As Oswald Chambers put it, “The author who benefits you most is not the one who tells you something you did not know before, but the one who gives expression to the truth that has been dumbly struggling in you for utterance.”
Skills in Flux
International New York Times | 17 March 2015
In an excellent piece on Lemov for The Guardian, Ian Leslie emphasizes that these subtle skills are often not recognized or even discussed by those who talk about education policy, or even by those who evaluate teachers.
Leslie
notes that the Los Angeles school system tabulated the performance of
roughly 6,000 teachers, using measures of student achievement. The best
performing teacher in the whole system was a woman named Zenaida Tan. Up
until that report, she was completely unheralded. The skills she
possessed were invisible. Meanwhile, less important traits were measured
on her evaluations (three times she was late to pick up students from
recess).
In part, Lemov is talking about the skill of herding cats.
The master of cat herding senses when attention is about to wander,
knows how fast to move a diverse group, senses the rhythm between
lecturing and class participation, varies the emotional tone. This is a
performance skill that surely is relevant beyond education.
This
raises an important point. As the economy changes, the skills required
to thrive in it change, too, and it takes a while before these new
skills are defined and acknowledged.
For
example, in today’s loosely networked world, people with social courage
have amazing value. Everyone goes to conferences and meets people, but
some people invite six people to lunch afterward and follow up with four
carefully tended friendships forevermore. Then they spend their lives
connecting people across networks.
People with social courage
are extroverted in issuing invitations but introverted in conversation —
willing to listen 70 percent of the time. They build not just contacts
but actual friendships by engaging people on multiple levels. If you’re
interested in a new field, they can reel off the names of 10 people you
should know. They develop large informal networks of contacts that
transcend their organization and give them an independent power base.
They are discriminating in their personal recommendations since
character judgment is their primary currency.
Similarly, people who can capture amorphous trends with a clarifying label also have enormous worth. Karl Popper observed that there are clock problems and cloud problems. Clock problems can be divided into parts, but cloud problems are indivisible emergent systems. A culture problem is a cloud, so is a personality, an era and a social environment.
Since
it is easier to think deductively, most people try to turn cloud
problems into clock problems, but a few people are able to look at a
complex situation, grasp the gist and clarify it by naming what is going on.
Such
people tend to possess negative capacity, the ability to live with
ambiguity and not leap to premature conclusions. They can absorb a
stream of disparate data and rest in it until they can synthesize it
into one trend, pattern or generalization.
Such
people can create a mental model that helps you think about a
phenomenon. As Oswald Chambers put it, “The author who benefits you most
is not the one who tells you something you did not know before, but the
one who gives expression to the truth that has been dumbly struggling
in you for utterance.”
We can all think of many other skills that are especially valuable right now:
Making nonhuman things intuitive to humans. This is what Steve Jobs did.
Purpose provision.
Many people go through life overwhelmed by options, afraid of closing
off opportunities. But a few have fully cultivated moral passions and
can help others choose the one thing they should dedicate themselves to.
Opposability.
F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote, “The test of a first-rate intelligence is
the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still
retain the ability to function.” For some reason I am continually
running across people who believe this is the ability their employees
and bosses need right now.
Cross-class expertise.
In a world dividing along class, ethnic and economic grounds some
people are culturally multilingual. They can operate in an insular
social niche while seeing it from the vantage point of an outsider.
One
gets the impression we’re confronted by a giant cultural lag. The
economy emphasizes a new generation of skills, but our vocabulary
describes the set required 30 years ago. Lord, if somebody could just
identify the skills it takes to give a good briefing these days, that
feat alone would deserve the Nobel Prize.
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