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| Hi, put this way I believe the line between learning and doing is thin. At school they taught us to learn for test days, they day we actually show what we've learned. But in PD, it's different, in the way that you should learn and at the same time apply what you've learnt. So I don't think there is a real line between the two conceptions since you learn from what you do |
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I was mainly talking about reading vs working, in a way. |
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| Might this have a clue to an answer? http://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/200...ght-vs-action/ Edit: I just realized the irony of posting more material to read in a thread about doing versus reading. I think you should do an insane amount of stuff. Keep quotas and stuff. I think that a lot of people haven't mastered the first level of PD including improving self-discipline and productivity before trying to go further.
__________________ Mind-Manual "What's pragmatic?" "Pragmatic? It's the opposite of hope." - Ze Frank Last edited by RT Wolf : 03-05-2007 at 11:30 PM. |
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| There's a great quote that's attributed to Confucius: Quote:
Last edited by Baltar : 03-06-2007 at 12:41 AM. |
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| I read for an hour or two everyday and do for 14 hours then I sleep. That is about the correct ratio - anymore reading and you do not absorb that days message. Though it helps a lot when you do the work you love.
__________________ 7ft 320lb International Movie Star YES - I'm living my dream |
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| It sounds like the correct ratio for you. I personally benefit from reading significantly more than that. I suspect this is something everyone has to discover for him/herself, even if other people's opinions and experiences can be helpful. |
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Just one good idea acted upon can make your life. 9 million ideas and you don't do anything and nothing changes. Not enough people take action
__________________ 7ft 320lb International Movie Star YES - I'm living my dream |
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| This is definitely a question that will have a unique answer for each person. Personally, I've been learning non-stop for the last 2 years, and have done virtually no "doing" (...I haven't even had a job; thank goodness for college scholarships). This is because I have extroardinary goals that require extroardinary understanding. I don't plan on "doing" until this summer; so that will be 2.5 years of learning. Almost everything I read, I remember and I truly understand because I think about it. Ultimately, I believe the answer is that you must know where you're going which will give you a good, general idea of what you need to learn to get to step 1 most efficiently (time > speed) and effectively (performance > productivity). At that point, always be looking out what it takes to get to step 2, etc. Thus, the optimal learning ratio is relative to what is most efficient for your life and most effective for you.
__________________ Personal Blog: www.eliotwasmund.com |
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| I suppose that with PD is the same as with anything. First learn something, then apply your knowledge. After that you will know if there is still something you have to learn. Then learn it. There are methods which might help in the whole process, like PDCA.
__________________ Behind the glasses |
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