Portfolio 2017-18 ________________________
Name: _destiny sanabria
Soft Skills: Setting Personal Goals What are soft skills? Soft skills are a combination of interpersonal people skills, social skills, and communication skills. In the workplace and school environment, soft skills are considered a complement to hard skills, which refer to a person's knowledge and technical expertise. Your task: From the back side of this paper, choose two soft skills that you would like to work on over the course of the school year. Skill #1: Why did you select this skill? Consider why it is important to you and why you think you need to work on this skill. Communication. I selected communication skill because i feel like i need to work on my communication skill because i get really shy in front of people and i don't like asking for help because i get shy.
Name three ways you can work on developing this skill. Consider what you can do both inside and outside of school. I can try and talk to new people, work with new people, and be engaged with everyone when there is a group project or when i have to work with a group in class.
Skill #2: Why did you select this skill? Consider why it is important to you and why you think you need to work on this skill.
Study skills. I chose study skills because i need to learn how to study more so i can pass my test and quizzes. Name three ways you can work on developing this skill. Consider what you can do both inside and outside of school.
I can make study guides for myself, I can ask my teacher for help on things that i don't understand, and i can ask my siblings or parents to help me study.
*At the end of the year, you will reflect on your soft skills progress in your final presentation. Common soft skills for college/career readiness: ● Self advocacy – Help your student learn how to identify his needs and be able to explain them to others. Help him learn how to ask for help when he needs it. ● Responsibility – College students are held accountable for their actions in academic, personal and social contexts. ● Self management – Time management is perhaps one of the most important keys to success in college. However, self management includes all aspects of taking control of your life including monitoring your own health, eating habits, self care, laundry, finances, etc. ● Communication – Your need to sharpen both her ability to listen and to express herself. She will need to learn to communicate effectively with other students, roommates, and faculty members. ● Teamwork and collaboration – Working effectively with others is increasingly important in today’s world. Your student will be expected to complete many projects as part of a group. ● Critical thinking and problem solving – Your student will be asked to work well beyond the restatement of facts or classroom material. The ability to think critically and analytically, both in the classroom and in other aspects of her life, will be important. ● Study skills – College students work more independently than many high school students and often cover much more material. The ability to organize work, read carefully, prepare for tests and plan and write papers is key. ● Comfort with technology – Technology is not only continuing to be a growing presence in all of our lives, but is increasingly becoming a standard tool in many college classes. Your student will need skills and comfort beyond surfing the internet. Help her do what she can to become comfortable with online research, e-mail communication, and various software programs. These are all tools that she will need to succeed in college. ● Tolerate ambiguity – Not everything taught or learned in college is black and white, or crystal clear. Students who are better able to understand and work in a “gray” area will be less uncomfortable and will be able to understand subtleties better. ● Comfort with diversity – one of the exciting and beneficial things about going to college is the opportunity to be exposed to many different types of people and many different ways of living, thinking and being. Students who have some intercultural competence or who are open to new people will benefit most from the college experience. ● Innovation and creative thinking – Being willing and able to “think outside the box” will help your student be able to apply new approaches to all that he does. ● Ability to work independently – Your student will be required to do larger blocks of work on her own and to keep track of her work and responsibilities. ● Ability to follow directions – Students need to be able to follow both simple and more complex directions. Instructions about how to do an assignment may be very specific, deadlines will matter, and your student will need to be able to “play by the rules”. ● Have personal goals – Some studies have suggested that students who have strong personal goals, even if those goals change over time, are better able to be engaged and stay on track.
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Be engaged – Students who participate actively in their own education, who expect to work hard and stay involved, will not only learn more and do better in their classes, but will also have a more satisfying experience overall.