Thursday, October 8, 2009
How to Teach the Value of Outlines
A big problem I've noticed about how outline skills are taught in various disciplines, be it writing or programming, is that they're introduced for problems that aren't complicated enough to actually warrant them. Students correctly identify that the more powerful organizational techniques aren't needed and resent the use of them, picking up bad habits that stay with them long term. The smarter a student is, the larger a problem he can handle without outline skills so the difficulty is compounded. Since it's impractical to jump straight to a very involved problem, I believe that the initial, simple problems given to students should not involve any mention of making an outline. After those small assignments have been mastered, then an extremely complex, more realistic task should be assigned, so that the greater organizational techniques are justified. Since such huge problems would likely take too long to solve completely in the space of a course, only a subsection need actually be implemented by the student, although it may be desirable to have all the parts solved by the various students so that effective collaboration can be taught. By only introducing outlines in the context of projects that reasonably require them, the bad attitude students tend to develop towards them can be eliminated.
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