background preloader

Register for your FREE ThinkBuzan Account today

Register for your FREE ThinkBuzan Account today

Mind42.com - Collaborative mind mapping in your browser untitled Certifying Practitioners The TLI’s Guide to Certifying Practitioners As a ThinkBuzan Licensed Instructor, you can use our exclusive training resources and course manuals to run your own courses and certify your course delegates as official ThinkBuzan Practitioners. Access resources to deliver your own training We provide you with everything you need in order to deliver your own ThinkBuzan Practitioner courses, including step by step course manuals, slide shows, Mind Maps and more. You can access the Practitioner course resources by logging into www.thinkbuzan.com/tli-resources, using your iMindMap username and password. Provide your delegates with an official ThinkBuzan certification To ensure your delegates are eligible for an official ThinkBuzan Practitioner certification, you must cover at least 80% of the content in the course manual we provide. You can also provide your delegates with an official ThinkBuzan certificate, signed by Tony Buzan and Chris Griffiths. Get free iMindMap licenses for your delegates

Visual Thinking Evolution A mind map is a diagram used to represent words, ideas, tasks, or other items linked to and arranged around a central key word or idea. Especially in British English, the terms spidergram and spidergraph are more common,[1] but they can cause confusion with the term spider diagram used in mathematics and logic. Mind maps are used to generate, visualize, structure, and classify ideas, and as an aid to studying and organizing information, solving problems, making decisions, and writing. The elements of a given mind map are arranged intuitively according to the importance of the concepts, and are classified into groupings, branches, or areas, with the goal of representing semantic or other connections between portions of information. Mind maps may also aid recall of existing memories. By presenting ideas in a radial, graphical, non-linear manner, mind maps encourage a brainstorming approach to planning and organizational tasks. Reference: wikipedia

Padlet (anciennement Wallwisher) Le site anglais gratuit « Padlet » [ permet aux élèves de développer la production écrite. Qu’est ce que c’est ? Il s’agit d’un « mur » en ligne avec la possibilité de créer des petits messages rédigés, sous forme de « Post-It ». Comment faire ? Allez sur le site : [ Créer le mur. Testez ! Que faire d’un « Padlet » ? Quelques suggestions d’exploitation : Exemple 1 : un Padlet Coupe du Monde de Rugby 2011. (Réalisé en classe de 4ème européenne au Collège le Racinay à Rambouillet) Objectif : développer la production écrite libre sur un sujet d’actualité. Exemple 2 : mise en commun d’informations culturelles sur les Beatles. (Réalisé en classe de 4ème au Collège le Racinay à Rambouillet) Objectif : élargissement culturel après l’étude de la chanson Help des Beatles. Exemple 3 : Wallwisher Charlie

Main Page Mind Map en ligne et Brainstorming - MindMeister

Related: