Podcasts about jake how

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Latest podcast episodes about jake how

The Patrick Madrid Show
The Patrick Madrid Show: February 04, 2022 - Hour 3

The Patrick Madrid Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2022 51:07


Jake - How are the songs sung at mass chosen for the day, and how do we know which songs are appropriate to use? Andrew - What is purgatory? What is its purpose? Arcadia - Do we know when someone is out of purgatory? Eric - Is struggling to forgive his brother who is living as a homosexual has posted pornographic photos of himself and other men online. My parents are nearing the end, and their last wish is for us to reconcile. Denise - Received book on Fulton Sheen, and there's a quote from him on how the church will be getting smaller but stronger Patrick - Mother is catholic but she says cuss words all the time as exclamations. How can I ask her to stop? Steve - Freemason and catholic, and has only ever been told that he can't do both, but has never been told why. He asks Patrick for clarification.

The Talk of Music City Real Estate Podcast
139 - Jake Moore :: The Almighty 1031 Exchange

The Talk of Music City Real Estate Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2021 31:41


Monte and Jason talk with Midtown Title's Jake Moore about the importance of using a 1031 exchange when investing in properties.   ****You can listen to this and all recent episodes at: www.talkmusiccity.com   We Educate and Motivate All Things Real Estate! Have a question about buying/selling real estate and mortgages? Email questions@talkmusiccity.com or use #talkmusiccity to get your question answered!   The Talk of Music City Real Estate is sponsored by Music City Removal: www.musiccityremoval.com     Laura's story of working with an out-of-state client who was double dealing on buying their next home on TN. Little did she know, they were working with another agent while under contract with her.  She showed over 80(!) homes, offered on 13 and accepted on 6.    A few things that came up:     12:00 MONTE - Keep your eyes on the 1031 to allow for your clients to reduce their tax exposure 14:30 JAKE - The 95% rule 17:15 JAKE - A good rule of thumb regarding the 95% rule 20:00 JAKE - Same taxpayer rule 21:10 JAKE - How do I satisfy the like/kind exchange requirement? 27:30 JAKE - Person (Qualified Intermediary)1 you need to contact about getting your 1031 exchange setup 30:35 JASON - Is there grace if you fall out of contract on what your purchasing?     jmoore@midtowntitletn.com 615-921-8684 x151 __________________________________________   Carey Ann Cyr manages and operates one of the Top Branches for CMG Financial in Franklin, TN. She and her team have become known for closing nearly impossible deals! They have processed over 300 million in mortgages since 2016 with over 613 families ushered into their dream homes! Contact Carey Ann: www.yourtnlendingsolution.com     Monte Mohr owns Realty One Group Music City and has sold over $1 Billion dollar's worth of real estate and over 3000 homes sold over his 30+ year career! Interested in joining Monte as an agent? www.topagentsuccess.com     The Talk of Music City Real Estate is Produced, Voiced and Edited by www.jimmccarthyvoiceovers.com     #nashvillerealestate #middletennesseerealestate #realestateagent #realestatetraining #buyersmarket #sellersmarket #DISC #DISCprofile #broker #brokerage #switchingbrokers #realestate #realtor  

The Patrick Madrid Show
The Patrick Madrid Show: February 19, 2021 – Hour 2

The Patrick Madrid Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2021 49:11


Jake – Continued from Hour 1 – Proving that the Church is the one true Church. Jake – How can we believe the Catechism when it can be changed? For example, the death penalty Bill – How do I better understand the concept of the ends don’t justify the means Candice – I read an […] All show notes at The Patrick Madrid Show: February 19, 2021 – Hour 2 - This podcast produced by Relevant Radio

TEFL Training Institute Podcast
App Based Language Learning (With Jake Whiddon)

TEFL Training Institute Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2020 15:00


