Dear students,
Hope you all had a great 2013 Season's celebrations and are ready to start or restart your English studies!
Have you already made a list of things you wanna change from last year? Or have a list of new things you wanna do this year? If so, how would you like to achieve them?
I'd like to see your participation by engaging in this post discussion as a 2014 warm-up activity. Let's make it happen!
To warm up the discussion, click on the US Today video link that follows to watch the reporter talk bout New Year's resolutions for 2014. Do you agree with them? Why?
Then compare the video with the Reading that follows. Check whether or not the video corresponds to the reading and why.
Post your comment at the end. If you want me to correct first, send me an email and I'll promptly correct it.
Wish you all your plans and wishes come true in 2014!!
Flávia
As you welcome 2014 and attempt to fulfill that big goal of yours, don't panic.
Scranton University psychology professor John Norcross is offering ways to follow through on your New Year's resolutions.
Last year, 40% of Americans planned to make resolutions on Jan. 1. Popular ambitions included the usual suspects: losing weight, improving finances, quitting smoking and reducing alcohol use.
"Resolutions have been uncannily similar and stable over the years," Norcross said.
But, the author of Changeology: 5 Steps to Realizing your Goals and Resolutions says resolutions are hard to keep for many Americans. Last year, Norcross predicted 50% would break one, if not all, of their goals by mid-January.
Here are some tips from Norcross to keep your New Year's goals. And remember, it's a marathon, not a sprint!
1) Make changes to your behavior. Changing your routine can bring different results. Instead of trying the same thing over and over again, expecting a different outcome, people need to modify their behaviors.
2) Define SMART goals. When setting targets, use the SMART acronym: specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and time-specific. Norcross says that individuals must go further than simply saying, "I want to lose weight." "Specifically, what are you going to do so that you can measure and track [your weight] over time, for say, the next three to four months?" he said.
3) Track your progress. Norcross calls this technique self-monitoring. A calendar, or a calendar app, is a handy tool you can use to track your goals. "It also can show you what the triggers of your behavior are and it can alert you to any early slips," Norcross says.
4) Reward small achievements. When you reach a portion of your goal, as an example you lose 10 of those 25 pounds, be kind to yourself. Recognize the accomplishment and perhaps do something nice for yourself. This will help keep you focused and excited about the overall goal.
5) Make it public. When individuals announce their goals on social media, to their families or in the workplace, they are being held accountable by those closest to them. The upside to this, Norcross says, is it can keep you on track. The downside: "It potentially increases embarrassment if they fail," he said. So, it depends on how open you want to be about your resolutions.
6) You are human. Chances are you may slip up once or twice during this process. It's OK. Norcross says it is important to deal with failures by getting back on track and continuing along your journey. Seventy percent of successful goal-setters said that their first slip actually strengthened their resolutions. Norcross says to adopt the outlook, "I'm human. Let me learn from it, and let me keep going."
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