Sunday, August 13, 2017

The Path from Information to Skill

Tabula Rasa
The beginning. No first-hand information. The only information about the subject is what has been heard in passing, and that has not been verified.

Example: Red Riding Hood is a fairy tale about a little girl in the forest. She might have laser vision and know kung fu.

Barrier: Does not try to find out information on own. Expects someone will tell what is important to know about something and blindly trust that information.

Breakthrough: Engage with information. Don't wait to be told the answer, search out the information.

Information
The facts, snippets of information like the meaning of key words (the ones in bold in textbooks), names of characters, description of events.

Example: Red is a girl with a basket of goodies for Grandma. The Wolf is hungry living in the woods. Grandma lives in the woods. The Wolf eats Grandma and Red.

Barrier: Cannot move past the snippets. In "Spark Notes" mode. Still expecting to be told what's important. Not fully engaged.

Breakthrough: Do not skim for information. Important parts won't "jump out" at you. Look at it as a whole instead of for the pieces. Slow down!

Knowledge
The bigger picture, the sequence and overt message, what the author's point was. The whats and the hows.

Example: Red talks to the Wolf, giving him the idea to eat both Grandma and Red. He exploits Red's willingness to talk and makes a trap for her. The author is sending a message about not talking to strangers because they are dangerous.

Barrier: Can only summarize. Can't move beyond presented facts, the obvious point, or the author's point.

Breakthrough: Slow down even more! Ask why at every opportunity. Make notes. Look beyond what was said for what has NOT been said.

Understanding
The deeper picture, how pieces fit together to mean something more. Asks questions and looks for hidden messages, makes connections between things that don't seem connected. The whys.

Example: The Wolf, Red, and Grandma are all connected in some way. They mean something more as a whole than apart. Why doesn't the Wolf eat Red right away? Why pretend to be Grandma? Why does Red take off her clothes before crawling in bed with the Wolf? Why the big eyes, big hands, teeth, etc?

Barrier: Can ask the questions, but cannot formulate own answers, or cannot justify the reasons behind their connection. Must be told what the deeper meaning is instead of creating and articulating it on their own.

Breakthrough: Get creative in making connections; be wild and crazy with the ideas. “If at first the idea is not absurd, then there is no hope for it.” –Albert Einstein. Test connections with logic and reason using evidence from within the source(s). Be aware that there is not a single answer or even a "right" answer, but the answer you can articulate and support after it survives your tests.

Skill
Your own point, using every previous stage to see the pieces in a new way. Independently form new understandings, that advance the whole discipline.

Example: The Wolf is a sexual predator. He deceives his victims, lulling them into safety before he attacks and rapes them (devours them). However, Red was willing because she took off her clothes voluntarily.

On the way to developing a skill, any skill, you will fail. Often. You will become discouraged at points, but you will never reach the skill if you do not continue to thoughtfully try. Look at failures as an opportunity to discover what went wrong. Understand the error, correct it, and resume the path to new skills.

Mastering a skill is simply the result of correct practice, experience, dedication, and more failure. “I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.” –Thomas Edison

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