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This is not Tiki documentation but general advice. Should not be here. Please see Where.



In many situations, to learn by doing is a best practice to acquire skill. Learning by doing develops problem solving skill and confidence that one can survive without instruction.

When large numbers of people learn a skill by doing, they have diverse approaches, make a variety of mistakes and can teach each other. When large numbers of people learn a skill by the same textbook, they all make the same mistakes and may not even recognize it.

Learning by doing is not appropriate when mistakes involve a substantial risk to others (e.g. operating a nuclear power facility, being Prime Minister).

In a wiki, learning by doing is the ideal method, because (unless you are an administrator) there is really nothing you can do that can't be undone - therefore the risk to others is minimal.

So, like, go for it.

Contributors to this page: Marc Laporte9140 points  and mlpvolt4388 points  .
Page last modified on Monday 21 June, 2010 03:49:02 UTC by Marc Laporte9140 points .
The content on this page is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.

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