added by Mo Shafieeha · updated 2y ago
Cognitive Flexibility Theory: The Rules
- Rule 1: Figure Out If You’re in an Ill-Structured Domain
from Cognitive Flexibility Theory: The Rules by Cedric Chin
Mo Shafieeha added 2y ago
- Rule 4: Reasoning by Analogy is … OK!
from Cognitive Flexibility Theory: The Rules by Cedric Chin
Mo Shafieeha added 2y ago
- Rule 3: Read History for Fragments, Not Lessons
from Cognitive Flexibility Theory: The Rules by Cedric Chin
Mo Shafieeha added 2y ago
- Rule 2: When Reading Principles or Frameworks, Actively Search for Cases
from Cognitive Flexibility Theory: The Rules by Cedric Chin
Mo Shafieeha added 2y ago
- This is Part 5 of the Learning in Ill-Structured Domains Series. Cognitive Flexibility Theory says you can be an expert in an ill-structured domain.
from Cognitive Flexibility Theory: The Rules by Cedric Chin
Mo Shafieeha added 2y ago
- Rule 5: Focus on the Differences in Cases, Not Just the Similarities!
from Cognitive Flexibility Theory: The Rules by Cedric Chin
Mo Shafieeha added 2y ago
- Rule 6: Search for Stories That Are Relevant To The Framework, But Might Not Fit
from Cognitive Flexibility Theory: The Rules by Cedric Chin
Mo Shafieeha added 2y ago