SuperSkills at 3 Monkeys – some more thoughts and writing a second book

5 responses to “SuperSkills at 3 Monkeys – some more thoughts and writing a second book”

  1. Hey Antony,

    I’d like to see skills (something you practice and get better at) supported by education (knowledge you can apply). An old post I wrote suggested the following as ‘new’ subjects that are very much of our information age…

    Corporate history: the ‘hidden history’ of the rise of the corporation as an entity that affects all of our lives today.

    Historical ecology: the study of the “two-way relationship between humans and their living environments”.

    Network theory: looking at the complex networks that run through our lives, from the micro to macro levels.

    … the reason being is that these skills you reference are all well and good but I despair at the received ideological framework in which most people apply them. The above topics start to break those conventions down.

    http://markhigginson.com/is-never-a-waste

  2. Thanks for the thought-provoking comment, Mark. Really intriguing ideas – I’d especially agree with the idea of teaching network theory.

  3. Hi Antony
    The thing that kept coming back to me at TEDx when you were running through this was that to a degree we already had these skills – and we have allowed the shiny, excitable immediacy of the web to take them away.
    Time management isn’t a new discipline. I was doing time management courses back in the dim days of email that only worked witin your own company. (Shows how old I am.)
    It’s human I think to be reactive and to enjoy being a magpie – particularly if you have a vaguely creative side to your personality. But it’s not hard to be disciplined if you put your mind to it. Write a list every morning of the stuff you need to do today. And work through it. And give yourself a pat on the back if you finish (or get give yourself a bit of a kicking if you don’t)
    There certainly are new techniques that we need to learn around working with these new web tools like twitter. But are they skills? I’m not totally convinced.
    Cheers
    Jeremy

  4. Thanks for the comment, Jeremy – it is really helpful to have some criticism. I delayed replying while I had a bit of a think about what you have said.

    You’re right to give things like the definition of “skill” a prod and to remind us that buckling down and working through a to do list is nothing new.

    I think, however, that working well within the context of online networks does require new skills or adapting and updating our skills to the demands and possibilities of the web. Obviously, though, I could do with working on how to make that clearer.

  5. Dug out from my delicious:

    ‘7 essential skills you didn’t learn in college’

    http://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/09/ff_wiredu/

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