Wednesday, November 27, 2019

How to Develop, Organize, and Plan Instruction

How to Develop, Organize, and Plan Instruction Good planning is the first step to an effective classroom, and one of the six main teacher tasks that excellent teachers must master. A well-planned class reduces stress on the teacher and helps minimize disruptions. When teachers know what they need to accomplish and how they are going to do it, they have a better opportunity to achieve success with the added benefit of less stress. Further, when students are engaged during the entire class period, they have less opportunity to cause disruptions. Obviously, the demeanor of the teacher, the quality of the lesson, and the method of delivery all play into an effective day in class. With that said, it all starts with a good plan. Steps for Planning Instruction Look over the state and national standards and your texts and supplemental materials to determine what concepts you must cover in the year. Make sure to include any required test preparation material. Use this to create a plan of study for your course.Create a personalized lesson plan calendar. This will help you visualize and organize your instruction.Plan your units using your overall plan of study and your calendar.Create detailed unit lesson plans. These should include the following items to be effective:ObjectivesActivitiesTime estimatesRequired materialsAlternatives- Make sure to plan for those students who might be absent during your activities.Assessment- This includes classwork, homework, and tests  Transfer your broad unit plan to a planning book to keep yourself organized. This will help with implementation and focus. This is where all the unit plans come together to give you a broader picture of the year.Write a daily lesson outline and agenda. The details included will differ depending how detailed you wish to be. Some teachers create a simple outline with times attached to help keep them on track while others include detailed notes and written information. At a bare minimum, you should have an agenda prepared for yourself and your students so that you appear organized and you make smooth transitions. It is very easy to lose student attention as you search for the page that you want them to read or fumble through a stack of papers. Create and/or gather any required items. Make handouts, overheads, lectures notes, manipulatives, etc. If you are going to start each day with a warm-up, then have this created and ready to go. If your lesson requires a movie or item from the media center, make sure that you put in your request early so that you are not disappointed on the day of your lesson. Planning for the Unexpected As most teachers realize, interruptions and unexpected events often occur in class. This might range from pulled fire alarms and unexpected assemblies to your own illnesses and emergencies. Therefore, you should create plans that will help you deal with these unexpected events. Create mini-lessons to help fill up any time that might be left at the end of a class period. Even the best teachers are sometimes left with extra time. Instead of just letting students talk, use this time for extra instruction or possibly educational fun. Further, if an unexpected assembly is called leaving you with just 15 minutes of instruction, these lessons can be a godsend.Emergency lesson plans are a necessity for all teachers. If you cannot make it to school at the last minute or have to leave to deal with a personal emergency, you need to leave lesson plans to help your substitute. This combined with your substitute folder is important to help your classroom continue to function without you.

Saturday, November 23, 2019

Catchy Blog Titles 5 Steps, 100+ Formulas, 500+ Words

Catchy Blog Titles 5 Steps, 100+ Formulas, 500+ Words Do you like catchy blog titles like these? What 10 Studies Say About The Best Times To Post On Social Media How To Attract An Audience With The Best Blog Photography Tips (+128 Free Images) 21+ Easy Ways To Build An Email List That Will Skyrocket By 552% In 1 Year The 10-Minute, 10-Step Solution For The Best Blog Outline Data and psychology say you do. And so will your audience when you apply this method to your own blog posts. So would you like to learn how to write catchy blog titles like that? If youre genuinely interested in writing better, catchier, and awesome-r blog titles for your already great content, youre in the right place.  This post is going to help you maximize the time you invest in writing your  awesome content to help you get more social media shares and traffic from your blog titles. Youre going to learn how to use  the four pillars of awesome content in  your blog titles, how to  use psychology to increase shares and clicks, and how to use the best words to capture your audiences unique interest. To top it off, youll even get a ton of  proven catchy blog title templates, formulas, and structures weve seen work for getting more social shares and traffic. Lets do this thing. 