Interview with A Founder: Conor McLaughlin (Co-founder of 99.co)
By David Wu (AppWorks Associate)
Conor McLaughlin was previously the Co-founder and CTO of 99.co, the real estate marketplace in Singapore and Indonesia. He spent six and a half years at the startup, whose backers include Sequoia Capital, 500 Startups, and Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin, helping to grow it into a $100 million company. As a member of AppWorks Accelerator #21, he is currently working on his next big project, a yet-to-be-named language learning startup.
【What advice do you have for first-time founders?】
First, you need to decide: do I want to run a sprint or a marathon? For a sprint, you may be open to acquisition from the beginning, delay non-startup aspects of your life, give yourself two years where you drop everything to test an idea, choose to raise more money earlier on and thus be more diluted, or do anything else that implies a shorter time horizon. Typically 1-5 years - this can lead to a major boon in a short period of time if executed well. If you decide you are in the sprinting business, you will most likely be pushed toward binary outcomes because of how many investors and employees you have on your cap table. As a first-time founder, you need to be clear with yourself on what you are willing to put on the line. As Reid Hoffman says, it’s like jumping off a cliff and building a plane on the way down… hopefully you build a plane in time.
If you are running a marathon, you are deciding that your competitive advantage is consistency over intensity. You are in this for 10, 15 years. With this time horizon, you will realize you need ways to metabolize stress and maintain emotional, spiritual, and mental health. You need to maintain relationships with friends, family, and romantic partners. When you are looking at this 10 year period, you realize the people around you can only put up with so much. Unfortunately, while work is something people can generally bounce back from, there are many things in life where you cannot - an example is your relationship with your partner. If you’re going to run a marathon, you need to be clear with yourself about what time you have for other aspects of your life and what time you have for your company. Eventually you need to learn what the right speed is where you can run as long as possible. It’s amazing how often it is that those people that keep going, assuming you have chosen the right problem to solve, eventually find daylight. Part of that is just lasting long enough.
Second, you need to revisit and continually ask yourself: should I still be running a sprint or a marathon? Circumstances change. Maybe you sprinted for the first two years to secure interesting results and funding; now it's time to transition to a marathon and clean up the life debt a bit. Or inversely, maybe you're finally leaving the trough of sorrow and it's time to sprint for a bit. Most founders will be in a long distance race with periodic sprinting. From my observation, founders most often stop because of two reasons: They either A) run out of money or B) run out of energy. There’s plenty of advice out there for scenario A (hint: don’t). But in my experience, scenario B is far more pernicious and dangerous to would-be successful founders. If you are in a marathon but fail to pace yourself and run it like one long sprint, you are unlikely to make it to the end.
Much founder advice speaks to this: Don’t let your startup make you fat. Exercise 5-10% of the time. Pick up a hobby outside of your startup. Go home for holidays. All of it leads back to one thing: You need to take care of yourself. Because injury will be far worse for your progress than being a little slower. “Slow is smooth, smooth is fast”, as the US Navy Seals say. This is surprisingly difficult advice for intrinsically motivated founders to follow, because in the event of failure, it makes them vulnerable to the thought, “Well, you didn’t work hard enough.” But for those that already have the hustle, your job is to avoid the moment of epiphany where you look in the mirror and think, “This isn’t worth it.”
All founders will have to sacrifice some things. The point is to not sacrifice everything. It will make you more resilient. Not less. It will give you the space to see situations more objectively and make better decisions. And most importantly, it will let you love what you do because it will remind you that the work isn’t just in service of yourself, it’s in the service of others. I do not think you can judge hard work over a day, or even a year, but I do think you can judge hard work over 5-10 years. Hard work is not just about the next 1-2 months. There will be times when you need to run as fast as possible, but if that is happening all the time you are probably not being smart about the situation. So don’t hurt yourself, be consistent, keep disciplined, and keep going.
Lastly, focus on your metaskills. Public speaking, reading, writing - skills applied in every aspect of your life. Generally what they reflect is learning how to think better. As a founder you need to think about - how can I think more clearly, be more creative, rigorous, analytical? As Warren Buffett and others have said: I have never seen a successful person that did not read as often as they could. Actual books and long form scare a lot of people. That’s your competitive advantage. Read blog posts from smart people, follow smart people on Twitter, listen to podcasts. Always be focused on how you can develop yourself to think better. Fostering the habit of improving your thinking will foster discipline in yourself. And discipline will let you turn that rigorous thinking into action.
【I imagine running the “race” has been especially tough this year. How have you gotten through 2020?】
I have leaned on routine and community. I’ve spent a lot of time trying to foster discipline in myself. I make my bed every morning, meditate every morning, make sure that I go to the gym 3-4 times a week. There’s so much uncertainty in both the world and the entrepreneurial space. Keeping certain things consistent gives me a spine to my life that I can fall back on. If I’m not feeling well, my discipline takes over and I’ll go to the gym. That helps me relieve stress - falling back to routine and having some mainstays of consistency and structure.
