With the introduction of various technologies into our everyday lives, multitasking has become a normal ____ of our busy days. Doing more tasks ought to mean that we ____. But does it really? Take this example from a typical day at my job. Last week, during a meeting, I decided to send a quick email to a client. A minute later, I had to send another email with the ____ I had forgotten. In my third email to him, I had to apologize for sending the wrong attachment. When I eventually focused on the meeting, I realized someone was asking me a question, but because I wasn’t paying attention, I couldn’t answer it and I had to ask him to repeat it. Embarrassing. Sound familiar? Don’t worry – you’re not alone. Research shows that when we multitask, we are actually playing a ____ on ourselves. We think we’re doing more, but actually we’re not. In fact, multitasking can lead to a 40 percent ____ in productivity. Researchers say that we don’t really multitask at all; we “switch-task,” and when we switch from one thing to another, we’re simply interrupting ourselves to do something else. I did some thinking about all of this and decided to do some ____ for myself. For one week, I would make an effort not to multitask. During that week, I discovered two surprising things. First, I made great progress on ____ projects. I stayed with each project when it got hard, and it really made a difference. Now, I no longer avoid tough assignments, I don’t get ____ by other things, and I finish one job before I go on to another – even if the job is driving me crazy! Second, my stress levels dropped ____. Research shows that multitasking isn’t just inefficient, it’s stressful, and I found that was true. It was actually a relief to finish one thing before going on to the next. So how can we change our multi-tasking ways? First, get ____ of interruptions. I now know that when I’m working, I should ____ the temptation to check email, and I make sure my phone is turned off. Second, set yourself a ____ deadline. If you think you have to give a presentation in 30 minutes, you might not want to answer that interrupting phone call! Single-tasking to meet a tight deadline will also reduce your stress levels – ____ you meet it, of course! My experiment ____ me that I don’t have to accept multitasking as a way of life. If you make up your mind to avoid distractions and concentrate on one job at a time, you really can achieve more.
0%
multitasking
Ibahagi
Ibahagi
Ibahagi
ni
Akinoshsmirnov
I-edit ang Nilalaman
I-print
Naka-embed
Higit pa
Mga Assignment
Leaderboard
Magpakita pa
Huwag gaanong magpakita
Ang leaderboard na ito ay kasalukuyang pribado. I-click ang
ibahagi
upang gawin itong pampubliko.
Ang leaderboard na ito ay hindi pinagana ng may-ari ng aktibidad.
Hindi pinagana ang leaderboard na ito dahil ang iyong mga pagpipilian ay naiiba sa may-ari ng aktibidad..
Ibalik ang Opsyon
Kumpletuhin ang pangungusap
ay isang bukas na template. Hindi ito bumubuo ng mga marka para sa isang leaderboard.
Kailangan maglog-in
Estilo ng visual
Mga Font
Kailangan ang subscription
Mga pagpipilian
Magpalit ng template
Ipakita lahat
Mas marami pang format ang lilitaw habang nilalaro ang aktibidad.
Buksan ang mga resulta
Kopyahin ang link
QR code
Tanggalin
Ibalik ng awtomatikong pag-save:
?