I enjoy reading articles like this, 5 Popular Education Beliefs That Aren't Backed by Research.
Specifically, the myth about reading aloud and the myth regarding music. I have my own experiences. As a kindergartner, yes, I remember this distinctly, I would get called out by "student teachers" aka older kids that were instructed to read to us younger ones, and teachers because of my inability to process what was being read to me. To this day, auditory is not my learning style. I learn by writing or reading. Clearly.
I also recall certain peers not doing well when it came to reading aloud and I always had this sense of disappointment it was a mandatory activity that promoted anxiety (although I didn't know that feeling at the time) and frustration. For the music myth, I have found that when I'm doing a monotonous task like entering time card info, then background music (often, jazz or a coffee shop mix) is relaxing and motivating to me. However, I know other tasks, like budget reviews, etc., are absolutely not the time for me to be listening to music. Fascinating.
Credit via IG
Then there's quotes that just resonate with everything inside me. Recently, my ear buds died prior to the run I'd had scheduled and was really looking forward to, so I ran sans music. Unheard of (get it, get it). Despite the midday timeframe, there was near silence all around me. No one speaking, no loud booms, just silence. Truly, it was exactly what I needed because nearly everyday is punctuated by noise, a constant sound cacophony of stuff. I won't get started about how it's typically loud in my head, but the silence of that run was absolute bliss.
Sometimes I just need to hear myself think.
_____________________
I ask you -
Did any myth surprise you?
Have you ever run in silence?
Tell me how often you charge your earbuds!
(The post Hear the Thoughts first appeared here at Running on Fumes.)
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