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I went to the bizarre Brooklyn preschool for adults, and I totally loved it

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adult preschool floorchestra

OK, let me start by saying that I'm a well-adjusted 24-year-old working and living in New York City.

Now, I recently attended a preschool targeted toward adults, and I loved it.

Preschool Mastermind is a month-long program that seeks to reconnect grown-ups with their inner child. Rather than treat students like kids, founder and head teacher Michelle Joni Lapidos places them in scenarios that get the creative juices flowing and open up the imagination.

Lapidos' class has sold out since January, and I now see why.

When I first heard about Preschool Mastermind, an artsy-fartsy playhouse for grown-ups who seek to "release their inner child," I cringed all over.



The media had not been kind to Michelle Joni Lapidos, the "manic pixie dream girl" behind the academy. Many harped on the program's cost.



For the month-long course, hosted in Miss Joni's two-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn, participants pay what they can, between $333 and $999. Art supplies, snacks, and class-trip expenses are not included.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider







Everything you need to know about men's dress shoes

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Part of dressing is knowing the terminology.

The only way to know what you want is to ask for it by name. Our friends at Nice Laundry have created the perfect cheat sheet to get up to speed quickly.

If you don't know your derbies from your eyelets, or your vamps from your Oxfords, this infographic is your perfect starting place.

All the shoes shown in the graphic are in style – pick the one that speaks to you.

NICE LAUNDRY DRESS SHOES INFOGRAPHIC

SEE ALSO: The most popular type of men's shoes in every decade

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A 14-year-old just beat one of the best players in the world at the US Chess Championship

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Sam Sevian US Chess Championship

Sam Sevian is 14 years old, but also one of the youngest chess Grandmasters in the world – and the youngest GM in US history.

He's playing in his first US Chess Championship – and he just took out Wesley So, the number 8 ranked player on the planet! 

That's right, a kid who can't even drive has taken down a Super-GM, rated 2788 (Sevian is 2531, just slightly above the GM threshold).

Wesley So is supposed to be a challenger to Magnus Carlsen, the current World Chess Champion. The number-two US player isn't supposed to be losing in the third round to a youngster who just became a GM.

But this is chess these days. In the era of computer analysis, with players about to study thousands of games and hundreds of variations, GMs are younger and better than ever before. 

Hey, this was a risk that the two top US players, Hikaru Nakamura (number 3 in the world) and So (number 8 in the world) were taking by playing the US Chess Championship. The field is full of young players who are rated well below the Super-GM level, defined as being rated 2700 and above.

It was a brilliant win for Sevian – his first showdown with a top player, playing with the black pieces, which was a huge disadvantage. Basically, So committed a blunder as his clock was running down – after being in a relatively solid position for much of the game.

Only three rounds into the the US Chess Championship and it's already getting wild and crazy!

This was the final position. With that powerful rook check and Sevian holding a bishop and a pair of knights, it was inevitable that So would get checkmated, so he resigned.

So-Sevian Final Position

SEE ALSO: The best US chess player is taking a big risk by competing in his national championship

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4 reasons Finland's schools are better

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finland finnish womenFinland recently dropped the news that it's revamping its already-unorthodox education system to teach students broad, multi-disciplinary topics.

Finland is an innovative country when it comes to education, and its innovation yields results. It's consistently one of the highest performing developed countries on the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA), an important tool for measuring education systems worldwide.

While Finland's ranking dropped to 12 in the most recent PISA ranking, it's still a lot higher than the US ranking of 36.

Here are some things Finland does differently — and arguably better — than the US when it comes to education.

1. Better standardized tests

Finnish students only take one standardized test during their entire primary and secondary schooling.

By contrast, the US, driven by No Child Left Behind and Common Core mandates, requires students in third through eighth grade to take annual standardized tests to track their performance. Critics claim constant testing doesn't make students any smarter but instead creates a "teaching to the test" environment in schools.

Karen Magee, the president of the largest teachers union in New York, went so far as to urge parents to boycott standardized tests recently.

The Finnish test, called the National Matriculation Examination, is taken at the end of high school and graded by teachers, not computers, as Pasi Sahlberg a professor and former director general at the Finland Ministry of Education, explained to the Washington Post in 2014. The test also doesn't shy away from controversial or complex topics.

Here are some typical questions, according to Sahlberg:

“In what sense are happiness, good life and well-being ethical concepts?”

“Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels predicted that a socialist revolution would first happen in countries like Great Britain. What made Marx and Engels claim that and why did a socialist revolution happen in Russia?” 

