For those who doubt what this video talks about, I suggest that they visit Kislingbury's site and listen to what he truly says. Even the brief king, Kislingbury does not believe that you should attempt to use briefs before you can use them correctly. You can follow my advice and learn to write smoothly, or buy his books and learn to hesitate. Your choice. No one, except Kislingbury, teaches students to use briefs for everything. He is flat out wrong.
Ahhh, the briefing is better debate. And what happens when you forget briefs, because you do. You still have to be able to bust out those words long. I'll bet you anything that Mark Kislingbury can still write all those words out long and fast. And as for writing slow, perfect practice makes perfect, not sloppy speed practice. You need speed and you need slow, to reorganize your brain and fingers. Noobs.
I really appreciate the dictation! You are a very good dictator -- haha. I must say, however, that your advice is inferior to that of Mark Kislingbury. He focuses on writing as short as possible, getting a stroke for every word, and getting your hands moving on your Steno machine as quickly as they can. THOSE are the true secrets to court reporting success, and students who watched this should google his name!
this has some issues I don't agree with.....6:17 "not all briefs are helpful"...that's why briefs were made....and at 6:22...working at a low speed is a bad idea...the faster you have to go...the harder you push yourself..you better you're going to be..period. People need to listen and follow M.Kislinbury. There is a reason he is the fastest real-time writer, but people have a hard time following our brightest.
For those who doubt what this video talks about, I suggest that they visit Kislingbury's site and listen to what he truly says. Even the brief king, Kislingbury does not believe that you should attempt to use briefs before you can use them correctly. You can follow my advice and learn to write smoothly, or buy his books and learn to hesitate. Your choice. No one, except Kislingbury, teaches students to use briefs for everything. He is flat out wrong.
MrRheaman 3 months ago in playlist More videos from MrRheaman
Ahhh, the briefing is better debate. And what happens when you forget briefs, because you do. You still have to be able to bust out those words long. I'll bet you anything that Mark Kislingbury can still write all those words out long and fast. And as for writing slow, perfect practice makes perfect, not sloppy speed practice. You need speed and you need slow, to reorganize your brain and fingers. Noobs.
AFluffyBlackPony 3 months ago
I really appreciate the dictation! You are a very good dictator -- haha. I must say, however, that your advice is inferior to that of Mark Kislingbury. He focuses on writing as short as possible, getting a stroke for every word, and getting your hands moving on your Steno machine as quickly as they can. THOSE are the true secrets to court reporting success, and students who watched this should google his name!
hopenify 10 months ago
this has some issues I don't agree with.....6:17 "not all briefs are helpful"...that's why briefs were made....and at 6:22...working at a low speed is a bad idea...the faster you have to go...the harder you push yourself..you better you're going to be..period. People need to listen and follow M.Kislinbury. There is a reason he is the fastest real-time writer, but people have a hard time following our brightest.
themagikone 1 year ago