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Ask HN: Should I teach you hackers how to teach a skill?

by InfiniteBox on 1/31/24, 2:55 AM with 3 comments

I've been learning skills by teaching them for the last 8 years. I started by teaching people chess, then I taught problem-solving, and now I'm teaching how to teach. (I obviously taught lots more stuff in between, but I summarize, ha.)

Assuming you're down to try, here's some basic stuff I need:

1) 15-20 minutes for a session zero, where we decide how to teach you. I'll give a plethora of options: e.g., I can be super theory heavy. Or I can emphasize practice with almost no theory. Or you can learn by watching me like a hawk. Or suggest your favorite path.

2) I need a way to get in touch. Discord's great for many many reasons, but if you really don't want to, offer an alternative that can be accessed through a personal computer. We'll need to voice chat as a minimum. Click on my profile for contact info or comment here.

For reasons why this whole thing may not be the best idea, see below:

a) I will ask you to give back in some way (but I'll let you choose how.) You could teach someone (not necessarily me) a skill you already possess. Or you could donate to keep my effort afloat. Or you could choose to decide a bit later. Something like that.

b) I mean to teach you how to teach a skill. This is not the Feynman technique; a skill to me is the ability to reach a specified result automatically and consistently.

c) I live in the Americas; if you're in Africa/Europe you're 6-7 hours ahead. If you're in Asia you're 12-16 hours ahead. (If Antartica, wtf are you doing there?) My schedules tend to be flexible but Asia-located people may struggle to get ahold of me.

If there's any other cons you can think of, leave them here, I'll respond in the comments if I agree.

  • by coldtrait on 1/31/24, 6:37 AM

    How much will it cost?