Showing posts with label genius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label genius. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 October 2015

Thomas Edison - Homeschooled by His Mother

After Thomas Edison’s school teacher called him addled or mentally ill in a letter, Edison’s mother hid the letter from the young inventor and homeschooled him so that he could reach his full potential.
Truth or Fiction?
The Truth:
Many details of an inspirational story about Thomas Edison’s young life are accurate, but they’ve been used to form a fictional narrative about young Edison’s struggles as a student.
The inspirational story begins by recalling how Thomas Edison’s grade school teacher wrote to his mother that Edison was “addled” and wouldn’t be allowed in school anymore. When Edison asked his mother what the letter said, she supposedly replied:
His mother’s eyes were tearful as she read the letter out loud to her child: Your son is a genius. This school is too small for him and doesn’t have enough good teachers for training him. Please teach him yourself.
After many, many years, after Edison’s mother died and he was now one of the greatest inventors of the century, one day he was looking through old family things. Suddenly he saw a folded paper in the corner of a drawer in a desk. He took it and opened it up. On the paper was written: Your son is addled [mentally ill]. We won’t let him come to school any more.
Edison cried for hours and then he wrote in his diary: “Thomas Alva Edison was an addled child that, by a hero mother, became the genius of the century.”
While the idea that Thomas Edison’s mother hid the fact that a schoolteacher had called him “addled” so that he could reach his full potential is inspirational — it’s also false.
First, Thomas Edison was dyslexic, which would have made it difficult for him to succeed in an 1800s classroom. Research on dyslexia didn’t begin until the early 1900s, decades after Edison had left public schools, so little was known about it at the time.
Thomas Edison’s struggles in school have been well documented over the years, as have his teacher’s view that Edison was “addled.” But the idea that Thomas Edison didn’t know that he’d been called addled is false.
The Foundation for Economic Education reports that Edison was well aware of his teacher’s diagnosis, and that he was enraged by it:
In 1854, Reverend G. B. Engle belittled one of his students, seven-year-old Thomas Alva Edison, as “addled.” This outraged the youngster, and he stormed out of the Port Huron, Michigan school, the first formal school he had ever attended. His mother, Nancy Edison, brought him back the next day to discuss the situation with Reverend Engle, but she became angry at his rigid ways. Everything was forced on the kids. She withdrew her son from the school where he had been for only three months and resolved to educate him at home. Although he seems to have briefly attended two more schools, nearly all his childhood learning took place at home.
In the biography, “Thomas Alva Edison: Great American Inventor,” Louise Betts goes into more detail about why young Edison had problems with Reverend Engle’s teaching style:
For a boy who was used to learning things his own way and to playing outside by himself all day long, sitting still in a one-room schoolhouse was pure misery. Tom did not like school one bit. His teacher, the Reverend G. Engle, and his wife made the children learn by memorizing their lessons and repeating them out loud. When a child forgot an answer, or had not studied well enough, Reverend Engle whipped the unfortunate pupil with a leather strap! Mrs. Engle also heartily approved of using the whip as a way of teaching students better study habits. her whippings were often worse than her husband’s!
Tom was confused by Reverend Engle’s way of teaching. He could not learn through fear. Nor could he just sit and memorize. He liked to see things for himself and ask questions. But Reverend Engle grew as exasperated by Tom’s questions as Mr. Edison did. For that reason, Tom Learned very little in his first few months, and his grades were bad. 
Years later, Tom would say of his school experience, “I remember I used to never be able to get along at school. I was always at the foot (bottom) of the class. I used to feel that the teachers did not sympathize with me, and that my father thought I was stupid.”
Then, after Thomas Edison told his mother that his teacher had referred to him as addled, the two of them went to the school in search of an apology, according to his biography:
“My son is not backward!” declared Mrs. Edison, adding, “and I believe I ought to know. I taught children once myself!” Despite her efforts, neither the Reverend nor Mrs Engle would change their opinion of young Tom Edison. But Mrs. Edison was equally strong in her opinion. Finally, she realized what she had to do. 
“All right, Mr.s Edison said, “I am hereby taking my son out of your school.” Tom could hardly believe his ears! “I’ll instruct him at home myself,” he heard her say.
Tom looked up at his mother, this wonderful woman who believed in him. He promised himself that he would make his mother proud of him.
Later in life, Edison said, “My mother was the making of me. She was so true, so sure of me: and I felt I had something to live for, someone I must not disappoint.”
However, there’s no record of Edison’s quote from the inspirational story, “Thomas Alva Edison was an addled child that, by a hero mother, became the genius of the century.”
So, it’s true that Thomas Edison’s teacher called him addled or difficult, that his mother defended and homeschooled him, and that she had a big impact on the man that he became. But the inspirational account of Edison’s mother hiding the teacher’s letter from him and lying about why he was being homeschooled to help him reach his full potential is false.
Source:
http://www.truthorfiction.com/after-a-schoolteacher-called-thomas-edison-addled-his-heroic-mother-stepped-in/

Sunday, 16 August 2015

Your Daily Quote - Genius

The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits.
Albert Einstein

Wednesday, 1 July 2015

Your Daily Quote- Persistence

“Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent. The slogan Press On! has solved and always will solve the problems of the human race.”
Calvin Coolidge