And community - it’s been the big mental health zeitgeist of this year. Everyone is recognizing that without the people around us, our mental health diminishes. Joining AppWorks was very intentional so I could surround myself with like-minded people who could question me, hold me accountable, and inspire me. And also just forming personal connections where I felt that I was still taking care of my mental health by connecting with others. Being a founder is an incredibly lonely journey. In the early days, there’s not a lot of people around. Later, when you do hire lots of people, you need to be the boss, the leader - for certain things, you can’t tell the employees everything, and even if you do, there will always be a bit of distance. You need people to relate to - people want to be seen for who they are, and appreciated for what they give. When you are a founder, sometimes it’s hard to feel that you are seen. So I intentionally put myself in situations where I can be inspired, be held accountable, and more importantly connect with others, and feel that I’m not alone. And that me and my co-founders are part of a communal journey with those around us.
【When you talk about how to run the race, I get the sense that you’re drawing from previous experiences and, perhaps, mistakes. What are the mistakes you’ve made in your founder journey and the takeaways?】
I think you could take a calendar, point to a random week, and we could list out all the mistakes from that week (laughs). I do subscribe to Steve Jobs’ philosophy: mistakes will happen, but mistakes happening means we are making decisions. Not making decisions is perhaps the biggest mistake. It’s often the reason for frustration, loss of speed, loss of momentum - so many of the issues you encounter in startups. Not making enough mistakes is probably the #1 mistake that I’ve made.
Second, going back to my advice to first-time founders, is not understanding what game I’m playing. Not understanding that all the money in the world is not going to be worth it if your spouse or partner decides to leave you because you have relegated them to a second-class citizen in your life. I think I forgot that at points. There is more to life than just the company.
Third, be careful about who you choose to work with. At minimum, if you’re doing a standard 8-9 hours at the office five times a week, that’s a lot of time with those people. You want to like the people that you work with - you want to know they’re high integrity, you want to respect their values, and you want to have common values. Choosing the right people that give you energy rather than take it away just makes running the marathon so much easier.
【We welcome all AI, Blockchain, or Southeast Asia founders to join AppWorks Accelerator: https://bit.ly/3r4lLR8 】
同時也有4部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過39萬的網紅Chen Lily,也在其Youtube影片中提到,Lingoda 90天挑戰: http://bit.ly/ChenLilySprint Lily獨家推薦碼: JOIN107 3/20更新 【參與衝刺班/超級衝刺班,要繳交訂金49元以及學費!】 不是只有繳交49歐元的訂金喔! 訂金之外還有學費! 訂金之外還有學費! 訂金之外還有學費! 以英文...
「second language acquisition」的推薦目錄:
- 關於second language acquisition 在 AppWorks Facebook 的精選貼文
- 關於second language acquisition 在 Alexander Wang 王梓沅英文 Facebook 的最佳貼文
- 關於second language acquisition 在 Alexander Wang 王梓沅英文 Facebook 的最佳解答
- 關於second language acquisition 在 Chen Lily Youtube 的最佳解答
- 關於second language acquisition 在 POPA Channel Youtube 的精選貼文
- 關於second language acquisition 在 POPA Channel Youtube 的最佳貼文
second language acquisition 在 Alexander Wang 王梓沅英文 Facebook 的最佳貼文
#英語師資培訓公開課
2020 年發生了世界很多鳥事,但對我來說是鳥中帶有特別意義的一年。在多年的籌劃、思維後,終於推出了「英語師資培訓」課程,在第一梯成功培訓了20多位的英文老師。
我也履行了當年我對我在哥倫比亞大學恩師的承諾:把語言習得科學研究那麼艱澀的內容,用接地氣的方式帶給更多想要變成英文老師的人、跟已經是英文老師但想要持續進步的人。
課堂中的大家有著各式各樣的背景。有現任哈佛大學教育學院研究生、有現任師大附中英文老師、百齡高中英文老師、英語內容創作者(社群媒體)、師大口筆譯所在學生、知名托福補教老師、知名多益補教老師、知名五星級飯店的英語內訓人員等等。
在總共12週的師培課程中,我帶著大家用 doctoral seminar 的方式,研討了超過 40 篇在世界頂尖 Applied Linguistics、TESOL、Second Language Acquisition 等等領域的重磅文章,配合2本語言習得經典教科書的精選內容 (Second Language Acquisition: An Introductory Course 和 Understanding Second Language Acquisition)。
這些重磅文章像是:
“Principles of Instructed Language Learning” Rod Ellis
“Task-based Language Learning: A Review of Issues” Peter Robinson
“Optimal input for language learning” Michael Long
"The Case for Narrow Listening” Stephen Krashen
“The Effects of Task Repetition on linguistic output” Gass & Mackey
更重要的是,我們一起討論、反思研究和 “classroom practice” 的相關性,讓大家真的在學習時、教學時碰到問題時,有個堅實的依據,可以用科學的視角,解決教學問題。
在課堂中,我們研討了各式各樣極為重要的主題,包含了
• corrective feedback 應該要怎樣給會比較有效?
