Monday, September 20, 2021

The Teaching Process

 Imagine you're a young person and want to learn a new skill. Let's say you're going to help your parent put together a table and chairs of the new dining room set. As a child, you're new to using screwdrivers, but are eager to learn. You go with your parent to the place where the assembly will take place. 

However, you're surprised when your parent doesn't hand you a tool. Instead, they open up their laptop and proceed with a history or tools, especially screw-driving tools. 

How exciting. Sigh.

Or, scenario B: 

You start opening boxes with your parent, who shows you first how to use a box-cutter knife by demonstrating it, then hands it to you or you do it hand-over-hand and then you get to do it by yourself. Then you get the parts sorted and start assembling; again, your parent demonstrates where the screw goes and how to use the screwdriver, then you do hand-over-hand, and eventually you get to turn it yourself a few times until it gets too hard and your parent does the last few turns. 

Which was a better learning experience?

This is my criticism of my nursing program education. We're definitely doing some hands-on in our first weeks, but the book starts off with history and national organizations. Sure - we need to understand HIPAA since we are going into healthcare settings to do clinical rotations. Otherwise, we need to focus on what to do when we get there! Then, you can interweave standards of practice, scope of practice, and the like. But starting us off with Florence Nightingale? I mean, I'm a history guy, but SNOOZE.

I look forward to learning more about her later. In the meantime, teach me how to be a nurse!

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Dealing with rejection - from the rejector's side

In my Anatomy 2 class, I have found myself having become a class leader. With that, a group project was assigned and we could form our own groups. I found a couple of people with whom I felt that I shared similar level of engagement and we formed our group.

Since then, I have had many requests from other classmates asking to be in my group.

First, it's a nice compliment to have people want to work with me. At the same time, it doesn't make sense to make our group so big. 

I'm trying to recall where I heard the following strategy that I used. It may have been from Tim Ferris (tim.blog).

Anyway, I have had to learn how to say no to people. Being a "people pleaser" is something that has both benefitted me as well as create situations where I fail to fulfil responsibilities to their completion. 

My response has been, "We have enough people in our group. A couple of other people who don't have a group have reached out to me as well. Should I connect you to them?"

In this way, I've said no. I want to be helpful, so offering an alternative is still being true to being helpful, an important value to me.

Thursday, September 9, 2021

Fun Fact: Blood Vessels

 If you laid out all of the blood vessels in a human body, they would stretch between 60,000 and 100,000 miles. (Child vs adult.) Yes - miles.


https://www.fi.edu/heart/blood-vessels#:~:text=But%20if%20you%20took%20all,arteries%2C%20veins%2C%20and%20capillaries.