5 Easy Steps And 100+ Formulas For The Best #BlogTitles That Will Quadruple Traffic3 Free Resources to Write Catchier Blog Titles Start writing better headlines now with these three free downloads: A Catchy Blog Titles inforgraphic that breaks down the elements of strong blog headlines. A Blog Title Performance Tracking Template to help you A/B test blog titles when shared on social media. A Content Calendar Excel Template to store your headline ideas and plan every blog post you write. Step 1: Write Catchy Blog Titles With The  4 Pillars Of Successful Content A very basic principle in content marketing is to  look back at your  best content and repeat its success. I've recently taken this idea to the next level at to help us use our data from past content to help us plan better content and actually predict future growth. That analysis revealed that top-performing content reflects four key traits extremely well. On the other hand,  worst-performing content does  poorly in all four areas. Simply rank each blog post according to four questions, giving each question a 1–3 ranking (meaning a top post according to your  gut would be a 12 whereas the worst would be a 4.) Was this a topic your readers would be deeply interested in learning more about? Was this post deeply researched to share unique and better information than any other source on the Internet? Did the post turn the research into actionable, exhaustive how-to advice? Was the keyword well-chosen and optimized throughout the post to help you  experience long-term traffic? After you rank them, compare each blog post's score to its page views to translate your  gut into actual data. The results should show that  most  of your  high scoring content ends up being your  best performing blog posts. If not, you just learned a lot about how your gut is off, and you can use your new knowledge backed by data to  strategically choose to publish better content. You can do this process for your content, too. But the point is: Since the idea of solid topic, research, depth, and keywords define success for content, your blog titles should reflect those qualities to connect with your audience from the moment they see your headlines. Translate your gut into data to strategically create better #content. #bloggingShare The Value Your Readers Will Get Behind The Click. The #1 thing that will help you write successful blog titles is by first creating content your audience will be deeply interested in learning more about. It makes sense, right? That's why this post kinda started off with that tangent, but it's coming full circle right now: Use the words  that describe the topic in your blog title. Avoid ambiguity. Ask yourself the question, "If I were a member of my audience, why would I read this blog post instead of any others like it? Why?" Then, like a little kid,  go down the why rabbit hole to get to the core value you're providing to your readers. Just like you would with marketing a product, define the value proposition for your blog posts and include that in your blog titles. From there, define the single best value proposition for your content. For example,  after a ton of brainstorming, this blog post's value proposition is to increase traffic. Recent research shows 29% of content marketers measure success primarily through social media and 38% see traffic as their #1 form of measurement. This blog post helps both of those groups of content marketers reach their goals. Pro Tip: Write your blog title  before you write your blog post. This practice will help you define the value proposition so you can connect it into the blog post, which guarantees your blog title will deliver on its promise. Use Numbers And Facts To Get 206% More Traffic To Your Blog Posts. ^See what I did there? The second pillar of successful content is to back up  the claims  you made in your value proposition with research. This is where you prove to your audience that your blog post is different because it's actually based on real success they could also experience if they just read your blog post. Use Numbers And Facts In Your #BlogTitles To Get 206% More Traffic To Your Blog Posts.Informal research from Canva and Ian Cleary of Razor Social suggests that including numbers in your blog titles  can double your social shares. Data from Brian Dean at Backlinko also suggests that including numbers in your blog titles  can increase your clickthrough rate by 36%! There are a few  ways to do this: Outline your blog post in the form of a list. Use the number of points from your list in your headline. Put a  real number to your value proposition. If your value proposition is to save time, your number could be  save 30 minutes of time. If your value proposition is to generate more sales, your number could be  generate 32% more sales. Share the sample size of your data to increase your credibility. For example, if your  post is about managing multiple projects at once and you sourced tips from 100 industry experts, include that number in your blog title. You get the picture. The blog post you're reading right now has several numbers; I chose to focus on 500 words, 100 templates, and the results you could achieve if you follow this advice with 438% more traffic.  