• @rottingleaf
    link
    English
    21 month ago

    People are different. For me personally “trusting the process” doesn’t work at all. Fortunately no, you don’t have to, generally.

    • @Warl0k3
      link
      English
      21 month ago

      I have never had a student with this attitude pass my program, and I’ve had a great many students with this attitude. Take from that what you will.

      • @rottingleaf
        link
        English
        -11 month ago

        Then you are a bad instructor, obviously.

        Because it’s often not like this and the difference is usually in the instructor.

        That’s what I take from that.

        (Other than common sense about meaningless mimicking versus gradual understanding from small steps, confirmed by plenty of research about didactics.)

        • @Warl0k3
          link
          English
          1
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          I’m going to be totally honest, on a re-read I do not understand what you’re trying to say here.

          • @rottingleaf
            link
            English
            01 month ago

            Not sure which particular parts are confusing, so I’m going to guess and rephrase like this:

            People are obviously different, it’s obvious that a certain process can’t fit all sizes, so if there’s a kind of “attitude” with which that process fails, then the problem can be both with the process and with the attitude.

            And in my personal experience there are processes which work just fine with that attitude.

            Processes are built for human needs. Not humans are built for processes.

            So the problem is with the process, which includes the instructor who seems to think that it’s not.