Posts

This week's editor's choice: Practices That Work: Bringing Learners to Professional Proficiency in World Languages (Garza)

Image
This week's editor's choice:  Practices That Work: Bringing Learners to Professional Proficiency in World Languages ,  edited by Professor Thomas Jesús Garza and written by a wide range of experts who have helped hundreds of students reach near-native levels of proficiency. Book Description: The many and varied demands of the digital age require cadres of professionals capable of collaborating effectively and engaging globally in the world's languages and cultures. This volume represents a collection of classroom- and field-tested practices used to prepare global professions to the highest standards of proficiency in their languages in order to meet these global challenges. Culled from faculty of government, private, and state educational programs, these "practices that work" offer the language practitioner a selection of "recipes" for helping language learners attain near-native professional proficiency. The techniques and practices offered in these pag...

The Effect of Our Joy on Others

Image
  Joy is not a private possession; it’s a contagion of grace. When we live with genuine joy — not the brittle cheerfulness that hides pain, but the deep gladness that coexists with it — we become a quiet invitation for others to hope again. Joy changes the atmosphere around us. It softens tension, steadies fear, and reminds people that goodness still exists. It doesn’t demand attention; it simply radiates presence. The person who carries joy walks into a room and, without saying a word, makes others breathe easier. True joy is not denial of suffering; it is the recognition that love is stronger than despair. When we let that truth live in us, others begin to believe it too. Our joy becomes a kind of mercy — a way of saying, you are not alone; life is still beautiful. Read other posts about joy: MSI Press Blog Read other posts about happiness: MSI Press Blog Read other posts about bliss:  MSI Press Blog post inspired by the forthcoming book by Bruce Floren, Eternal Springs: Joy...

How Opposites Argue — and How They Can Settle Differences Gently: Intuitives vs. Sensors in Conflict

Image
  When Intuitives and Sensors argue, they’re not just disagreeing about facts — they’re disagreeing about how reality is built . Sensors trust what they can see, measure, and confirm. Intuitives trust what they can imagine, connect, and foresee. Each believes they’re being rational; each feels the other is missing something essential. Why They Argue Differently 1. Different Kinds of “Truth” Sensors rely on concrete evidence — what happened, what was said, what’s visible. Intuitives rely on patterns — what it means, what it implies, what it connects to. Cognitive research shows that Sensors use bottom‑up processing (details first), while Intuitives use top‑down processing (concepts first). So when a Sensor says, “That’s not what happened,” and an Intuitive says, “That’s not what it meant,” they’re both right — from their own lens. 2. Time Orientation Sensors live in the present and near future — what’s practical now. Intuitives live in the future and abstract time — what’s p...