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Blog

My 2020 Book Reviews

December 21, 2020 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

I love to read. Normally I have a “professional” book going that I read in the morning before I dive into work and a “fun” or “historical novel” that I read in the evenings. Here are the books I’ve read in 2020 in three categories; Books that make me better. Historical / Non-Fiction. Just for Fun. I assume if you are reading this, you love reading books too…check out this interview I did recently with four other book lovers. Watch now.

Each link below will take you to a short summary I have written about the book. I do this so I can share book ideas with others and to help me remember which books I’ve read and the actual correct title and author 🙂

 Books That Make Me Better

Retirement by Design:  A Guided Workbook for Creating a Happy and Purposeful Future. By Ida O. Abbott, JD.

Life’s Great Question : Discover How YOU Contribute To The World. By Tom Rath. Author of Strengths Finder as well. Good stuff here.

Transpirations: Guidance for the Head & Heart through Career and Beyond. By Thomas Bachhuber, Ed.D. A view of the career process with through the filter that Thomas calls, Transpirations is a combination of “transitions” and “spirits”as he says, “transitions inspired by the spirit.” 

The Introvert’s Complete Career Guide: From Landing a Job to Surviving, Thriving, and Moving Up. By Jane Finkle. As an extrovert, I am always looking for insights on introverts to better understand them. 

Small Teaching Online Applying Learning Science in Online Classes. by Flower Darby with James M. Lang. I’ve been teaching online for 18 years and this reinforced much of what I know and gave me some great tips.

Virtual Training Basics by Cindy Huggett . Ditto to my above comment.

Small Teaching :Everyday Lessons from the Science of Learning. By James M. Lang. This is filled with research on how people learn and much of this was instituted into Flower Darby’s book above.

Creative Lives: An Anthology by Ed Murphy. It is a collection of stories from a variety of people who work in a creative industry and how they got into their jobs.


The Treasure Hunt of Your Life: Seeking Your Calling, Encountering God, Finding Yourself. By Rebecca Schlatter Liberty. I love how serendipity is included in this book of the “treasure hunt”.

 Walking with Glenn Berkenkamp: 35 Wellness Walks to Expand Awareness, Increase Vitality, and Reduce Stress. By Glenn Berkenkamp. My backpacking buddy Howard sent this to me, knowing that I love to do walking-meditation.

Historical and Non-Fiction

Salmon: A Fish, the Earth, and the History of Their Common Fate By Mark Kurlansky. This book is worth it for the pictures in it alone. But his world-wide research on what is killing off salmon is fascinating and frightening.

Midnight in Chernobyl: The Untold Story of the World’s Greatest Nuclear Disaster. By Adam Higginbotham. I knew this was a bad thing but had no idea of the depth of the event and how the Russians had hid it from the world for so long.

America’s Game: The epic story of how pro football captured a nation. By Michael MacCambridge. Yep, football and why it is America’s sport. Its great.

Beyond The Trees by Adam Shoalts. If you love the wilderness and canoeing, you will love this 2500 mile canoe trip across the top of Canada.

The Invention of Nature: Alexander Van Humboldt’s New World By Andrea Wulf. Van Humboldt was probably one of the last people on earth who literally knew everything there was to know about all of the sciences in the 1800’s and he was able to tie it all together to give us understanding of nature in a completely different way.

Road to Valor by Aili and Andres McConnon. Thank God people like Aili and Andres saved this story about the Italian bicyclist who rode in WWII. This should not be forgotten.

 JUST FOR FUN BOOKS

The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. John LeCarre

As I write this blog, I am finishing up Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy by John LeCarre who sadly passed away this month. I will have a link here later this week.

Port City Crossfire. By Gerry Boyle

Flood Tide. By Clive Cussler

Jim Peacock is the Principal at Peak-Careers Consulting and writes a weekly email for career practitioners. Peak-Careers offers discussion-based online seminars for career practitioners focused on meeting continuing education needs for CCSP, GCDF and BCC certified professionals as well as workshops for career practitioners and individual career coaching.

He is the author of A Field Guide for Career Practitioners: Helping Your Clients Create Their Next Move and the recipient of the 2020 Kenneth C. Hoyt Award from the National Career Development Association.

