English, asked by frezertibebu, 1 day ago

problems you face when you listen to a lecture in paragraph in 100 words please

Answers

Answered by kumarisoniasonia2488
1

Answer:

I were still a school kid now, then I’d almost certainly be classified as having ADHD. Sitting in class and listening to teachers was pure agony. I couldn’t sit still and just wanted to get away. I sometimes escaped into my own thoughts or fell asleep but teachers usually wouldn’t let me do that. A few times, I managed to sleep in class with upright back and open eyes. A few other times, I sculled a few beers before class but that only made time go even slower.

At uni, I slept through almost all of my lectures until I stopped going to them.

Now as an academic, I avoid most seminars and conference talks if I can. However, for the first three years of my position, I was the organisor of weekly local seminars as well as co-organisor of a higher-profile joint colloquium between Sydney Uni and my own UNSW. It would be my job to find good speakers, arrange dates and venues for their talks, take them and others out to lunch, and so on. It would also be my job to sit in the first row in the auditoriums and appear interested and give moral support, and to ask good questions afterwards. Unfortunately, despite my best efforts, I invariably fell asleep after five minutes, not the best support for my speakers, especially not when occasionally snoring loudly.

Although I find it harder than most to sit still in one place and be awake, I would not call my condition a disorder, and it seems really crazy that kids are given strong drugs to fight such conditions. I’m highly productive but almost never sit at a desk. It’s neither natural or healthy to sit for hours at a time, let alone being bored out of your mind in some classroom or lecture theatre. Work and learning can’t always be fun and exciting, and you need to learn discipline and how to overcome procrastination and get stuff done - but the classroom or lecture theatre or work office are not necessarily great environments for that, and many teachers and lecturers can be boring as hell. More personalised environments and better delivery methods are possible. Having to sit for hours and days and months and years is imprisonment and torture, and a waste of resources. The same is true of many (most?) white collar jobs: tragic wastes of people’s lives and contributing negatively to society and to our world.

Answered by GodZiini26
1

Explanation:

In our lives we are never happy, all times we carry our problems and stress with us. This locks our thinking about other topics around us and one problem also occurs while listening to lectures-Not wanting to listen to the lecture, because it is boring or we are so stressed that we cannot prioritize listening to that lecture on place of thinking about next step in our game.

Other natural problem is lack of knowledge due to which it seems like the lecture is gliding past our head, which makes people drowsy, and at last the main problem is interest, because usually these days youths don't listen to stuffs not helpful for them, but acc.. to me hearing a lecture is on you, but the inspiration of hearing to lecture and full might to store it in your brain comes from a strong" WHY?"

If your "WHY?" for doing a work is strong no power in this world can make you stop to reach your destiny either it is fixed for eternal

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