• input-based 和 output-based 的教學各自的優缺點為何?
• 假定 “Without attention, without learning.” 這句話為真,老師有什麼方法可以操縱學生的 “attention” 呢?
• receptive skills (閱讀、聽力) 和 productive skills (寫作、口說) 的培養包含怎樣的練習、認知機制?
• classroom instruction 的優勢和限制各是什麼呢?
• 普遍被認為最 implicit 的「聽力能力」,第二語言習得研究顯示應該如何教呢?
• 單字教材應該如何設計、應該如何教,才符合「字彙習得」實證研究 (empirical research) 的結果?
• extensive reading、intensive reading、repeated reading、narrow reading 各自的優缺點為何?應該如何讓帶學生閱讀?
如果你已經是、或未來想成為英文老師,也想用科學理論做教學,歡迎你一起來聽英語師培公開課!(也歡迎私訊索取線上試聽)
🔥 11/2 (一) 週間場:
https://www.accupass.com/go/nteltt1102
🔥 11/21 (六) 週末場:
https://www.accupass.com/go/nteltt1121
🔥 我們的第一梯英語師培老師:
https://ntetaiwan.com/ltt-results/
second language acquisition 在 Alexander Wang 王梓沅英文 Facebook 的最佳解答
#留言索取學習僵化paper #擁抱你的錯誤
【會有些文法錯誤永遠改不了、有些發音永遠發不好嗎?】
✔︎ 文章 highlight: 錯誤是什麼?錯誤是學生努力、嘗試用自己的方式理解這個語言的軌跡。
「若怎樣怎樣,就可能會學習僵化 (fossilization)」是很多台灣老師、甚至是教授,常常用來講述學習者「永遠無法將一個錯誤根除」的可怕現象。
在紐約哥倫比亞大學求學時,我的教授其實就是現在全世界在研究學習僵化的最知名的學者,也因此我的碩士論文寫的主題也是學習僵化。因此今天想跟教授、老師們、以及在學習英文中的你,分析如何看待「錯誤」。
Fossilization 這個詞最早由 Larry Selinker 教授在 1972 年 Interlanguage 一篇論文當中提出。當初對這個現象的定義還很粗糙不明確,但很不幸的,這也是99% 台灣教授在念博班時、英文老師上教程時學到的定義。
Fossilization 基本上就是「學習者將在某些錯誤上永遠無法根除」的現象。相反地,Dr. Selinker 也將那些「最終會消失」的錯誤(像是錯講成 Do you know where is the restroom?) ,名為 stabilization,比一輩子註定的 fossilization 還要樂觀許多。
即便如此,很多英語系教授跟老師們,還是喜歡講比較悲觀的 fossilization. 我要特別呼籲英語系教授、台灣英文老師們,別亂用「學習僵化」 (fossilization) 這個詞彙。
時間快轉,在 2004 年時,Larry Selinker 的學生 Dr. ZhaoHong Han 出版了 Fossilization In Adult Second Language Acquisition (第二語言習得中的學習僵化現象) 一書,重新將學習僵化定義為:Cessation of learning in spite of adequate motivation
to learn, abundant exposure to input, and ample opportunities for communicative practice (Han, 2004).
意思就是,要在有 3 個條件都滿足,錯誤仍然一直存在時,我們才能初步判定可能有學習僵化的可能性:
(1) 學習者有有強烈動機
(2) 有很多的輸入 (input)
(3) 充足的練習機會。
在台灣的學習環境下,這3個條件常常沒有一次滿足。如果只是學習者一直犯一個錯 (像是一直說 I suggest you to…或是 discuss 後面亂加 about… 口說裡頭 Although 後面一直加 but ) 我們頂多能說是 stablization,身為老師的我們,要做的事情反而是更努力用其他的方式,幫助學生學得更好,而不是給他們下判決。
有學習僵化現象嗎?有(我會再寫一篇文章)。但在條件沒滿足之前,不應該將錯誤看成什麼罪大惡極的東西。
錯誤是什麼?錯誤是學生努力、嘗試用自己的方式理解的軌跡。
如果你對於 fossilization 有興趣,請在下面留言「我對學習僵化的 paper 有興趣」我會內信給你喔!
second language acquisition 在 Chen Lily Youtube 的最佳解答
Lingoda 90天挑戰: http://bit.ly/ChenLilySprint
Lily獨家推薦碼: JOIN107
3/20更新
【參與衝刺班/超級衝刺班,要繳交訂金49元以及學費!】
不是只有繳交49歐元的訂金喔!