Sign up here to receive my  TOP 10 TIPS WHEN WORKING WITH AN UNDECIDED PERSON.  You will also receive the career practitioner’s weekly email on a variety of career topics, industry news, interesting events, and more. 

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: books

Small Teaching Online

December 14, 2020 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

Applying Learning Science in Online Classes by Flower Darby with James M. Lang. I read James Lang’s book called Small Teaching first, and I’m glad I did because this book refers back to much of his science and research in that book.

Because I have been teaching online for about 18 years, I learned that my instincts are good. So many of the things I have been doing were reinforced here with good solid research from Darby and Lang.

I have been using short videos doing welcome and wrap ups of each week for awhile now and they concluded this is a great technique to keep people online engaged. Online is a strange place in many ways because you can’t “see” how engaged a person is. So you have to create activities and use techniques to keep people engaged.

Holding office hours and finding ways for people to be able to reach me quickly is another tip I share with others. I now offer “office hours” regularly via zoom AND give people my online scheduler for 15 minute appointments if the office hours don’t work for them.

The key is to also think about offering multiple ways for people to engage, whether it is via a group discussion, paper sent only to me, video, screen-captures, whatever works for them. Be creative!

If you teach online or are thinking about teaching online, get this book and devour it. Take lots of notes because it was helpful to me as a seasoned online person but it will be chock-a-block full of tips for newbies.

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: online classes, teaching online

INTERVIEW: Reading books for inspiration and growth

December 14, 2020 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

This interview was inspired by my annual theme each December of reading. Mostly reading books for professional development but also for personal growth and entertainment.

My blog this month was on training your brain to do “deeper thinking” by reading books…any kind of books, but books that require more thinking than short articles or what you read on social media. (Read that blog).

My guests today are fellow readers, Crystal Debrah-Ekolie, Meg Gerry, Mark Danaher, and Betsy Sheets. We explore the following questions.

1. Tell us about your favorite professional book you read in 2020

2. Why is reading books so important to you? How does it help you in your work?

Note: See the books (title / author) they each talked about at the bottom of their bios (see below).

WATCH NOW

BIO’s

CRYSTAL DEBRAH-EKOLIE is the MD and Career Change Coach at Vorai Career Coaching.  She currently hosts the Change and Transition career podcast advising on career change and interviewing inspiring guests! Crystal is the author of 2 books “What They Don’t Tell You about University” and “What They Don’t Tell You When You Graduate” which help people to make challenging transitions in their lives. She is a non-practicing Solicitor Advocate where she previously represented clients across the UK. Website: https://voraicoach.com/ Free career clarity guide available: https://voraicoach.com/ Podcast: https://anchor.fm/candtpodcast

  • Book she talked about: Coaching for Performance: The Principles and Practice of Coaching and Leadership by Sir John Whitmore

MEG GERRY is an experienced Certified Career Services Provider (CCSP), Global Career Development Facilitator (GCDF) and Academic Advisor that manages a private practice, Academic & Career Advising Services, LLC, based in Kennebunk, Maine.  You may visit that website here:  Link

She is a member of the Adjunct Faculty at the University of Maryland-Global Campus, UMGC where she teaches Career Planning Management and Program and Career Exploration.  

Meg created and co-hosts the popular podcast called All Things College and Career where Meg and her cohost, Bobbie, interview College & Career Experts as well as professionals currently working in their field so listeners can learn what a typical day is like on the job, the advantages and drawbacks of an occupation and what sort of education and training is best to break into the field.   Meg is also a nationally trained FCD Instructor. 

  • Book she talked about Switchers by Dr. Dawn Graham.

