tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10313978.post9198639662717795337..comments2023-11-03T06:03:50.388-07:00Comments on The Learning Circuits Blog: Face Up To It: Are You the CBT Lady?jayhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16271633210993298646noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10313978.post-11693251929725907162012-06-26T08:22:17.965-07:002012-06-26T08:22:17.965-07:00Thank you for this call to action, Cammie. This is...Thank you for this call to action, Cammie. This is right on the money.<br /><br />We tend to get so bound up in dogma and our own learned helplessness that we forget and neglect the things we DO have control over. <br /><br />Will we do away with the perception completely? No. Sometimes we'll make people do things they'd prefer not to. As long as we're doing so with outcomes in mind and have payed attention to the way people actually work and learn, we can mitigate the detrimental trade-offs.<br /><br />To me, design is about applying this statement to refactor the solution into the most important facets of the problem:<br /><br />If I do X, then I will see Y but I may also produce Z.<br /><br />We often simplify to the X and the Y but don't consider the but... Z. Far too often the but...Z consequences are the things we ignore that make people hate our solutions as ineffective and torturous.<br /><br />:)Stevehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09587081454369718677noreply@blogger.com