We drew those 500 words from more than 1 million of the most-shared headlines we've seen go through , so I could have also included that number. Pro Tip: If you  have multiple numbers to increase your credibility and your audience's perception of success, write several headlines  with multiple numbers.  Then  A/B test them to eventually choose the best one and change your blog title even after your post publishes. That will give you more initial shares and click-throughs and  will boost your long-term traffic to that blog post. This is not blowing smoke. Seven  of our top 10 posts on the blog have at least one number in the blog title, if not more. And of those seven, six are in the top six positions and  they get on average 206% more traffic than an average blog post. Tell The Story And Deliver On The Expectation. The third pillar of awesome sauce content is depth and delivering on the promises you made in your blog title with your value proposition and research. Good #blog titles  are only as good as the extensive  advice that follows the click. #bloggingWhen you translate this to your blog title, it means telling the story truthfully and as clearly as you can. If your blog post doesn't follow through on the value proposition or you can't back up your number, you're doing it wrong. This is where you translate your actionable, in-depth, how-to advice into a few words that help your readers understand what to expect after clicking through to read your content: Critically analyze the words you use to make sure you deliver on your promise. For example, if you use the word template in your blog title, your audience will likely expect a free download of some kind. Make sure your blog post delivers on that promise. Consider searcher  intent when you write your blog titles. Ask yourself, "As a user, what would I expect to read if I clicked through on this blog title?" Critique the way you  include numbers to make sure you deliver on the promise. It seems obvious, but it's incredible how often blog titles  don't deliver on the promises they make. I wanted to include examples of successful blog titles  outside the marketing industry to complement this post. Unfortunately, I was super dismayed by the sheer lack of quality behind the headlines I found because they were purely click bait. Here are some things to look out for: I searched for "manage multiple projects" and clicked through to see the headlines: How to Manage Multiple Projects – 5 Things You Need 5 Most Common Mistakes in Managing Multiple Projects: Micromanagement Leadership (Part 1) How to Manage Multiple Projects Managing Multiple Projects, Objectives and Deadlines 7 Ways to Juggle Multiple Project Tasks- and Get Things Done The top five search results promised how to resolve my challenge to manage multiple projects at once, but they barely scratched the surface. You can avoid situations like these for yourself by thinking of searcher intent: As a searcher, I want to know how to manage multiple projects at once. As a searcher, I want detailed information on process- so a step-by-step procedure would be great. As a searcher, I don't care about your blog's word count goals but rather  getting all of the information I need to do my job better. If you were to click-through the top five search results for this example,  most of the blog posts don't deliver on these three searcher stories (to use a term  from agile project management). In fact, #2 only delivers one  mistake instead of the five it promises while all of the others neglect the how to nature they promise. That causes poor  reader experience  that could  increase your bounce rate and cause you to lose fans like my friend John here who commented on a recent post Ben wrote: Good blog titles  are only as good as the actionable, in-depth, and how-to advice that follows  after the clickthrough. Takeaway: Write blog titles  that tell the complete story in your posts, and deliver on the promise you make. If you're not sure if you're making this mistake, take a look at your bounce rate in Google Analytics. If it's more than 5%, you  can use the advice from this post to help you work through even better blog titles. Use The Keyword In Your Blog Title. The fourth pillar of great content is  optimizing it for your audience to find it via search engines.  The 17% of you who put 5–10 hours into writing blog posts can get more traffic from your content if you simply optimize it so people can find it when they need it. I say it that way because Google seems to reward longer content with better rankings. And if time is an indicator of length, depth, covering everything having to do with that topic and giving actionable stories, then those who spend more time creating content have  more opportunity to get traffic and social shares from this pillar of successful blog posts. Relating that back to your blog titles, Brian Dean recently researched the top 200 ranking factors that make Google tick, and one of them was this: H1 tags are a â€Å"second title tag† that sends another relevancy signal to Google, according to results from this correlation study. What Brian is trying to say, is  that when you target a keyword in your  blog posts, it makes sense to include that keyword  in your blog titles for your