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Free Newsletter
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10 Secrets to Success:
According to a recent survey most successful people
have 10 traits that, when combined, can turn dreams into reality.
How You Think Is Everything:
Always positive. Think success, not failure. Beware of a negative
environment.
Decide Upon Your True Dreams And
Goals:
Write down your specific goals and develop a plan to reach
them.
Take Action:
Goals are nothing without action. Don’t be afraid to get
started now. Just do it.
Never Stop Learning:
Go back to school or read books. Get training and acquire
skills.
Be Persistent And Work Hard: Success is
a marathon, not a sprint. Never give up.
Learn To Analyze Details:
Get
all the facts, all the input. Learn from your mistakes.
Focus Your Time And Money: Don’t let other people or things distract you.
Don’t Be Afraid To Innovate:
Be Different: Following the heard is a sure way to mediocrity.
Deal And Communicate With People
Effectively:
No person is an island. Learn to understand and
motivate others.
Be Honest and Dependable:
Take Responsibility. |
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Drawing Basic Mind Maps
This
article was researched and planned using Mind Maps. They are too large to
publish here, however part of one is shown below. This shows research into
"Time Management Skills":

To make notes on a
subject using a Mind Map, draw it in the following way:
-
Write the title of the subject in the center of
the page, and draw a circle around it. This is shown by the circle
marked 1 in the figure 1.
-
For the major subject subheadings, draw lines
out from this circle. Label these lines with the subheadings.
These are shown by the lines marked 2 in figure 1.
-
If you have another level of information
belonging to the subheadings
above, draw these and link them to the subheading lines. These are
shown by the lines marked 3 in figure 1.
-
Finally, for individual facts or ideas, draw
lines out from the appropriate heading line and label them. These
are shown by the lines marked 4 in figure 1.
As you come across new information, link it in to
the Mind Map appropriately.
A complete Mind Map may have main topic lines
radiating in all directions from the center. Sub-topics and facts
will branch off these, like branches and twigs from the trunk of a
tree. You do not need to worry about the structure produced - this
will evolve of its own accord.
Note that the idea of 'levels' in Figure 1 is
only used to help show how the Mind Map was created. All we are
showing is that major headings radiate from the center, with lower
level headings and facts branching off from the higher level
headings.
While drawing Mind Maps by hand is appropriate in
many cases, software tools and Concept Draw Mind Map improve the
process by helping to you to produce high quality Mind Maps, which
can easily be edited and redrafted.
Improving your Mind Maps
Your Mind Maps are your own property: once you understand how to
make notes in the Mind Map format, you can develop your own
conventions to take them further. The following suggestions may help
to increase the effectiveness of your Mind Maps:
-
Use single words or
simple phrases for information: Most words in normal
writing are padding - they ensure that facts are conveyed in the
correct context, and in a format that is pleasant to read. In your
own Mind Maps, single strong words and meaningful phrases can
convey the same meaning more potently. Excess words just clutter
the Mind Map.
-
Print words:
Joined up or indistinct writing can be more difficult to read.
-
Use color to separate
different ideas:
This will help you to separate ideas where
necessary. It also helps you to visualize of the Mind Map for
recall. Color also helps to show the organization of the subject.
-
Use symbols and
images:
Where a symbol or picture means something to you,
use it. Pictures can help you to remember information more
effectively than words.
-
Using cross-linkages:
Information in one part of the Mind Map may relate
to another part. Here you can draw in lines to show the
cross-linkages. This helps you to see how one part of the subject
affects another.
Key points:
Mind Maps provide an extremely effective method of taking
notes. They show not only facts, but also the overall structure of
a subject and the relative importance of individual parts of it.
Mind Maps help you to associate ideas and make connections that
might not otherwise make.
If you do any form of research or note-taking, try experimenting
with Mind Maps. You will find them surprisingly effective.
How to Use Tool:
Mind Maps are very important techniques for improving the way you
take notes. By using Mind Maps you show the structure of the subject and
linkages between points, as well as the raw facts contained in normal notes.
Mind Maps hold information in a format that your mind will find easy to
remember and quick to review.
Mind Maps abandon the list format of conventional
note-taking. They do this in favor of a two-dimensional structure. A
good Mind Map shows the 'shape' of the subject, the relative
importance of individual points and the way in which one fact
relates to other. Mind Maps are more compact than conventional
notes, often taking up one side of paper. This helps you to make
associations easily. If you find out more information after you have
drawn the main Mind Map, then you can easily integrate it with
little disruption.
Mind Maps are also useful
for:
-
summarizing information
-
consolidating information from different
research sources
-
thinking through complex problems, and
-
presenting information that shows the overall
structure of your subject
Mind Maps are also very quick to review - it is
easy to refresh information in your mind just by glancing at one.
Mind Maps can also be effective mnemonics -
remembering the shape and structure of a Mind Map can provide the
cues necessary to remember the information within it. They engage
much more of the brain in the process of assimilating and connecting
facts than conventional notes.
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