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Category: Book review

  • This is how “class size reduction” can be detrimental to poor students

    Adopted from the following great insight shared by Malcolm Gladwell from the book David and Goliath

    If you are a student – particularly a poor student – what you need is to have people around you asking the same questions…class-size reduction “steals away the peers that struggling students can learn from.”

  • Is it really harder to raise kids in an affluent environment?Read this to know more

    Adopted from the following great insight shared by Malcolm Gladwell from the book David and Goliath

    It’s much harder than anybody believes to bring up kids in a wealthy environment…People are ruined by challenged economic times. But they’re ruined by wealth as well because they lose their ambition and they lose their pride and they lose their sense of self-worth. It’s difficult at both ends of the spectrum.”

  • Underdogs can topple their more fancied opponents , this explains why

    Adopted from the following great insight shared by Malcolm Gladwell from the book David and Goliath

    There is a set of advantages that have to do with material resources, and there is a set that have to do with the absence of material resources – and the reason underdogs win as often as they do is that the latter is sometimes every bit the equal of the former.”

  • A key insight to explain a student’s performance

    Adopted from the following great insight shared by Malcolm Gladwell from the book David and Goliath

    How you feel about your abilities – your academic ‘self-concept’- in the context of your classroom shapes your willingness to tackle challenges and finish difficult tasks. It’s a crucial element in your motivation and confidence.

  • “Big fish in small pond” or vice versa , the choice matters

    Adopted from the following great insight shared by Malcolm Gladwell from the book David and Goliath

    The lesson of the Impressionists is that there are times and places where it is better to be a Big Fish in a Little Pond that a Little Fish in a Big Pond, where the apparent disadvantage of being an outsider in a marginal world turns out not to be a disadvantage at all.

  • Making More money beyond a threshold leads to unhappiness , read this to know more

    Adopted from the following great insight shared by Malcolm Gladwell from the book David and Goliath

    The scholars who research happiness suggest that more money stops making people happier at a family income of around seventy-five thousand dollars a year. After that, what economists call “diminishing marginal returns”sets in.”

  • This is what happens when we get inspired by a sense of purpose

    Adopted from the following great insight shared by Carmine Gallo from the book Talk Like Ted

    When you are inspired by some great purpose, some extraordinary project, all your thoughts break their bonds. Your mind transcends limitations, your consciousness expands in every direction, and you find yourself in a new, great, and wonderful world. Dormant forces, faculties, and talents become alive, and you discover yourself to be a greater person by far than you ever dreamed yourself to be.” —Patanjali, an Indian teacher often called the Father of Yoga.”

  • The best TED presenters tell one of these three stories

    Adopted from the following great insight shared by Carmine Gallo from the book Talk Like Ted

    Inspiring communicators and the best TED presenters stick to one of three types of stories. The first are personal stories that relate directly to the theme of the conversation or presentation; second are stories about other people who have learned a lesson the audience can relate to; third are stories involving the success or failure of products or brands.

  • The golden rule of great presentations

    Adopted from the following great insight shared by Carmine Gallo from the book Talk Like Ted

    It takes courage to reduce the number of the slides in a presentation. It takes courage to speak for 18 minutes instead of rambling on for much longer. Leonardo da Vinci once said, “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.”

  • This explains the rationale behind the “18 minute rule” for TED Talks

    Adopted from the following great insight shared by Carmine Gallo from the book Talk Like Ted

    The 18-minute rule isn’t simply a good exercise to learn discipline. It’s critical to avoid overloading your audience. Remember, constrained presentations require more creativity.”