page title and H1. Brian also notes that including the keyword closer to the beginning of your blog title (specifically in your page title) helps search engines understand the importance of it in relation to your post. Step 2: Use Psychological Triggers In Your Blog Titles To Encourage More Social Shares Jonah Berger is the author of Contagious: Why Things Catch On, and found there are six STEPPS behind the psychology of contagious content: Social currency: People talk about things to make them look good. Triggers: Topics  that are at the top of your mind are at the tip of your tongue. Emotion: When you care about something, you share it. Public: When you see people doing something, you'll imitate it. Practical value: You share things to help others. Stories: You like to share things that are wrapped in narratives. I'll let Jonah himself explain his research a little more thoroughly: Neil Patel also  researched a few different studies to find five  key elements that help  influence social shares: Curiosity Amazement Interest Astonishment Uncertainty And when the New York Times analyzed why their readers were sharing content, they found people share: Valuable and entertaining content to change opinions or encourage action. Content that helps define who they are and what they care about. Information that helps them stay in touch with people  and maintain relationships. Content that helps them feel involved in the world. Content that supports causes or brands they care about. Now, all of  this  goes way beyond writing catchy blog titles, and it's  all great advice you can use to craft even better content.  But let's take all of  this research  and apply it to your blog titles specifically: Appeal To Your Audience's Emotional Need For Resolution. Appeal to  the emotional reasons people would read your content. Understanding your readers' challenges  and suggesting your blog post offers a solution immediately from your headline will encourage clicks and shares. For example, think of headlines that include  that will messaging in them:  21+ Easy Ways To _____  That Will Skyrocket Your Followers By 552% In 1 Year. Recommended Reading: Proof that Emotional Headlines Get Shared More on Social Media Focus On The Remarkability Within Your Content. Take advantage of trendy words and appeal to entertainment, amazement, and astonishment. Jonah uses the word remarkable often to describe content that gets shared- so include noteworthy information in your blog titles that shows the remarkable information your readers will get after they click. For example, Neil Patel offers this example for a blog title that amazes:  How Spending $162,301.42 on Clothes Made Me $692,500. That  blog title also has numbers as proof that you can experience the same success as Neil if you just follow his advice. Make Your Audience Feel Like Rock Stars Among Their Peers. Write  your blog titles to help people look good. Your readers  want to feel successful, engaged in the world, and be supportive. Your readers  feel as though the blog titles from the content they share- like yours- define who they are as people. A great way to connect this emotion to your blog titles is through uncertainty.  When someone reads your blog post, they know the answer to something others don't- so let them boast their knowledge while also encouraging more clicks back to your content. Do this by asking questions. And not just any questions. Close-ended questions that essentially cause your readers to answer with yes or no. In a recent case study, I found that social messages with close-ended questions get more clickthroughs than any other type of social message we shared. In fact, close-ended questions get 255% more clickthroughs than open-ended questions! For example, write a blog title like: Are You Using _____  To Get 277% More _____?  Blog titles like this suggest that the sharer knows the answer and is getting the kind of success your headline promises. It also makes anyone seeing that blog title feel the fear of missing out (FOMO) that will encourage them to click through just to know the answer. And hey, you might get the snowball effect of yet another share. Provide A Practical Way To Solve A Problem. Blog titles that focus on practical value are those that offer how-to, actionable, and oftentimes  step-by-step solutions to problems. They cover information that is interesting- not the same-old thing that feels like it's been done over and over again. You can do this by differentiating your  blog titles by including your value proposition in them directly. For example, this blog title includes the value proposition of doing something super quickly (because who has time these days) coupled with a promise of doing it in 10 quick steps:  The 10-Minute, 10-Step Solution For The Best _____. Step 3: Use Catchy Words That Are Proven To Increase Action So other than focusing on telling  a complete story with your blog title and connecting it to your audience's emotional needs, what specific words make certain blog titles catchier than others? Do You Use The Words Your Audience Uses In Your Blog Titles? That's a good question  and one that Joanna Wiebe from Copy