As the coronavirus causes more and more schools, more students and teachers are turning to apps to fill the gap. Ross and Jake Whiddon talk about the potential of apps for language learning, the limitations of current software and how apps will influence classrooms in the future.Ross Thorburn: Hi, everyone. I'm Ross Thorburn. Welcome back to "TEFL Training Institute Podcast." This week, I'm talking with my friend Jake Whiddon. Jake's a diploma in TESOL qualified teacher. Over the last year or so, Jake has been working for a company that develops language learning apps.As the coronavirus is causing more and more schools to close, and more and more learning switching from offline to online, we'll find that language learning apps are going to be playing a bigger part in teachers' and students' lives than they were before.In this conversation, Jake and I discuss some of the advantages of language learning apps. How they affect the classroom? Where they will be going in the future? Enjoy the conversation.Ross: Welcome back, Jake.Jake Whiddon: Thanks, Ross. Good to be here.Ross: Jake, you are now working for a company that does language learning app. Let me just start off talking about what are some of the potential benefits of using an app to learn language.Jake: Probably, the biggest benefit is the idea of learner autonomy and motivation. If you hand over the power for them, and the control that says, "You can now take control of your learning." You have an app. You can open it. You can play some games. You can see some feedback. You can see how well you're going.It's, sometimes, a little bit more motivating, than if you have to be in a class. All your peers are around you. The teacher's telling what you're doing wrong or right. This is a very personal thing. That's one of the biggest benefits of having an app or online learning does.Ross: I was thinking about this recently with work, and with Katrina was doing in Chinese in front of a group of about 30 people on a conference call is still pretty nerve wracking. Comparing that to standing up in front of 30 people, and speaking my second language, it's much less scary.That's one of the things that people don't talk enough is how much that takes away that the fear within you. You don't have all these eyes on.Jake: Exactly. We should make the very distinct difference. Online learning is still engaging with someone. App based learning is you and the app learning together. Getting feedback, trying things.Ross: Let's talk about that. You mentioned their feedback. Answering a question and getting immediate feedback. If you're in a class, I feel the normal way that would happen, would be the teacher gives instructions for an activity in the course book. The students spend the next 10 or 15 minutes doing the activity. Then, the teacher goes through the answers with them and...Jake: Exactly, It could be the next day. It could be, "Here's your homework, go home and do it." I've got to hand it to the teacher. I have no attachment to what I was doing, once I get my feedback.In an app, if you get something wrong, it tells you instantly I got it wrong. Usually, might give you the right answer. It's very meaningful instant feedback, which is more valuable. It's not like, I'm going to get a high score in my test. It's right now, I want to get this right. It's a very personal thing.Ross: There is a huge difference in ownership there. One of them, I'm passive and I'm waiting for someone else to tell me whether I got it right or wrong.Jake: Which is crazy. Naturally, in your daily life as a child, I'm going to go try something. Climb a tree, I fall off. [laughs] I try again. I'm on my bike, I fall off. What do I do? I jump back on the bike. It's only once, we get with language learning or with classrooms, where we seem to say there's a separation between, I've done something and I'm going to find out whether I did well at it.Really what technology is doing, and software is doing, is it's enabling kids to get back into that really pure way of learning. I got it wrong. I'll try again.Ross: Another benefit here potentially, is that with the classroom version of it. The 10 questions that you have to ask, all the kids in the class are getting the same 10 questions. They might be too easy for some students in the class. They might be too difficult for others. That can become demotivating for everyone except the kids in the middle, right?Jake: It can. Where are you trying to get to here, Ross?Ross: Presently, the thing with the app, or the software or whatever, is able to push questions just at the right level of the students where they're able to get most of them right. But no...Jake: From my experience, I've been lucky enough to meet a lot of developers. Everyone says that they have some sort of algorithm that feeds back and allows kids to see what they got wrong. In reality though, Ross, I don't think that that's exactly what everyone is doing.The simplest form of it is that, "I got this wrong" and the algorithm would know, you got that wrong, and it will feed it back to you. Apps like Duolingo do that.I don't know if that completely is what we're talking about when it's this magic formula of AI, that everyone talks about when they're marketing their products. That's where it should be