![]() Maintains cleanliness and tidiness of work areas Integrates all technical skills within tasks throughout preparation, service, and end of task. Reviews special request from workplace supervosir and and interprets relevant repair needs and faults required to in the devices Self Management Plans and organises tasks from organisational information including repairs jobs, task sheets and supervisor instructions Develops and reviews work schedules Follow work schedules effectively Prepares workshop area and equipment according to procedures to meet Electronic service requirements. Learn more about the online Raising Happiness Class.T echnical Education Development Institute (TEDI) Technical Electronics Centre RTO Code: 22300 CRICOS NUMBER: 03221G Level 1, 212 King street, Melbourne, Victoria 3000, Australia Email: ABN:63 135 095 957 Performance Evidence – Benchmarks Tick each benchmark achieved at the end of all services Student Self- Assessment Workplace Supervisor Trainer/Assessor Reading skills Interprets and follows a range of organisational procedures and work schedules. What do you think?īecome a fan of Raising Happiness on Facebook Why wash dishes when you can do something more fun, after all? I’m beginning to see that organization really is an investment in happiness. ![]() So here is the big question I have for you all: Can you feel calm, centered, collected-TRULY-when your house is a mess? Because I’ve been known to rationalize my messiness: if I ignore the dirty laundry, I can go outside to play. The challenge for me will be to find a place for everything, to start as I mean to end, or I’ll end up living out of boxes for ages. I know I’m going to be so excited to have our friends over that I’ll be tempted to stash things in closets and under beds, without really getting organized. This is clearly my Walking the Talk challenge this week: to get the house unpacked and organized BEFORE I launch into the next project. Meditation might help us train our brains to feel calm in the midst of turmoil, but imagine the psychological benefits of getting my whole house in order! (Who ever visited a messy monastery, after all?) We talk about washing away our sins, wiping the slate clean, and psychologists study the “Macbeth effect”: Washing your hands seems to “scrub away mental turmoil,” according to University of Michigan psychologist Spike Lee. I think home organization can probably be grouped with personal cleanliness, a state with clear psychological benefits. ![]() (Probably for this reason, Gretchen Rubin often includes, “Make Your Bed” on her lists of happiness tips.) But still, I feel a thousand times better when things are in their place. ![]() I am more parts slob than neat-nick orderliness just doesn’t come all that easily to me. And when there is stuff stacked everywhere and I’m constantly looking for misplaced sunglasses and lost keys, I always feel a bit jilted. (Maybe because it hasn’t been that big of a challenge: Everything about my parent’s house is very familiar, and they are super-helpful and very fun grandparents.)īut I’ve also noticed something else: When everything has its place, when all the stuff around me is in order, I feel calm. My hope was that we’d settle right into our wandering and find solace in each other and within ourselves rather than in the order and routine of our environment. What better way to develop this skill than to live here and there out of duffle bags for a month or so? These seem to me essential skills, useful ones to develop young, giving us the ability to make any environment feel like home, or, at the least, to feel calm and centered no matter the chaos around us. (Unsettled, and also a little frightened.) So we’ve also been talking a lot about using our positive thinking, our courage, and ways to feel grounded on the inside, even if the outside is in flux. When we first packed up our house and put all of our belongings into storage, the kids and I did a lot of talking about change and how it makes us feel. From the GGSC to your bookshelf: 30 science-backed tools for well-being.
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