Vaidehi Joshi found that many resources on the web about core computer science concepts she wanted to know more about were either too obtuse or too academic. She started a blog, basecs, where she wrote down something she had learned that week--every week--for an entire year. While learning something new in and of itself was a delight, her curiosity led her to question how people learn best.
She discusses the Feynman Technique, which, through a processes of iteratively explaining a concept to someone who doesn't know anything about it, strengthens the knowledge for both the student and the teacher. The best way to do this is by telling a narrative. It keeps the listener engaged, while also serving as a way of identifying gaps in ones' own understanding, as new questions arise.
Links from this episode31. Building Docker images with Cloud Native Buildpacks
30. The Infrastructure Behind Salesforce's Chatbots
29. Technology and Art
28. Effective Leadership Development
27. Behind the Brand with Heroku's Lead Designer
26. Connectivity in the Woods
25. Building Enterprise-Level Applications with Web Components
24. Side Projects for Fun and (not necessarily) Profit
23. The Changing Landscape of the Tech Industry: Diversity
22. The Changing Landscape of the Tech Industry
21. Building APIs that Integrators Want To Use
20. Becoming a Junior Developer
19. Securing the Web with Let's Encrypt
18. The Making of Trailhead
17. Integrating Terraform with Heroku
16. Accessibility in Web Standards
15. Pursuing a Career in Tech
14. Talking About Talks
13. oclif: An Open Source CLI Framework
12. Mindfulness at Work
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