going. It will go eventually, that each child will be on a personalized learning journey.Ross: Kids are already on a personalized learning journey anyway, in a class. It's just the teaching doesn't match the learning...Jake: Exactly, exactly. What's happened now is that, we can have kids learning on an app and have data on every single interaction. You can get data on, if there's different games in that app, you can find out which games that they were more motivated by. If there's a quiz in the app, they can see the results on the quiz and which games were more likely to lead to a higher score in the quiz.We can see which language points lead to a higher score. If you kept on playing, which games motivated you to play more games later. All these different granular pieces of data that help with the educator ‑‑ it could be the teacher or the facilitator or the company ‑‑ to make sure those kids are actually moving forward their language learning, which then leads to efficacy, which we've never known before.Anyone who's listening has been a teacher in a classroom, they all leave, and they think, "I don't know what my kids really learned today. I know what they said in class. I know what they appear to understand. I know what they got in their test. But I don't know what they've acquired. I really don't know."Ross: Taking a couple steps back, you mentioned the different types of games, different types of interactions that might happen. You have some example? Obviously, a lot of this is based on a lot of multiple choice questions, right? But presenting those in different ways.Jake: Yeah, it's really fascinating. Something that I've learned from the coding is one fascinating thing. All the coding is the same, it's multiple choice. You get an app like Duolingo or any of the apps and it's usually, here's four choices, A, B, C, D. Tap the right button, right or wrong.What I've discovered from where I'm working now is that you can have those same four choices in a variety of ways, which I never realized. Rather than having four colors, just statically on the screen, those could be bubbles floating around the screen. Then, someone has to actually think about it, I can try to touch it and find it. There's more cognitive process happening.It's still an A, B, C, D test. The gameplay is more engaging than just seeing four things on a screen.Ross: This obviously feeds back into the motivation of the students. It's just like being in a language class where if you're doing interesting activities, that's going to keep you motivated and engaged, minute by minute. It's the same on an app. If you're doing the same multiple choice questions, it's going to get pretty boring.Jake: Often now, apps break into two types of learning games. They'll call them accuracy games or experience games. An accuracy game means there is a right or wrong answer. If you get this wrong, it's going to affect the accuracy of your score. There are other types of activities, which might be a song playing, and you just have to hit the words, but that's an experience game.That's input and seeing what happens. But, you're focusing on the input, being not wrong or right. If the word comes up, you hit it. If you don't hit it, it doesn't mean you're wrong. Some learners do better when they're doing experience games a lot. Some do better from accuracy games.What you could have is a different path. Some kids might like to see a song, a dialogue and this type of game. What will happen is, we can actually personalize journeys on the language they're learning and on the game type.Ross: Obviously, teachers in classes will be able to relate to this. You can see different students engaging more with different activities in every class.Jake: Some apps allow you to send out homework. The kids will do something on the app. Then, the teacher can see a whole class aggregate score. They'll know, how well they're doing with a certain lexical set. Say, it's colors. There's a 90 percent on blue, green, red, yellow, but orange, it's a 40 percent. What am I going to focus on in the next class?Ross: Focus on orange.Jake: I'm going to focus on orange, right? Now, the teachers are empowered by the data to be better teachers. They can focus on exactly what the kids need to know and not what they should know.Ross: Find out where the learners are and teach them accordingly. If the app's giving you all this data on where the learners are, that's going to let you do a better job.Presumably also, there's another layer to that. You're talking about the app giving data to the teachers to help the teachers teach the students accordingly. But also, the app's going to use that data to teach the student to...Jake: Exactly, right. Number one, the app already will feedback and ensure that the child, the learner, keeps getting better at that one particular language point. Parents have more information now.Parents used to drop their kids off at offline schools. Two hours sit outside. Come out and they have any idea how well they're going. Everyone's had a parent‑teacher night. Parents meet the teacher. They discuss how well they're going and the teachers feel uncomfortable. They don't really know every detail.Ross: They have 16 kids in the class. You've taught them for four hours. You're really giving feedback