Difference between revisions of "Embodied Skills/OG"
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Continue practicing until you acquire the desired skills.
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▼In this context
▼Therefore
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<center>''Continue practicing until you acquire the desired skills.''</center> | <center>''Continue practicing until you acquire the desired skills.''</center> | ||
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''“Practice makes perfect.” — Proverb'' | ''“Practice makes perfect.” — Proverb'' |
Revision as of 11:19, 10 February 2017
Embodied Skills | |
Contributors | Takashi Iba, Mami Sakamoto |
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Last modification | February 10, 2017 |
Source | Iba & Sakamoto (2011)[1] |
Pattern formats | OPR Alexandrian |
Usability | |
Learning domain | |
Stakeholders |
“Practice makes perfect.” — Proverb
You want to acquire a skill.
It is not enough to memorize the “how to.”
- • Learning from experience is easier to remember than rote memorization.
- • Skills can be used unconsciously.
- • It is hard to verbalize a skill that has been acquired through experience.
Continue practicing a skill again and again until you can use it unconsciously.
- • First of all, try to use new skill and acquire a sense of it.
- • And then, study the skill and understand how it works.
- • Finally, keep in practice until you master it. Leaving the trace of learning as Tangible Piles (Tangible Piles) is a good way to maintain your motivation.
References
- ↑ Iba, T., & Sakamoto, M. (2011). Learning patterns III: a pattern language for creative learning. In Proceedings of the 18th Conference on Pattern Languages of Programs, PLoP 2011 (p. 29). ACM: New York.