medium.com
Open in
urlscan Pro
2606:4700:7::a29f:9904
Public Scan
Submitted URL: http://tinyurl.com/3avb3drf
Effective URL: https://medium.com/@robbatron/into-the-un-known-5259328261ed
Submission: On September 10 via manual from US — Scanned from DE
Effective URL: https://medium.com/@robbatron/into-the-un-known-5259328261ed
Submission: On September 10 via manual from US — Scanned from DE
Form analysis
0 forms found in the DOMText Content
Open in app Sign up Sign in Write Sign up Sign in Robert Delfs · Follow 3 min read · Oct 10, 2019 5 Listen Share Photo by J Daniel Hud Epistemology, in all of its big-wordism, is the branch of knowledge that seeks to separate fact from opinion, theory from conjecture. It is how I as an instructor try to encourage my students to think every time I step into a boot camp classroom. For all its many syllables, epistemology can be distilled into four types of knowns and unknowns: 1. Unknown unknowns: Scary entropy — often disregarded before explored (chaos) 2. Unknown knowns: Unconscious beliefs, dogma, instinct (biases) 3. Known unknowns: Assumptions that can be confirmed or denied with measurements (hypotheses) 4. Known knowns: Data that you can use to verify future data (facts) In the classroom, an instructor wants to help students travel from the unknown to the known. To accomplish this, the instructor must first understand how something becomes known and then blaze that trail for their students. The framework of knowns and unknowns can help the instructor along this path of discovery. As you gauge how your students are grasping the curriculum, you will likely find yourself asking one question: Any questions? When there are no responses to this question, your first instinct may be to proceed to the next lesson. But I urge you to delve deeper into the silence. When students don’t ask questions, they are experiencing unknown unknowns and are not conscious of what they are not considering. When they know what to ask, they are then able to take what little they know about a problem and work in an analytical way to discover unknowns. As instructors, we need to identify the type of knowledge we are working with so that we can adapt our methods to surface them. So what does the path from an unknown unknown to a known known look like? How do we determine which step our students are at? UNKNOWN UNKNOWNS This is the stage where a student (or the class) is lost but does not know what to ask. A good practice is to regress to what they do know or to review the facts. This lifts them into the realm of unknown knowns. UNKNOWN KNOWNS If your students are asking questions, then they are in the unknown known phase. Once they are aware of the facts, have them brainstorm out loud. Class discussions are invaluable because every student brings a new variable to the equation, and being in the same mental ballpark allows them to exchange ideas without the inherent biases of industry experts. Through explaining the concept to each other, the group will filter unconscious biases into hypotheses. KNOWN UNKNOWNS This is the phase where questions are forged into ideas. Once the unconscious biases are filtered out, the class is ready to create hypotheses. These are ideas based on existing knowledge that are immediately testable, so test them! Code out their ideas, write unit tests, and uncover incorrect assumptions by showing not telling. This phase can also turn into a fun lateral thinking exercise whereby you ask your students how they can carry their knowledge of this concept into the next. This is also where you can determine problem areas and re-teach using other angles and analogies. KNOWN KNOWNS These are the facts. You can carry these over to reduce the frequency of future unknown unknowns. If you do, you will soon find the amount of unknown unknowns your class experiences decreasing along an exponential curve. Review these facts as much as possible and have the class teach them to each other to prevent the facts from becoming unknown knowns (where students forget why they are true). I have found that coding bootcamps follow a format much more conducive to this style of learning than the traditional lecture approach. Much like a lean start-up, boot camp learning happens when you can test, measure, and iterate on your knowledge as frequently as possible. The longer you lecture between discussions and exercises, the more time you allow an unknown unknown to snowball. Trilogy understands this danger, so it cultivates an instructional atmosphere built on robust testing and thoughtful feedback. These methods teach students to think not only more holistically but also more analytically about incrementally solving problems using only their resources and exploratory techniques. This, to me, is the true method of teaching a student how to fish. Any questions? This article was originally published on Trilogy Education’s Instructor Blog @ https://www.trilogyed.com/instructors/ SIGN UP TO DISCOVER HUMAN STORIES THAT DEEPEN YOUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE WORLD. FREE Distraction-free reading. No ads. Organize your knowledge with lists and highlights. Tell your story. Find your audience. Sign up for free MEMBERSHIP Read member-only stories Support writers you read most Earn money for your writing Listen to audio narrations Read offline with the Medium app Try for 5 $/month Education Coding Codingbootcamp Epistemology Teaching 5 5 Follow WRITTEN BY ROBERT DELFS 3 Followers (instrumental) Follow MORE FROM ROBERT DELFS Robert Delfs GIT SWITCH DO YOU EVER OCCASIONALLY CHECK IF YOU HAVE ACQUIRED SUPERPOWERS DUE TO SOME KIND OF CAUSALITY DILEMMA THAT YOU CAN NOT MAKE DIALECTICAL… Aug 7, 2017 Robert Delfs GIT SWITCH DO YOU EVER OCCASIONALLY CHECK IF YOU HAVE ACQUIRED SUPERPOWERS DUE TO SOME KIND OF CAUSALITY DILEMMA THAT YOU CAN NOT MAKE DIALECTICAL… Aug 7, 2017 Aug 7, 2017 See all from Robert Delfs RECOMMENDED FROM MEDIUM Sufyan Maan, M.Eng WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU START READING EVERY DAY THINK BEFORE YOU SPEAK. READ BEFORE YOU THINK. — FRAN LEBOWITZ Mar 12 33K 811 Karolina Kozmana COMMON SIDE EFFECTS OF NOT DRINKING BY REJECTING ALCOHOL, YOU REJECT SOMETHING VERY HUMAN, AN EXTRA LIMB THAT WE HAVE COLLECTIVELY GROWN TO DEAL WITH REALITY AND WITH EACH… Jan 21 44K 1214 LISTS STORIES TO HELP YOU GROW AS A SOFTWARE DEVELOPER 19 stories·1344 saves GENERAL CODING KNOWLEDGE 20 stories·1556 saves HOW TO FIND A MENTOR 11 stories·674 saves THE NEW CHATBOTS: CHATGPT, BARD, AND BEYOND 12 stories·455 saves Alexander Nguyen in Level Up Coding THE RESUME THAT GOT A SOFTWARE ENGINEER A $300,000 JOB AT GOOGLE. 1-PAGE. WELL-FORMATTED. Jun 1 20K 380 Devon Price in Human Parts LAZINESS DOES NOT EXIST PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH IS CLEAR: WHEN PEOPLE PROCRASTINATE, THERE'S USUALLY A GOOD REASON Mar 23, 2018 325K 1656 Kris Gage HOW TO *REALLY* KNOW YOU’RE IN LOVE BECAUSE MOST OF “THE SIGNS” THEY TELL YOU ARE GARBAGE Aug 3, 2017 138K 870 Rebecca✨ in ILLUMINATION I STARTED WAKING UP AT 4:30 A.M. DAILY— THIS IS WHAT HAPPENED FOR 21 DAYS, I WAKE UP AT 4:30. THE RESULTS WERE CRAZY. Apr 9 7.4K 184 See more recommendations Help Status About Careers Press Blog Privacy Terms Text to speech Teams To make Medium work, we log user data. By using Medium, you agree to our Privacy Policy, including cookie policy.