3 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2024
    1. Ill-structured problems are often poorly defined and usually do not include all of the information required to solve them. There may be multiple ways of solving them, and even multiple possible “correct” outcomes/answers.

      Mentally, I understood that this was true, but this sentence just really made me have a new appreciation for this. We're always doing problems which are similar to real world solutions, but they aren't real. Like how correlation doesn't equal causation. I still had a bias that A is affected by B so C. In the real world though, that's just not true. Like the old meme, I added below. People just think differently, and neither is exactly wrong.

    2. Identify the important vocabulary words and key concepts presented in lecture. Be able to recall this information

      Personally, I have an easier time learning the concepts, so I struggle with the specific definitions. For almost every vocabulary word, I have something to help me remember it. One of the most obvious ones is meiosis and mitosis. I like the silly example of my-toe-sis is what your toe cells use and ME-iosis is what made me. Or for anion and cation. Cats are pawsitive. Anions are A-Negative-ion.

    3. it is surprisingly rare to find problem solving taught explicitly in formal educational settings

      I understand why it can be difficult to teach problem solving skills while also teaching specific material. However, I'm curious if anyone has specific ideas about how to use teach both at the same time?