Sahlberg added, in the Washington Post, "Students are regularly asked to show their ability to cope with issues related to evolution, losing a job, dieting, political issues, violence, war, ethics in sports, junk food, sex, drugs, and popular music. Such issues span across subject areas and often require multi-disciplinary knowledge and skills."

2. More time for play

Students in Finland spend relatively little time on homework, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). A 2014 study of 15-year-olds around the world by the OECD said that on average, Finnish students spend 2.8 hours a week on homework. This contrasts noticably from the 6.1 hours American students spend per week.

Screen Shot 2015 03 30 at 4.44.31 PMFinns place a lot of value on free time and play. By law, teachers must give students a 15-minute break for every 45 minutes of instruction.

It's a different story in the US where kids typically get less than half an hour of recess every day.

This "deficit of play" for US students may lead to additional anxiety and other mental health issues, the psychologist and research professor Peter Gray has written. 

3. College is free 

In Finland, not only are bachelor degree programs completely free of tuition fees, so are master and doctoral programs. Students pursue higher education goals without the mountains of student loan debt that many American students face. And the same goes for foreign students. Tuition is free for any student accepted into a college or graduate program in Finland.

This contrasts greatly with the US, where the average student loan debt now approaches $30,000, according to the Institute for College Access and Success's 2014 report. 

4. Elevated teaching profession

Screen Shot 2015 04 02 at 2.56.33 PMIn Finland, teaching is one of the most revered professions with a relatively high barrier to entry.

Only one in 10 students who apply to teacher education programs are admitted, according to the Center on International Education Benchmarking (CIEB).

Teachers in Finland are treated like professors at universities, and they teach fewer hours during the day than US teachers, with more time devoted to lesson planning.

They also get paid slightly more in Finland. The average teacher in the US makes about $41,000 a year, compared to $43,000 in Finland, according to OECD data.

And while teachers in the US make less money than many other countries, the OECD found that they work the longest hours of all. 

It's easy to understand why America's teachers — who are overworked and get relatively little respect — might not be as effective as teachers in Finland.

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14 things you didn't know about Whole Foods

New York hipsters are being encouraged to move to Detroit

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detroit billboards in new york

New York residents may have noticed new billboards throughout the city encouraging them to move to Detroit.

There’s one in SoHo, another at the Ace Hotel in Midtown, and the other two billboards are in Bushwick. One example reads, “Detroit: Just west of Bushwick” while another says, “Detroit: Be left alone” below a rainbow.

“I think Detroit is a compelling place for people to be moving,” explained Philip Kafka of Prince Media Co., the boutique billboard company behind the campaign, to Business Insider. “I can do things there as a young guy that I could never imagine doing in New York or any other major market in the US.”

Kafka is currently opening a Thai restaurant along with a few partners in Detroit’s Corktown neighborhood which will be called KATOI, and is trying to get people to work there. “We plan to hire between 15 and 20 people,” one of the co-partners in KATOI, Courtney Henriette, told Metro Times. “We are looking for general kitchen and service staff.”

And while part of the campaign is to drum up awareness for the upcoming restaurant, New York-based Kafka said another, separate campaign is to encourage people — particularly artists and young creatives — to move to the financially troubled city. Kafka himself owns property in Detroit, and believes it is on the rise.

A photo posted by @lillysmith48 on Mar 18, 2015 at 5:03pm PDT

“Every time people find a neighborhood in New York, ‘the man’ moves there,” he told us. “You always have to keep moving east or west. Bushwick was east of Williamsburg, which was east of the Lower East Side, and so on.”  

Detroit, he says, is merely going a little west instead. Kafka also insists that the scene is becoming more hip and appealing to millennials.  

“Detroit is a lot more spread out than New York, so it’s hard to see what’s happening,” he said. “But once it’s connected and people see what Detroit is about, it’s new and unexpected.”

“It also has a great history, and we can never ignore that,” Kafka added.

Henriette agrees, and told Metro News that the right kind of New Yorkers will “recognize the value in Detroit.” 

Time will tell whether the romantic billboards will encourage a new wave of residents to uproot from their tiny, overpriced apartments and make their way to Detroit, but for now at least it has it’s own hashtag #movetodetroit.

A photo posted by @siobhankiely88 on Feb 22, 2015 at 4:44pm PST

SEE ALSO: The 15 most expensive places to live in America

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These guys are turning trash into beautiful skateboards

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Artist Mac Premo was contacted by the World Wildlife Fund to contribute to their "Everyday Things" collection for Earth Hour. The collection's goal was to repurpose daily objects to show how creativity can lead the way in encouraging people to live a greener lifestyle. Mac collaborated with skateboarding company Sanford Shapes to create skateboard decks made entirely out of construction buckets. 

