Single, Double Loop… Model what?
I decided that for my reading reflection, I was going to type up notes as I’m reading so I don’t forget something from earlier on.
- So, to use my superb analogy, single looped would be figuring out how to film your action sequence with the set budget and double looped would be how you are going to find a way to change the budget to create a more defined action scene. Cool.
- Model I = bad, Model II = good
I’m not finished, and I’ll come back to edit this later, but I dont really get the point of what this article is about. It seems really broad and too general for my liking. I’ll read over it again maybe and see what else I can deduce from it.
[…] James‘ has this, where the double loop is explicitly thought about. I’d push it a bit further so that it might not be more budget but how you could make/do things differently with the same budget (rarely do you have the opportunity as a solution of throwing more money at something). While James’ finds it broad (it sort of is, sort of isn’t I reckon), the heart of it is to realise that we all think we question (our assumptions, values, how we approach problems, and assume we are really creative), but the reality is that we actually use a small set of very regular behaviours and assumptions when we actually do stuff – particularly when we’re not sure of ourselves. Double loop learning begins from learning what our own specific habits are, so that we can become aware of them. The hard bit (and it is incredibly hard) is recognising them, as habits, by definition, aren’t things we notice in ourselves. […]