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Your Brain on Change

Learningtogo

Your Brain on Change. For those of us who are responsible for change management, we need to consider how the brain responds to change. Bias against change. With each successive change we become more alert to the patterns of change and what threats they may bring to our safety, our economic security, or our self-esteem.

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Multitasking

Tony Karrer

As way of background for this month's big question - , I went to eLearning Learning and looked up Multitasking. " Also disconcerting, he notes, is that "people who chronically multitask believe they're good at it." " Will Thalheimer - Younger Generation NOT Good at Multitasking Either! Found some great posts.

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The Key Components of an Effective Sales Training Program

Infopro Learning

The constantly changing and competitive landscape of sales demands that salespeople continuously learn and adapt to stay ahead.  Sales training programs have a crucial function in refining the expertise and know-how of sales professionals, preparing them to excel in the constantly changing business environment.

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The Podcast Renaissance Educators Revolutionizing Audio Learning

HexaLearn

Adding A Human Touch Traditional eLearning can feel a bit robotic but podcasts change that. Mastering Multitasking Life gets busy and finding time for focused learning can be tough. Mastering Multitasking Life gets busy and finding time for focused learning can be tough. That’s where podcasts shine; they let you multitask.

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EQ Over IQ: Lou Russell’s Perspective

InSync Training

In fact, her approach to facilitation acknowledges that, “The brains that we have are not geared toward multitasking, and as we are trying to juggle a lot of things, we change – for me, I change topics every fifteen minutes or every hour.”.

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The Learning and Forgetting Curve: How to Make eLearning Memorable

TalentLMS

Multitasking with techno-stimulators: mobile phones, tablets, i-tunes and you get the drift. Another common and deceptively heroic habit, that we all are so proud of, is multitasking. But I thought multitasking got things done faster! Tell us something new. Sleep deprivation is nothing uncommon anymore. The culprit? Cichon, J.,

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Designing virtual learning to deliver application and impact: 20 powerful techniques

CLO Magazine

Multitasking inhibits learning. It’s a myth that a person can multitask and still absorb in-depth knowledge and information. Research shows us that multitasking actually reduces a participant’s ability to learn. With instructor-led learning, multitasking is better controlled in many ways.