December 8 2015

A List Of The Various Types Of Courts


admiralty court
Circuit Court of Appeals
Court of Appeals
Permanent Court of Arbitration
Court of Assistants
Court of Assizes
court of chancery
circuit court
Court of Claims
Court of Common Pleas
district court
ecclesiastical court
court of equity
Court of Exchequer
court of hustings
court of inquiry
Permanent Court of International Justice
International Court of Justice
juvenile court
Court of King’s (or Queen’s) Bench
court of last resort
municipal court
probate court
court of record
Court of Star Chamber
superior court
Supreme Court

[SOURCE: The New International Webster's Comprehensive Dictionary]

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November 6 2015

The Brain’s Natural Battle Of Speed vs. Accuracy

Speed and AccuracyIn his book, “Brainblocks,” clinician Dr. Theo Tsaousides discusses the brain’s natural give-and-take tug-of-war of speed vs. accuracy. His expert rendition of the brain’s conflict between speed and accuracy makes what we do as stenographers seem even more amazing! Here’s what he had to say:

“Your brain can process things fast or it can process them accurately. These two qualities, speed and accuracy, are always is competition. As one goes up the other goes down. You can do things fast or you can do them well. Under normal circumstances, it is impossible to increase both your speed and your accuracy.

Efficiency is the ideal balance between speed and accuracy. It refers to the highest speed at which you can process information without making mistakes. Imagine that you’re reading an interesting article in your favorite magazine. Efficiency is the length of time it takes you to finish reading the article and to also understand the content. If you read it faster than your brain can process, you will miss some of the information in the article, you will not pick up some of the details, and you will forget it faster. If you slow down and read it at a more leisurely pace, you will process, understand, and remember the information in the article much better. But you may be late for work!

Impatience happens when you favor speed over accuracy. Instead of taking your time, you choose to do things quickly. Instead of waiting for things to fall in place, you want things to happen faster. But inevitably, doing things faster increases the chances of making more mistakes, which you have to go back and fix.”

After reading that passage, how amazing is it that we train our brains to master both speed and accuracy?! Awesome!

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October 18 2015

Steno Fitness: The Importance Of Getting Enough Sleep

I Love Steno Logo (Cropped)A recent Inc. article entitled, “18 Behaviors of Emotionally Intelligent People,” written by, Travis Bradberry, discusses the importance of getting an adequate amount of sleep.

Author Travis Bradberry states: “It’s difficult to overstate the importance of sleep…When you sleep, your brain literally recharges, shuffling through the day’s memories and storing or discarding them (which causes dreams) so that you wake up alert and clearheaded…Self-control, attention, and memory are all reduced when [you] don’t get enough- or the right kind- of sleep.”

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September 22 2015

Freelance Statistics

I Love Stenography Logo (Cropped)Money Magazine’s October 2015 edition has an article dedicated to freelance statistics for the United States. Some of the interesting statistics include the following:

The 7 best cities for freelancers: Scottsdale, Los Angeles, Portland (OR), Austin, Boise, Nashville, Greensboro (NC).

The total number of freelancers: 30 million.

The number of freelancers who work at least 15 hours per week: 17,800,000.

Frequently overlooked tax deductions: Insurance, unpaid invoices, education courses.

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August 24 2015

Steno Fun Fact: How Many Words Are In The English Dictionary?

I Love Steno Logo (Cropped)The unabridged Webster’s dictionary has a reported 470,000 enteries. However, Dictionary.com states: “There are about a million English words, maybe more. It is hard to see how even a conservative estimate of English vocabulary could go much below a million words. If you allow all of scientific nomenclature, this could easily double the figure. For example, there are apparently some one million insects already described, with several million more awaiting description. The two largest dictionaries – the Oxford English Dictionary and Merriam-Webster’s Third New International Dictionary – each include around half a million words.”

Dictionary-building from my Webster’s dictionary made me look this information up. I wanted to know how far I had to go. Lol.

Love, Speed and Accuracy,

Elsie Villega

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