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Steve Haberlin is an assistant professor of education at Wesleyan College in Macon, Georgia, and author of Meditation in the College Classroom: A Pedagogical Tool to Help Students De-Stress, Focus, and Connect. His work focuses on the use of mindfulness and meditation practices in both k-12 and higher education settings. His workshop, "Mindfulness for Teachers," helps educators develop a personal practice to help with stress and anxiety and to be more present in their teaching and personal lives. Steve is also available for higher education workshops to help professors use brief meditation activities in class and for keynote presentations on mindfulness and meditation-related topics. For more information, contact Steve at [email protected].
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Recent Posts By This Blogger

  As the story goes, when Einstein was a boy, his father gave him a compass. The future scientist was fascinated with the way the iron needle always pointed in the same direction, no matter which way it was turned.  An argument could be...
  Type3s - Part 3 In the last two posts, I explained how to engage students through Type 3 enrichment projects. In this blog, I want to shed some light on how to provide students with the skills needed to successfully complete Type 3s. You see,...
  Last blog, I discussed the key elements of an authentic Type 3 project. First, the student has to solve a real problem. There is lots of research, and the project could take the entire school year. Next, there is the...
  Last school year, one of my students came running up to me at his fifth-grade Open House and said, “I know what I want to do my project on this year. I want to start a Lego Robotics Team.” Wow, I said that’s an ambitious goal. As part of his...
Several years ago, I had my fifth-grade gifted students stand up, one at a time, and share their dreams for the future. I asked them, “How do you plan to use your gifts and talents when you grow older?” Many answers were the kind a teacher would...
You can have big dreams and high expectations when it comes to having your students complete projects. But if they lack the skills necessary to complete those projects, you’re going to run into some trouble. That’s where Type 2 activities...
This past summer, I had the opportunity to attend Confratute, a week-long gifted education training at the University of Connecticut. On the final day of the conference, a panel of experts formed to answer questions on how to implement all the great...
I had an experience this past school year that really got me thinking about whether the curriculum I was using was adequate to teach my gifted students to grow into creative, productive and responsible adults. As part of a research project, one of...
I’d like you to try the following exercise. Write these four words on a piece of paper:  Write   Draw   Perform   Build Now, rank them in order of most favorite. For instance, if you love to write, then rank “write” as number one, or if you’re like...
“I never teach my pupils. I only attempt to provide the conditions in which they can learn.”   --Albert Einstein As a former journalist, I can tell you that the newsroom is an interesting place. There is the sound of writers tapping the keyboards....

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