on the kid at the back who doesn't talk much, it's impossible.Jake: How exciting is it, that parent‑teacher night, now can happen every day. Not just every day, every hour. Anytime the child interacts with learning, the parent can see exactly how well they're going.The exciting part will be once those apps link parents and teachers up to social media. They'll say, OK, my child is struggling with, this sentence or the past sentence all orange. They'll be able to click on it and find out what all the other parents done who've had that same problem? What do the teachers recommend?The solution for the problem will be instant. They won't need to drop their kid off at school anymore because that learning was become part of daily life.Ross: You hit on one of the things that probably makes a lot of teachers nervous. The idea that apps could replace teachers completely. What's the role of the teacher?Jake: The role of the teacher would change. We already have seen this in STEM. We used to have science lectures, no one does science lectures anymore. That was a thing of the past, that's died. Now what you have is, everyone sends out what you have to learn. You watch a video and when you come to class, guess what you do? An experiment with the teacher.That's all that will happen in language learning. It will catch up to the rest of the world. You'll learn all the stuff. You'll get all your feedback. When you come into class, the teacher will have an activity for you to do. Really push you in the class to use that language.How can I help you interact better with people or communicate better or use your creativity or it's not just the language anymore? It's all that stuff that surrounds it.Ross: This reminds me a lot of an ex‑colleague talking to me about the community aspect of learning a language and that being the thing that keeps learners coming back. If you don't have that sort of interaction with real people, it's really easy to give up. That's the case with apps. If there's not that community aspect, then people tend give up pretty easily.Jake: Think about it, no one learns a language to speak to themselves.Ross: [laughs]Jake: Like in the classroom, no one learns a language to speak to a teacher, you learn language to speak to other people. Offline schools will develop into places where kids and adults can go in, use the language to interact in the community, but the learning will happen with technology.Ross: I feel here it's useful to unpack the word "learning." When we think about the word "learning," we assume that memorizing the words, which is a lot of what we're talking about can happen on the app. Whereas, there's a deeper level that needs to happen. That's the thing that happens in the classroom communicating with real people.Jake: I don't think we'll use the word "class" anymore. The idea of class needs to go because of class implies learning and the teacher. The relationship shouldn't be teacher‑student. It will become, "I've already learned this stuff, I need places to use it and keep developing it."Language doesn't exist in a vacuum without all the other experiences around it. Teachers' roles would expand into making experiences around the language.Ross: Those are the most interesting parts of teaching. Designing the interesting communicative activities and tasks. Talking about culture, facilitating discussions, that's a lot more interesting than holding up the blue flashcard. Getting students to turn it back to you.[crosstalk]Jake: Can I add the point that what's exciting is, as data and coders and language learning have become best friends. What's the code? It's a language, right? Due to social media and Internet and all these connections, all those barriers have been broken down. Now we have computer scientists talking to linguists talking to psychologists.What will happen to teachers is, they won't be thinking about, "This is the grammar point I need to teach today."They'll be talking to psychologists, they'll be talking to other discourses and making that class a more valuable experience for the kids.Ross: You mentioned, psychologists and language teaching and programming. One of the bits where that comes together is, finding the sweet spot of challenge and using gamification. That's a bit of a controversial issue.Jake: The word "gamification" is controversial because gamification can be along the lines of gambling. That's what they base it on. Challenge level and finding the challenge level is what motivates people to keep coming back. If something's too easy, you get demotivated. If it's too hard, you don't come back. You need to find that sweet spot of where's the challenge level?Essentially, that's gamification. Gamification is finding the spot where it's not too hard. It's not too easy. It's just at the point where I want to keep going. There's so many advantages.If you can find the spot where kids or people are motivated to keep learning, isn't that a good thing? But, then they become addicted to the platform that you're using to teach them to do that, that could be unethical, especially when money's involved.Ross: One more time, that was Jake Whiddon. Thank you very much for listening. For more podcasts, please go to the website, www.tefltraininginstitute.com. We'll see you next time. Goodbye.

