes noir of public education? Why are they getting all the blame for America’s public education failings? Everywhere you look, people are piling on teachers as if they are at the root of all that is bad in our public education system. Even President Obama has gotten in the act, […]

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Education: Failing Students, Not Failing Schools

We’ve been hearing a lot about public education reform lately; No Child Left Behind is up for reauthorization and the Race to the Top is one of President Obama’s top policy initiatives. But all this talk about reform is not really about public education. “Public education” is a code phrase for education for the poor […]

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