From 410811c0f3fcfa0045f2a19886afa060e39979ec Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Richard Leyshon <49126943+r-leyshon@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2023 08:16:54 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Update tutorials.rst Add reasons for why stating 'you will learn' is a poor choice of words. Exemplify with potential factors that may limit knowledge acquisition. --- tutorials.rst | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/tutorials.rst b/tutorials.rst index c8dd452..40a6ebe 100644 --- a/tutorials.rst +++ b/tutorials.rst @@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ It's important to allow the learner to form an idea of what they will achieve ri Providing the picture the learner needs in a tutorial can be as simple as informing them at the outset: *In this tutorial we will create and deploy a scalable web application. Along the way we will encounter containerisation tools and services.* -This is not the same as saying: *In this tutorial you will learn...* - which is presumptuous and a very poor pattern. +This is not the same as saying: *In this tutorial you will learn...* - which is presumptuous and a very poor pattern. It reduces the learner's experience to the passive receipt of information. Learning contributes to the learner's pre-existing understanding and is influenced by many factors, such as motivation, cognitive load and cognitive conflict. To state *...you will learn...* reveals that the tutor is ignorant of *how* knowledge is acquired. Deliver visible results early and often @@ -254,4 +254,4 @@ Meanwhile, the cooking lesson might be framed around the idea of learning how to The child learns all this by working alongside you in the kitchen; in its own time, at its own pace, **through the activities** you do together, and not from the things you say or show. -With a young child, you will often find that the lesson suddenly has to end before you'd completed what you set out to do. This is normal and expected; children have short attention spans. But as long as the child managed to achieve something - however small - and enjoyed doing it, it will have laid down something in the construction of its technical expertise, that can be returned to and built upon next time. \ No newline at end of file +With a young child, you will often find that the lesson suddenly has to end before you'd completed what you set out to do. This is normal and expected; children have short attention spans. But as long as the child managed to achieve something - however small - and enjoyed doing it, it will have laid down something in the construction of its technical expertise, that can be returned to and built upon next time.