BETSY SHEETS is a Career Coach with 20 years’ experience working in managerial roles in public, private and non-profit sectors, and is an entrepreneur with her private career coaching practice focusing on career exploration, transition, and the federal job application process. She is a co-founder of a non-profit veteran service organization located in San Diego for senior-level military members and spouses transitioning into the civilian workforce, where she’s served as program manager, board secretary and volunteers her time facilitating workshops and coaching participants. Visit her website: www.betsysheets.com

  • Books she talked about: You’re Not Listening – What You’re Missing and Why It Matters’ by Kate Murphy
  • Creative Career Coaching – Theory Into Practice’ by Liane Hambly and Ciara Bomford
  • A Field Guide for Career Practitioners. by Jim Peacock (Thank you 🙂

MARK DANAHER, LPC, BCC, CCSP is the founder of Mark Danaher Training and Coaching (www.markdanaher.com) and Retire to the Good Life (www.retiretothegoodlife.com). He helps successful business leaders reduce stress and burnout, regain balance, and thrive in their life and career. Mark has been a career counselor and coach for over 25 years, working with students and adults ranging from high school age through retirement. Through his private practice, Mark presents workshops and training for career professionals, universities, businesses, and organizations throughout the United States. His commitment is to help people find the work and life they love and deserve. He has a passion to for helping people reinvent themselves to be ready for their next adventure. Mark has served as President of the National Career Development Association (NCDA) and the Connecticut Career Counseling and Development Association. 

  • Book he talked about: The One Thing by Gary Keller

JIM PEACOCK is the Principal at Peak-Careers Consulting and writes a weekly career news email for career practitioners. Peak-Careers offers discussion-based online seminars for career practitioners focused on meeting continuing education needs for CCSP, GCDF and BCC certified professionals as well as workshops for career practitioners and individual career coaching. He is the author of A Field Guide for Career Practitioners: Helping Your Clients Create Their Next Move.

Sign up to receive my TOP 10 TIPS WHEN WORKING WITH AN UNDECIDED PERSON. You can also receive the career practitioners weekly career email which includes a variety of career topics, industry news, interesting events, and more.

Peak Careers - Professional Development for Careers

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: professional books, professionaldevelopment, readingbooks

Improve Your Deeper Thinking

December 7, 2020 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

Deep work is the ability to focus without distraction on a cognitively demanding task. Cal Newport.

How do you improve your deeper thinking? Cal Newport wrote about the importance of deeper thinking in his book, Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World. We live in a world filled with YouTube videos, Facebook, emails, Instagram, Pinterest, and more…which are ALL trying to keep you and your mind on them and only them.

One way to improve your deeper thinking is to read. Read books that will help you in your job, books that will inspire you, books that will take you on fantasy trips, and books that are pure entertainment. For those of you who are prolific readers, there is no need to continue reading this blog. Just go to the comments and share your thoughts 🙂

Improve your deeper thinking

For the occasional book readers or people who are not reading books these days, hear me out. TV, movies, YouTube videos, and social media can be very entertaining and serve a purpose. But recognize that it is “passive” thinking for your brain. You are taking in information that someone else is sending to you. There is not much ‘deep thinking’ here…which is fine. We all need entertainment. But if you want to stretch that brain a bit, let me suggest one simple way to do that: reading.

Here are some of the benefits, in my opinion, that come from reading books to help me with deeper thinking.

Increases concentration and focus. When I am reading a book, whether it is fiction or non-fiction, I have to focus on the words, the characters, the plot, or the meaning behind whatever the book is about. It is forcing my brain to leave the distractions of my everyday life behind and really focus on that book, at that time.

Memorization. In Cal Newport’s book, he talks about Daniel Kilov who can memorize a shuffled deck of cards, a string of one hundred random digits, or 115 abstract shapes. He has won silver medals in the Australian memory championships. There are tricks to doing this, but his point is that you can train your brain to memorize things that require the removal of all distraction…and gets us closer to deeper thinking. I am reading a John LeCarre novel now that requires me to memorize a variety of characters and it is a challenge, but I accept the challenge!

Connecting disparate thoughts. In James Lang’s book, Small Teaching, he talks about the difference between memorizing things and real knowledge of a topic. Experts, in all fields, have the ability to learn new information and to store it in their brains in ways that are “connected” to other things we already know. This improves your deeper thinking as well.

Stretching your brain. Your brain is like a muscle. It actually does not stop growing as we grow older; it improves on making connections between other things we have learned in our lives. This is why as people get older, they often get wiser. This is why as a career coach for over 25 years, I can come to different, often creative solutions to problems my clients present. By reading, you are stretching your brain and keeping it working, just like a muscle.