Shot & directed by Mac Premo
Edited by Ann Lupo 
Production team: Pete Treiber, Adrianna Dufay & Divya Gadangi
Sound design by Mac Premo & Ann Lupo
Sound mixed & mastered by Luciano Vignola
Shot in Leucadia, Encinitas and Carlsbad, California on location at Sanford Shapes.

For more information on the project visit thebucketboard.org

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17 stunning and strange buildings designed by the architect behind Facebook's new HQ

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facebook hq

The flagship building on Facebook's expanded Menlo Park headquarters officially opened for business this week. 

The 430,000-square-foot building was designed by award-winning architect Frank Gehry and built over a three-year period. 

Gehry is known for his unconventional aesthetic, using surprising angles and metal materials that have a strangely undulating effect. 

We've rounded up some of his most famous works here. 

Facebook employees started moving into their newly expanded headquarters last week. Totaling more than 430,000 square feet, it's a massive structure that will ultimately hold about 2,800 people.

 



Most recently, Gehry designed the Dr. Chau Chak Wink Building, a structure on the University of Technology's campus in Sydney, Australia. It's known by some as the "crumpled bag building."



The colorful Biomuseo of Panama City was also finished in 2014.



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The world's first custom pancake printer has already made over $320,000 on Kickstarter

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Coined "the world's first pancake printer," the PancakeBot allows you to print out pancakes into just about any design you can imagine. The printer comes with user-friendly software that allows users to design their own pancake by tracing any image right on their computer. The machine was created by civil engineer Miguel Valenzuela in 2013 originally with Legos.

The Kickstarter campaign has raised over $320,000, which is $270,000 more than the original $50,000 goal. You can get your own PancakeBot early by contributing $179 to the Kickstarter campaign. The printer is set to go for $299 upon its official release.

Video courtesy of Storebound

Click here to contribute to the Kickstarter campaign 

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Turn your iPad into a floating screen with the HoverBar

Here's what people around the globe eat on Easter

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easter table

As trees begin to blossom with the start of spring, the thoughts of Christians around the globe turn to Easter. Easter is a time for those who celebrate it to be with family, friends, and loved ones.

And what better way to spend time with your favorite people than to stuff your face with delicious and traditional Easter meals? But what these time-honored treats are can differ dramatically depending on where you are in the world.

We decided to find out just what those typical dishes are. Now we're hungry.

Mexican families traditionally often spend Good Friday eating capirotada, a sweet bread pudding covered in sugary syrup, various fruits, berries, and nuts, and a layer of cheese.



Fanesca is a rich soup served in Ecuador during the week before Easter. It contains milk, gourds, pumpkins, beans, grains, peas, corn, eggs, and salted cod. It is usually served with empanadas or fried plantains.



In Jamaica, Christians eat buns and cheese on Easter. The buns, made with spices and raisins, are cut in two and eaten with slices of cheese, usually cheddar.



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RORY MCILROY: How Nike's $200 million man spends his money

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rory mcilroy nike

At age 26, Rory McIlroy has already won three of the four major championships and has a deal with Nike rumored to be worth as much as $200 million.

He only needs the 2015 Masters to complete the career Grand Slam.

He also has the makings of a pretty fantastic lifestyle off the course, with a lavish house in Florida, a $400,000 car, and much more.

He earned $24.3 million last year, making him the 35th-highest-paid athlete in the world.

Source: Forbes



He made $20 million in endorsements alone.

Source: Forbes



His biggest deal: a monster Nike contract rumored to be worth $200+ million.

Source: USA Today



See the rest of the story at Business Insider






Scientists figured out how to avoid making a bad first impression

DEAL OF THE DAY: This Samsung NX300 mirror-less camera is 56% off today

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Screen Shot 2015 04 06 at 8.51.17 AMIf you're in the market for a great camera, today is your lucky day.

There's an insane deal on this Samsung NX3000 camera— it's 56% off.

This camera comes with a 20.3 megapixel sensor that captures incredible details, and an interchangeable lens mount that offers versatility.

It also has built-in Wi-Fi, so you can share your photos immediately. (And you can connect your smartphone to the camera, too.)

The camera comes with an 18-55mm OIS lens, SEF-8A flash, BP1130 battery, micro USB cable, USB charger, camera strap, and Adobe Lightroom v4 DVD software.

Samsung NX300 20.3 MP CMOS camera: $799.99 349.00[56% off]


 

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