Hackers has an answer to. Joanna is a copywriting genius. When I read her Headlines, Subheadlines, and Value Propositions  book recently, one very interesting point really stuck with me (among tons of others- you should totally check out her  book since you're interested in writing better blog titles): Use the words your audience uses in your blog titles. That's a very simple idea, and it's one that can help you connect with your audience immediately because it's exactly how they think. While planning  a headline test with Crazy Egg's website, Joanna surveyed their users by asking them to describe Crazy Egg in two to three words. From there, she worked  the most-used words into her headlines to connect with  an audience like Crazy Egg's existing users. That. Is. Brilliant. So when we launched a new course recently, I took Joanna's advice  and  used the words from our audience's biggest challenges in the headline to connect with their lingo immediately: The words were:  on track, organized, and save time. The result? For an initial launch just to our existing email subscribers, 2,181 people signed up with page view to signup conversion rate of 27%! You can apply that same strategy to the words you use in your blog titles  by sending a simple survey to your existing email subscribers. Just promise them a reward (a free e-book or  exclusive content of some kind is perfect for this), that it'll only take two minutes, and ask one simple question: "What is your biggest professional challenge as a (insert job title here)?" That will  not only give you tons of blog post ideas; you'll also have their own words you can use in all of your copy- and blog titles- moving forward. Use Words Proven To Increase Your Social Media Shares. Since is a social media editorial calendar tool, we have access to millions of blog titles. Literally. So, being the data nerds we are, we looked at more than 1 million headlines and found the words used most often in the top shared content. From there, we compiled a list for you of those 500 words to use as a tear sheet for inspiration  the next time you're writing blog titles: Pro Tip: Use these words with the headline analyzer to increase  your grade and score as you write your blog titles. Step 4: Rock These Catchy Blog Title Templates To  Jumpstart Your Creativity So you could take  all the advice from this post and start writing catchy blog titles right now. You know the background of your four pillars of successful content, how to connect to your audience emotionally, and how to use catchy words in your headlines. Or you could get a little more advice from the headline pros out there with some formulas so you don't have to come up with everything from scratch. Sound good? Let's take a look at the best blog title templates from around the Interwebs. Write better headlines with formulas from Joanna Wiebe of Copy Hackers:  Joanna wrote an amazing post with every copywriting formula you could imagine. In it, she says she keeps a swipe file handy for when she sees cool headlines she'd like to use for inspiration later on. Might be something for you to consider, too. :) Write magnetic headlines with templates from Brian Clark of Copyblogger: Brian is a genius when it comes to writing pretty much anything. He has some great advice for using social proof, insider knowledge, and appealing to ease to get more traffic. Get attention with headline templates from Michael Hyatt:  Michael is a friend of who's built a platform of 615,597 fans to date. His blog titles definitely tie into the information throughout this post, and his templates- though simple- are extremely effective at getting more readers. Increase conversions with  headline formulas from Sherice Jacob on the Crazy Egg blog:  Sherice takes the stance that  writing great copy is an art and a science. She's helped a bunch of folks increase conversion rates with her headline writing skillz. Since Crazy Egg- a tool that helps people get better conversions- thought this information was awesome, I thought you gals and guys would enjoy it, too. Get more social shares with a little advice from users: We recently analyzed the 4,302,684  blog titles in our database, focusing on the headline structure behind the 1,000 most popular posts that got the most social shares of any content we've ever seen. Those formulas are proven to increase your chances of getting more social shares from your blog titles. To top off that list, I'd also like to share the blog title structures from our top-performing content on the blog: What {#}  Studies Say About  {Subject} {#} {Noun}  That Are Proven To  {Desirable Outcome} {#} Ways To Be {Adjective}  When You Don’t  {Verb} {Adjective} How To {Verb}  An {Audience} With The Best {Subject}  Tips (+{#} Free {Resources}) {#} Data-Driven {Noun}  From {#}  Of The Most Popular  {Noun} {#}+ Easy Ways To {Verb  A  {Noun}  That Will Skyrocket By {#}% In 1 Year How To Use {Noun}  To Increase Your  {Desirable Outcome} The {#}-Minute, {#}-Step Solution For The Best  {Noun} How To Rock A {Noun}  That Will Save You Tons Of Time How To {Verb}  Your {Noun}  For Massive Growth If you start with these ten blog title formulas and write  'em in the headline analyzer, I can nearly guarantee you'll get an awesome grade and score which means you'll get more social shares for your hard work. Which brings me to the last step here... How To Write Catchy Blog Titles With 100+ Proven Templates That Increase Social SharesStep 5: Use 5 Blog Title Tools To Take Your Headlines To The Next Level Woohoo! You made it and understand the best ways to write  super catchy blog titles. Let's  just say you're having a bit of trouble staying inspired.  