Slowing down. Even professional books that may be challenging to read can help us slow down. In mindfulness and meditation practices, people talk about the “monkey brain” that never stops thinking. We all have it. If you are just jumping from emails to Facebook, to YouTube, back to emails, from your phone to your computer to the TV, you are “feeding” your monkey brain. By taking even 15 minutes to read a book, you are calming your mind and teaching it to slow down.

I encourage you to pick up a book today. If not today, this week. Find a quiet place and a time each day at the same time and read. Turn off your phone or leave it in a different room. Even if it is for 10-15 minutes, you will begin to slow that distractible brain down and improve your deeper thinking.

In the mornings, I like to start my day with 10-15 minutes of reading a professional book, one that will help me in some way. What I like is, I start my day NOT chasing emails, and reading helps me to be slow…to read…to think…to be in the moment. In the evenings, I like to end my day with a historical book or a fiction book that helps me stop thinking about work. I tend to read for 15-45 minutes in the evenings and this is MUCH better than ending my day on the computer or the TV.

Think about it. If you read 15 minutes per day at an average of 250 words per minute, that’s nearly 4000 words in a setting, and 26,000+ words each week. That would get you through about a third to half of the average adult book.

Want to improve your deeper thinking?

Grab a book each day and make a routine out of it and let me know how you feel in a few weeks. 

Jim Peacock is the Principal at Peak-Careers Consulting and writes a weekly email for career practitioners. Peak-Careers offers discussion-based online seminars for career practitioners focused on meeting continuing education needs for CCSP, GCDF and BCC certified professionals as well as workshops for career practitioners and individual career coaching.

He is the author of A Field Guide for Career Practitioners: Helping Your Clients Create Their Next Move and the recipient of the 2020 Kenneth C. Hoyt Award from the National Career Development Association.

Sign up here to receive my  TOP 10 TIPS WHEN WORKING WITH AN UNDECIDED PERSON.  You will also receive the career practitioner’s weekly email on a variety of career topics, industry news, interesting events, and more. 

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Filed Under: Career Tagged With: deeper thinking, reading

The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. John LeCarre

December 2, 2020 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

I was in need of a fantasy book after reading a three books on teaching and teaching online. My neighbor stopped me on my walk the other day and we ended up talking about books and how he needed to start getting rid of some of his. Me mentioned his John LeCarre books and I said, drop them off if you want… and the rest is history.

It has been a while since I read any John LeCarre but this was another great one. I read it in the evenings to get my mind out of all the “things to do” and to “quiet” my stress & anxiety levels before bed. Yes, spy’s and people getting killed really helped 🙂

Just when I thought I knew what was going on, there would be a twist. Some uncertainty as to what was true or might be true and who was the “good guy” and who were the “bad guys”. I really had to pay attention and because of that I finished this book pretty quickly.

If you like spy novels with twists and you like to be surprised at the end of books, you’ll love this one.

Filed Under: Book Reviews

Walking with Glenn Berkenkamp

November 27, 2020 by Jim Peacock 1 Comment

35 Wellness Walks to Expand Awareness, Increase Vitality, and Reduce Stress. By Glenn Berkenkamp

I enjoy walking. I love backpacking and hiking. My backpacking buddy, Howard, bought me this book recently and has helped me understand why I love walking so much. This book 35 different walks with details of why you might do them, how, and what you might learn from doing them.

They range from walking meditation (which I do nearly daily), Full Moon Walk, Gratitude Walk, Slow Motion Walk, and all the way to a Backward Walk.

The big lesson here is focusing. Focusing on the present moment you are in and connecting the movement of walking to your head, heart, and hara (your center).

I particularly embraced his GBS start for every walk. You start every walk by turning off your cell phone (or leaving it behind).
G- ground yourself to the earth
B- find your breath. Take a couple of deep breaths.
S- Sense the space around you.

I find myself when I walk taking the time to do his GBS start and really “think” about where I am before I just start cruising. If you enjoy walking and want to explore ways to go deeper in ‘being present’ in your walks, this is a great book for you.

Filed Under: Book Reviews

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