訂金之外還有學費!
訂金之外還有學費!
訂金之外還有學費!
以英文班為例,第一個月219歐元,第二以及第三個月269歐元
如果完成Super Sprint的話,會退回【49歐元訂金】以及【全額的學費 (219+269+269歐元)】
如果完成Sprint的話,會退回【49歐元訂金】以及【全額的學費 (219+269+269歐元)的一半】
【如果沒有取消,衝刺班結束後回直接續訂扣款】
這期的衝刺班將於7/6結束
7/7會直接續訂扣款!不會另外告知!
如果不想被扣款,一定要在 6/7-7/6之間取消Lingoda訂閱
如果不想被扣款,一定要在 6/7-7/6之間取消Lingoda訂閱
如果不想被扣款,一定要在 6/7-7/6之間取消Lingoda訂閱
以下是關於續訂的規則:
35.參與者同意於衝刺班活動結束時將自動續訂每個月的付費訂購(包含折扣)。第一筆款項將於2020年7月7日(中歐時間)收取。本條件不適用於參加「商用英文衝刺班」活動的學員。
36.如果參與者不希望每月訂購,則他們有責任在開始日期之前取消訂購,否則將不予退還。可以在衝刺班活動的最後一個月(第3個月)於參與者的Lingoda個人帳戶取消訂購。在衝刺班活動的最後一個月之前無法取消訂購。
【攸關權益,請詳閱】Lingoda官方衝刺班規則:https://www.lingoda.com/downloads/sprint/Apr2020/SprintRulesApr20Zh.pdf
如果還有不清楚的地方請聯繫:contact@en.lingoda.com
Ref:
Lyster, R., Sato, M. (2013). Skill acquisition theory and the role of practice in L2 development. In Mayo, M., Mangado, M., & Martinez Adrian, M (Eds.), Contemporary approaches to second language acquisition (pp. 71-91). Philadelphia: John Benjamins
🌲想用英文自信聊天?
▸ Lily英文聊天術課程:https://speaking.cool
📚想準備出國留學?
▸ Lily新制托福課程:https://bit.ly/2GIs3mC
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我是Lily Chen.加拿大McGill University語言教育碩士
我的頻道分享英文學習、語言學,以及留學相關資訊
希望能藉由應用語言學的知識,讓更多人成為自信的bilingual (雙語者)
second language acquisition 在 POPA Channel Youtube 的精選貼文
英語這種國際語言世界通行,但每個地方總有不同,有美式、英式……,不知何時開始,還有「港式」……香港人之間溝通無間,但外國人肯定聽得一頭霧水,我們明明由三歲開始學英文,但學了十幾二十年,都無法好好運用英語,到底是為什麼呢?
參考資料
Monica Goh. (英國文化協會幼兒英語課程高級導師). Tips for parents helping their child learn English at home
Saka, D. (2015, February 17). British Council Interviews Stephen Krashen part 2 of 3. Retrieved from YouTube
S. D., Krashen. (2009, July). Principles and Practice in Second Language Acquisition.
R. W., McCaul. (2016, February 11). Can we learn a second language like we learned our first? Retrieved from British Council
S., Krashen. (n.d.). The Comprehension Hypothesis Extended. In Input Matters in SLA. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. (pp. 81-94).
S., Krashen. (2004). The Case for Narrow Reading. In Language Magazine 3(5):17-19.
second language acquisition 在 POPA Channel Youtube 的最佳貼文
曾有研究指,如果父母放棄母語,而改用外語和子女溝通,可能會令小朋友在語言和智力發展上輸在起跑線。很多人不同意這樣的主張,有人說「我外國留學回來」、「在外資公司工作十幾年」、「英文非常流利」、「我不認為跟子女只用英語溝道有甚麼問題」。
其實我們只是希望各位父母明白,除非你的英語水平已經達至母語程度,否則放棄用母語跟子女溝通,對小朋友的語言習得會有多方面的影響。
參考資料
Mampe,Birgit,Angela D. Friederici,Anne Christophe & Kathleen Wermke.2009.Newborns' cry melody is shaped by their native language.Current Biology 19.1994-7
Proverbio AM, Adorni R, Zani A. Inferring native language from early bio-electrical activity. Biol Psychol. 2009 Jan;80(1):52-63. Epub 2008 Feb 26. PubMed PMID: 18378060.
Hart B and Risley T (1995). "Meaningful differences in the everyday experience of young American children". Baltimore: P.H. Brookes.
second language acquisition 在 Introducing Second Language Acquisition 3/e - 文鶴網路書店 的相關結果
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second language acquisition 在 Stephen Krashen's Theory of Second Language Acquisition 的相關結果
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second language acquisition 在 Second-language acquisition - Wikipedia 的相關結果
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