Dear readers,
One day, a teacher dropped a ball into a hole and instructed the children to retrieve it. The students first tried to grab the ball with their hands, but the ball was beyond reach. The students then opted to use sticks, but that prove unsuccessful too. Their attempts remained unsuccessful until the a student, who was quietly observing his classmate, poured a bucket of water into the hole. To the others' astonishment, the ball floated to the top and was picked up by the brightest student.
Upon hearing this story, one would wonder which student they would be. Will they be the brightest student or the student whose attempt failed? Many of us would like to believe that we would be the brightest student. However, we all know that can't be true. Realizing this is a very humbling experience. Realizing this can be very depressing also. But this does not mean we are inferior in anyway to the brightest student. It does not give us permission to become unmotivated and strive to be nothing more than average. To those who might think this, I beg you to reconsider. Although the brightest student was the one to ultimately solved the problem, it was the other students who made the first attempt. These attempts, although unsuccessful, were actions nonetheless. While the brightest student was observing their classmate and contemplating their action, the others were more than willing to dive right in and try.
I consider the students the "doers" and the brightest student the "thinker." If it was just a group of students that was "the thinker", I doubt any of those students would have came to the resolution so easily or at all. It is in the thinker's nature to over think and talk themselves out of the right resolution. In saying so, it was the doers who told the thinker information (like how deep the hole might be) that enabled the thinker to find the solution. The doers are the pioneers who paved the way for the thinkers. The doers and thinkers are compatible with one another and the intelligence of the doers is completely necessary to a solution of the problem. Why? Because smart mistakes helps and dumb mistakes do not.
Sincerely,
RacyLuu
This is a blog post I found while browsing the web the other day that I found very interesting. Which do you think you are? And if you are a thinker, is there anything you've like to dispute about the analysis?
Fortitude-Racyluu.blogspot.com
One day, a teacher dropped a ball into a hole and instructed the children to retrieve it. The students first tried to grab the ball with their hands, but the ball was beyond reach. The students then opted to use sticks, but that prove unsuccessful too. Their attempts remained unsuccessful until the a student, who was quietly observing his classmate, poured a bucket of water into the hole. To the others' astonishment, the ball floated to the top and was picked up by the brightest student.
Upon hearing this story, one would wonder which student they would be. Will they be the brightest student or the student whose attempt failed? Many of us would like to believe that we would be the brightest student. However, we all know that can't be true. Realizing this is a very humbling experience. Realizing this can be very depressing also. But this does not mean we are inferior in anyway to the brightest student. It does not give us permission to become unmotivated and strive to be nothing more than average. To those who might think this, I beg you to reconsider. Although the brightest student was the one to ultimately solved the problem, it was the other students who made the first attempt. These attempts, although unsuccessful, were actions nonetheless. While the brightest student was observing their classmate and contemplating their action, the others were more than willing to dive right in and try.
I consider the students the "doers" and the brightest student the "thinker." If it was just a group of students that was "the thinker", I doubt any of those students would have came to the resolution so easily or at all. It is in the thinker's nature to over think and talk themselves out of the right resolution. In saying so, it was the doers who told the thinker information (like how deep the hole might be) that enabled the thinker to find the solution. The doers are the pioneers who paved the way for the thinkers. The doers and thinkers are compatible with one another and the intelligence of the doers is completely necessary to a solution of the problem. Why? Because smart mistakes helps and dumb mistakes do not.
Sincerely,
RacyLuu
This is a blog post I found while browsing the web the other day that I found very interesting. Which do you think you are? And if you are a thinker, is there anything you've like to dispute about the analysis?
Fortitude-Racyluu.blogspot.com



