Page 117 - Power Up Your Mind Learn faster,work smarter
P. 117

108                                           Power Up Your Mind

                                  When you have done this, stick all the labels on to your paper and
                                  stand back. Now, see if you can group them together into helpful
                                  categories. Then work out what kind of approach you need to take
                                  with each group.
                                        A useful prompt in this activity is to ask yourself questions
                                  beginning with who, what, where, why, when, and how.

                            Writing the recipe


                                  You might like to see if you could describe your learning in terms of
                                  a recipe. For driving a car, your recipe could deal with the skills you
                                  need to learn to become competent, learning to start, changing gear,
                                  turning corners, etc. Or, it might be that you prefer to think of it
                                  consecutively in the way that a food recipe does:


                                  Find a car
                                  Find a driving school
                                  Book a course of lessons
                                  Arrange for practice sessions
                                  Etc.


                                  Whatever  your  chosen  technique,  with  learning  as  with  life,  you
                                  need to be able to break down any task into achievable sections or
                                  chunks, to understand the series of “hows” you need to master.




                            LEARNING BY IMITATION


                                  The saying “Imitation is the highest form of flattery” makes light of
                                  an  enduringly  contradictory  aspect  of  human  behavior.  Stealing
                                  someone  else’s  lines,  unless  you  use  quotation  marks  or  clearly
                                  acknowledge  them,  is  understandably  considered  to  be  a  kind  of
                                  theft. At school we are told not to cheat. For commercial ideas and
                                  products, copyright, patent, and trademark laws exist to provide a
                                  kind of protection. Yet, we know that smart people are those who
                                  can use other people’s ideas for their own and others’ benefit.
                                        Given  the  competitive  environment  in  which  we  find  our-
                                  selves, it is not surprising that too many organizations have a cul-
   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122