There are some great  tools out there to help you out: Impact has a blog title generator that helps you insert a topic you'd like to write about and spits out all sorts of headlines to get the inspiration going. Similarly, HubSpot as a blog topic generator that will help you enter in a couple nouns that you might use in your blog post (think about using the keyword), and generate a bunch of topics based on your nouns. Where HubSpot starts, SEOPressor takes it a step further and literally asks you to enter a keyword into their blog title generator to get the ideas flowing. And if you're looking for something a little more humorous and trendy, the content idea generator by Portent is the one for you. Last but not least, once you come up with your headline through any of these generators, run it through the headline analyzer  (which is now built directly into your editorial calendar, too). While your blog title might be close, you could probably use a few of the lessons you've learned from this post- along with the huge list of emotional words- to improve your blog title even further to increase your social shares. How To Use What You've Learned In A Meaningful Way You're a headline  maniac now with your 5-step process for writing a super catchy blog title. I wanted to recap with a bit of advice you might have seen from us in the past because if you're serious about improving your blog titles, this is how to take what you just learned to the next level: Write your headline first- before writing your post. That will help you focus on the value proposition to keep your writing on track. Write at least 25 headlines for every post. Your first take at this might feel awkward, and this process gives you the chance to work through tons of ideas to find the best ones you can use in A/B tests. When you put the time into writing great blog titles, use them for multiple purposes. Share alternative versions you came up with in your blog title brainstorm on social media, and A/B test your headlines in your email subject lines. Download and use alternative headlines throughout your post to encourage more social shares. Don't worry so much about the mechanics. Word count and length- though important in some contexts like subject lines- don't matter as much as the catchiness factor you learned about in this post. If you decide to write catchy headlines  through this process, make sure the content behind the click is just as powerful as your promise. Plan time to improve your blog titles by analyzing  data from your own audience. This  process definitely works for increasing traffic and social shares- but you may have to adjust the pillars according to your own findings. You've got this. :)

Thursday, November 21, 2019

Communication Disorders Assignment Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 1000 words

Communication Disorders - Assignment Example So you need to adopt various skills and have knowledge about your profession and the tact of dealing efficiently. There is the need to improve upon the teaching practices by CART providers. It has been seen that most of the services are provided for graduate as well as under graduate levels. Professionals in this area need to cater various informal areas too. The association between student ands professionals should be made strong to gain better outputs. There should be more access for deaf and HH to lab settings etc. "while students can get support for classroom lectures, they find less possibility of access to study groups, lab settings, and other forms of information exchange outside the classroom." It is high time to treat graduates and under graduate students differently considering their level of experience and knowledge. Support for the growth in their careers rather than providing simple academic knowledge will be catered in future as well. More deaf and HH students will be encouraged towards opting different fields as careers as biomedical sciences, researching, vocational courses etc. It can be done by arranging an inventory of role models and speakers as well as deaf or HH scientists to share their scientific pursuits, training history etc. to encourage them. Various colleges offer the courses for learning and improving upon the knowledge imparting skills to deaf and HH people or students as STSN- Speech to Text Services Network, National Verbatim Reporters Association (NVRA), PepNet etc. So, the above mentioned improvements need to be catered upon in future for the benefit and growth of deaf and HH people. Sources: 1. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders. 21 OCT, 2002. 2. Classroom Text Delivery Methods for the Deaf & Hard-of-Hearing.