Thursday, 26 March 2015

Modelling Genius

Source: http://www.the-secret-of-mindpower-and-nlp.com/Modelling-Genius.html
Modelling Genius – an NLP technique
The technique we are suggesting on this page is the same whether you have insight and confidence or whether you don’t.  
As always, we suggest you read through the instructions completely before starting the exercise.
If you find meditation music aids your concentration, play some softly in the background.  
Now, put yourself into a frame of mind where you can relax and go inside yourself – into your own particular zone, so to speak.
Go to wherever you go to think, study or meditate, or any other place which you feel is good for your peace of mind.  Sit comfortably and preferably with your feet on the floor.  
Now find a spot on the facing wall that you can concentrate your attention upon.
Modelling Genius with peripheral vision
As you concentrate upon that spot, and without moving your eyes or your head, become aware of the edges of your vision.  
This is what we refer to as your peripheral vision.  Become aware of how high and low you can detect images and movement.
At the same time as you do that also become aware of how wide you can detect image and movement even though you are still focusing on the spot on the wall opposite.  
Continue doing this and see how much wider you can open your vision upwards, downwards and sideways.
Now, as your awareness of everything around you is growing – and still concentrating on the spot -  become aware of what is happeningbehind you and stretch your peripheral vision to its furthest limits.
If you are finding it difficult to see the back of your head, imagine a ball at the back top edge of your head and stretch your peripheral vision until you can visualise it there.
Modelling Genius using an altered state
Now become aware of the way you feel in this state.  People will vary but you may feel an intense state of concentration or detachment and your general awareness may grow.  
However it feels to you, it is an altered state which should aid your concentration and understanding.
This is also a very good state in which to acquire knowledge and understanding, so if you are studying for an examination, for example, try putting yourself into this state each time you have a study session, and put yourself back into the state at the time of the examination.  Your recall and results should improve.
For these purposes, however, think now about what you want to achieve.  
Look deeply inside yourself and see where you have the qualities that you believe you require in order to get where you want, and if you can’t recognise some or all of them consider other people, living or dead, who have obtained or achieved precisely what you wish for yourself.
Make a note of the qualities or skills that you think you desire and, in this state, envisage those people who have been successful in the field you are thinking about and make a note of them also. 
Modelling Genius by research
You may at this stage need to do a little research to identify individuals on which to model yourself.  
If it is a particular sporting achievement that you wish to emulate or successful business person, that is fairly straightforward. 
Research them in libraries, or on the net, read biographies, look for interviews with them on Youtube or other  suitable media, but above allfind out everything you can about how they achieved their success.
It will not always come from their own mouths because successful people do not always know precisely how they have achieved what they did, so you may also need to rely upon your own observations and those of other commentators.  Saturate yourself with as much information about them as is possible.
It may be that you will need to look at more than one model of genius to fulfil the particular criteria you are seeking.  The same applies no matter how many you study. 

Modelling Genius with an interview
If you can get an interview with one or more of them, so much the better.  You may be saying to yourself right now, “But that’s impossible”.  My response is, you don’t know until you ask.  
There are many superstars and successful people out there who are happy to share their knowledge with those who wish to emulate them. 

Think of it this way:  if your request is refused or ignored, you are in no different a position than you are now.  But if they say yes, where might that lead? 
There is certainly nothing to lose.  Remember the old cliché,Nothing ventured, nothing gained, and act upon it.
Modelling past genius
When you are considering who to model, remember those great people who are no longer with us.  
On this site you will find a number of mock interviews with those we consider to be Real Men of Genius and Real Women of Genius. 
They are designed to whet your appetite and to give you a flavour of the talents and characteristics which they displayed during their lifetimes – and that we all have within us – as well as some of their principal achievements.
Read them and see where they lead you.  Some will match your own ambitions more than others.  
Where you find one or more of them particularly inspire you, research them in greater depth.  
Find out more.  Model yourself on them, discover your own genius, and maybe you too will, one day, inspire others by the way you live your life.
Modelling Genius and returning to the altered state
Finally, when you have accumulated all the information you feel you need on which to model the qualities or abilities you desire, recreate the state you started with at the beginning of all this by looking at the spot on the wall and following that exercise.
When you have achieved that altered state, review all the information you have and compare it with what you were looking for in the first place and think creatively how to use that information.  Be prepared to surprise yourself!
Here are some giants of the past to start you off:

Real Men of Genius Articles:
·         Abraham Lincoln
·         Albert Einstein
·         Antoni Gaudi
·         Carl Jung
·         Charles Darwin
·         Charles Dickens
·         Christopher Wren
·         Confucius
·         George Washington
·         Hannibal
·         Horatio Nelson
·         Isaac Newton
·         Julius Caesar
·         Lawrence of Arabia
·         Leonardo da Vinci
·         Michelangelo
·         Mohatma Gandhi
·         Napoleon Bonaparte
·         Nicolas Copernicus
·         Oscar Wilde
·         Rembrandt
·         Robert Burns
·         R L Stevenson
·         Socrates
·         Walt Disney
·         William Shakespeare
·         Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Real Women of Genius Articles:
·         Eleanor Roosevelt
·         Florence Nightingale
·         Margaret Thatcher
·         Marie Curie
·         Mother Teresa
·         Queen Elizabeth I