You must not look far afield for problems. Such problems may never arrive. Instead, tend to the wolf within your fences. The packs ranging outside may not even exist.
from Children of Dune by Frank Herbert
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You must not look far afield for problems. Such problems may never arrive. Instead, tend to the wolf within your fences. The packs ranging outside may not even exist.
from Children of Dune by Frank Herbert
Problem Framing: Good Point!
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com You have probably heard variations on this old saw, “To a hammer, everything looks like a nail.” I’ve also heard, “If you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail.” There is also this popular anecdote:One night, I took my dog out for a walk and I noticed one of my neighbors under a nearby street lamp crawling around on his hands and knees, apparently looking for…
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Reframing the Problem: Paperwork & Working Paper
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com Reframing the Problem: Paperwork & Working Paper This is the second in a series about the importance of correctly framing a problem. Generally, at least in formal American education, the teacher gives you a problem. Not only that, if you are in Algebra class, you know the answer will be an answer based in Algebra. If you are in art class, you’re expected to paint…
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The Doorbell’s Ringing! Can you get it?
Photo by Little Visuals on Pexels.com After a long day’s work, I arrived home to a distraught wife. Not, “Hi, sweetheart” but “This doorbell is driving me crazy!” Me: “What doorbell? What are you talking about?” People differ in how they perceive the world around them. In my case, for instance, I’m very easily distracted by movement in my visual field. Noise can be annoying, but it rarely…
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Astronomy Lesson: Invisible Circles
Astronomy Lesson: Invisible Circles
My senior year at Case-Western Reserve, I went to college full-time but I was also head of a small family. I was married and we had small baby to take care of. I worked three jobs. One of those jobs was as a teaching assistant in downtown Cleveland at a place called “The Supplementary Educational Center.” The job involved a wide range of activities including putting new walls in, painting them,…
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Training Your Professor for Fun & Profit
Training Your Professor for Fun & Profit
Photo by Max Fischer on Pexels.com The name of B. F. Skinner is not often invoked in discussions of User Experience. There are limitations to his basic theory, but perhaps it is time to revisit the baby that was, by many, thrown out with that bathwater. Skinner’s approach has two major limitations that come to mind. First, human behavior is moderated by internal structures such as beliefs,…
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A Long Day’s Journey into Hangover
A Long Day’s Journey into Hangover
Photo by Prem Pal Singh on Pexels.com Closely aligned with the notion of “Problem Framing” is the notion of “Attribution.” My dad was an electrical engineer. My mother was an English and Drama teacher. I’ve always enjoyed acting though I never pursued it as a career. My mother’s mother founded the “Akron Dramatic Club” and held meetings for many years at the house where my mom grew up.…
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