I fell
into speechwriting like most people fall into speechwriting – by accident. In
the mid-1970s, I was working on a big issue project for my company, an
executive needed a speech on the topic, and so I wrote one. I’d written
speeches for myself before, but not for someone else. But it seemed to go OK,
the executive liked it, and soon I was writing more speeches.
It was a
learn-by-doing effort. And one of the things I did was to read speeches –
famous speeches, business speeches, political speeches, not-so-famous speeches.
A good friend suggested I start reading poetry on a regular basis, because it
would help in speechwriting. He was right. I started with T.S. Eliot, Wallace
Stevens, and Dylan Thomas, and went from there.
Almost 20
years later, something very similar happened with electronic communication. In
the early and mid-1990s, it was beginning to explode in public consciousness. I
started my team on an email newsletter. Then producing a CD-ROM. And then the
company’s first web site. And all through this process I was reading everything
I could get my hands on (which wasn’t much) – I was trying to understand why
this form of communication was so appealing to me.
I was
learning to learn. I did it frontwards, backwards, and sideways. But there is a
better way, and writer Zak Schmoll describes it in Learn
to Learn: 8 Steps to Developing New Skills Efficiently and Effectively.
In this
compact book, Schmoll describes the learning process in eight steps, starting
with what is probably the least obvious – assume that you don’t know
everything. It sounds obvious, but I worked for corporations for 40 years where
it could be a career disaster to admit you didn’t know everything. For
effective learning, though, beginning with a good dose of humility is vital.
Zak Schmoll |
From
there, you become familiar with the new material you want to study. You fill in
the details. You identify problem areas and bolster them. You test and quiz
yourself. You identify gaps and work to fill those. You then practice by
explaining the new information to someone else and let them ask questions. And
then you look for and move into associated fields.
Schmoll is
very methodical in his approach. I did variations of all of these, but not
necessarily in order. I might have learned better if I had followed an orderly
process.
Schmoll
received a degree in Business Administration from the University of Vermont in
2013, and he’s working in Ph.D. in Humanities degree at Faulkner University. He’s
a member of the Vermont Chargers Power Soccer Club for power wheelchair users.
He blogs at Entering the
Public Square. He is also the author of Contending
for the Christian World View: 30 Days of Reflections on Faith, Culture, and
Apologetics (2016).
I wish I’d
had Learn to Learn available a few
decades ago.
Top photograph by Aaron Burden via Unsplash.
Used with permission.
Well, I certainly have plenty to learn in all kinds of areas. Thanks for sharing your own learning curves and this fine book with a method!
ReplyDelete