FUT Buddies - FIFA Ultimate Team Podcast
How to invest before Qualifiers? Episode 7 - FUT Buddies

FUT Buddies - FIFA Ultimate Team Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2020 35:27


New show, new trading tip from Jake: How to invest before Qualifiers when a lot of pro players build their teams for a weekend full of competitive FIFA. We also cover the Headliners week 1, the SBCs, we try to predict future Headliners and low budget investment tips like Marquee Matchups. Thank you for watching and listening!

Heat Ratio Sports
Heat Ratio – Episode 10

Heat Ratio Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2018 60:03


In what should be a very active offseason, the Eagles have a lot of decisions to make. Who gets paid, cut, and/or allowed to walk. What is your biggest concern? On the other side of the parking lot, the Phillies are looking to build a winner too. Do they sign a top of the rotation guy named Jake? How about Continue Reading --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/heat-ratio/support

Inspire Nation Show with Michael Sandler
HOW TO FIND YOUR LIFE PURPOSE! + Guided Meditation! Jake Ducey | Health | Inspiration | Motivation | Self-Help | Inspire

Inspire Nation Show with Michael Sandler

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2016 63:58


If you've ever felt uninspired, trapped, at a dead end, or just wondered whose life am I leading anyway, and my God, what have I done, then do we have the inspiring, life changing show for you! Today I'll be speaking with Jake Ducey, perhaps the first millennial we've had on the show, and the 3 times author of inspirational books including, Into the Wind and The Purpose Principles. He's a future Tony Robbins, correct that, Jake Ducey in the making, and just got off an international book tour where he spoke on stages to 500,000 people and helped raised 345,000 pounds of food for homeless youth in America. Today we're going to talk about your life's purpose, where it's hiding, how to find it, and what in the world you NEED to do about it once you know you've found it. That plus we'll talk about self-actualizers, Steve Jobs, Jack Canfield, Jay Z, Dave Matthews, Abraham Lincoln, Sylvester Stallone, SW SW SW, and why in the world you want to take an entire summer or two, retyping the Great Gatsby… Questions and Topics Include: How Jake Got Jack Canfield to Write the forward to his book How Jake Ducey was listening to “Dare to Win' and followed Jack Canfields advice to write down 101 goals and what happened. What happened on November 20, 2010 Why we're all gambling on the biggest risk of all How Jake left school to chase his dreams of becoming a writer What happened with the Shaman in Guatemala (when he was not a very 'spiritual' person) Why “our lives are like onions and we want to live to live the tough flavorless part first” Why it's a trap to wait until we get x,y or z (even spiritual or self-discover experiences) to find happiness. What happened to Vic Revezo and how his death affected Jake How he had a near-death fall in Indonesia, and how locals risked their lives to save him What is destination addiction What's Jake's take on the Law of Attraction & Bob Proctor, and what we have to do to get the unconscious to help us get our desires What we can learn from Bonnie Ware who studied top regrets of people who were dying What is risk-ability? Why lack of evidence is not evidence of lack The story of Steve Jobs and ‘not evidence of lack' Why most of our fears are just ‘monsters under our bed' The story of Sylvester Stallone and how he got his start What Martin Luther King tells us about finding our freedom Why JK Rowling (author of Harry Potter) once considered herself the biggest failure she knew What's it mean from George Bernard Shaw to become ‘unreasonable' Why Martin Luther King knew he was going to be killed the next day (when he gave his I've been to the Mountaintop speech). Why most people are gambling on the biggest risk of all, that one day we'll find the time to do what we want. Story of a friend who was stabbed by his father Why our childhoods can be blessings in disguise What we can learn from Jay Z (though not necessarily his content). What inspiring lesson we can learn from Arnold Schwarzenegger What inspiring lesson we can learn from Jim Carry – and how he used the Law of Attraction What's the reoccurring theme between the world's most successful people What's Bob Marley's inspirational story The inspiring story too of how Bob Marley put on a free concert for 300,000 and played the night after he got shot! What's Jack Canfield's Rule of Five? How he turned a self-published book into a best-seller What is Jack Canfield's SW, SW, SW? Why you want to ask for what you want What's the inner journey? What's the importance of knowing yourself? New book coming out June 7th, Profit from Happiness: The Unity of Wealth, Worth and Personal fulfillment. JakeDucey.com (and check out his Ted Talk!) Plus Guided Meditation!!! Jake Ducey Shares Life-Changing Stories from Jack Canfield, Jim Carrey, Sylvester Stallone, Steve Jobs, Jay Z, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bob Marley & Martin Luther King + Bob Proctor & The Law of Attraction! Spirituality | Inspiration | Motivation | Self-Help | Ted Talk | Inspire For More Info Visit: www.InspireNationShow.com

Stuff I Never Knew Trivia Game Show
Random Trivia Podcast - Episode 22

Stuff I Never Knew Trivia Game Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2016 34:35


This week 5 players from around the world battle it out over 3 rounds of random trivia. Questions this week include, Who played guitar on Michael Jackson's Beat It? Which Male Animal is called a Tom or a Jake? How many chances do high-jumpers get to clear the bar in each round? Which country is the Peroni Brewery based in? What is the Greek Word for Fire? .....And More! Tune in and follow along. You will be sure to learn some stuff you never knew you didn't know!