One thing society needs to get right is not screwing over slow thinkers from day 1. A slow thinker can sometimes generate amazing projects over remarkably short timelines, but deliver "meh" performances on standardized tests that use time pressure to fit scores to a bell curve
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I think a lot of people just assume that human populations somehow fit a bell curve neatly over various traits, but many of these tests are *designed* to clean up the curve by tweaking test items until beta populations fall along the right line
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This might mean adding redundant "easy" questions to push more low-scorers up to the middle or using time pressure to push slower readers/thinkers down to the middle, depending on how the curve looks on initial tests. Or vice versa.
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The problem isn't that high-scorers are bad at the thing that's being tested for, it's that there may be some or many folks scoring in the middle who are equally good or better. When you tweak items to produce a desired curve, you muddy the waters re: what the test actually tests
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If top scorers *are* really good *and* really fast, isn't that fine? Well, no. In the real world, cognitively-demanding work isn't a speed run. If top scorers get the best opportunities, people w/ traits preferable to speed (creativity, conscientiousness, etc.) may get pushed out
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Replying to @webdevMason
The longer I live the more I detest any form of standardizing humans.
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Replying to @halsted
Our variation is our strength, and our hubris in assuming we know what sort of homogeneity to aim for is our downfall
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Replying to @webdevMason
And is ALWAYS rooted in the conceptions of the past...
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Replying to @halsted
Shifting from being someone who looks backward to being someone who looks forward is the most intellectually humbling experience
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Replying to @webdevMason
That’s certainly been my experience. Programming has helped me realize that most things i used to think of as truths are just slightly better models for how to think about a way of sitting and applying experience.
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Holy fish fingers, that experience of *knowing, deeply and viscerally* how to do x and being wrong, straight-up wrong, over and over. Programming imparts great wisdom for the self-reflective
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