Hi,

>>It sounds like they were shunted into an R course they didn't care about.

If you read the comment, I don’t think this was the case, I think the 
major point here is that the session (instructor/helper or material) gave 
off an impression that they were an idiot for using Excel - This is not 
conducive to a good learning environment - no matter an instructors 
viewpoint they have to ensure students can learn. This is the impression I 
have been getting from this whole thread of conversation - “If you don’t 
do it a way I consider to be good or completely change how you work to 
that way, you are an idiot” - especially in the use of evocative words 
like “terrifies”. People have to exist in the real world and in many 
places sudden change just isn’t possible so making small changes to move 
towards a more efficient or “better” path is all they can do.

>>We should all take responsibility for the way we market our courses. If
>>someone is perfectly happy with Excel, then I might wonder what they're
>>doing in academia, but I wouldn't push them to do an R course.


I think that this statement is utterly out of order - one) the quote prior 
to this never claimed to be perfectly happy and two) who are any of us to 
judge who should or shouldn’t be in academia - you don’t know what they 
are using it for, what their background is or anything to contribute to 
saying whether anyone should be academia.

My understanding of SWC was that is was about improving things, and 
teaching about process and concept with grounding in tools such as Git, 
etc, but lately it appears in some cases that the Git part is becoming 
more important that the version control - there are many version control 
systems with advantages and disadvantages - just getting someone to 
realise the usefulness of any of these is good and getting them to start 
is even better. There appears to be an undercurrent of “fundamentalism” 
forming which reads as do it my way as your way is just wrong.

I am reminded of what I teach students about software development:
If you the developer make business decisions about your client’s business, 
then you are doing something wrong. 
People have to make their own choices and change their own ways of 
working, at these courses, we can show people what may be a new approach, 
but if we denigrate their prior knowledge or call them idiots then we lose 
any willingness to work with us and they will close down receptiveness.

Regards,
Alistair
-----------------------------------------------
Alistair Grant
EPCC
Rm 2403
0131-650-5028
-----------------------------------------------


Thought to be thought about:
Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, 
because your character is what you really are, 
while your reputation is merely what others think you are. (John Wooden)








On 05/05/2016 12:24, "Timothy Rice" <[email protected]> wrote:

>> It isn't productive if they think they're being patronised then go
>> on the defensive, get irritated or switch off altogether. As an
>> example, an attendee at a SWC workshop in September 2014 commented:
>> 
>> >I never had any formal instruction in Excel, and instead have
>> >clawed my way into a decent working knowledge of it over the last
>> >almost two decades.  I am very proud of what I can do with it, and
>> >I have found it of great use, but I know there is a ton I don't
>> >know, so I was looking forward to that session. However, that
>> >session ended up being bitterly offensive. The basic message being
>> >conveyed was "you are an idiot for using Excel to do anything
>> >expect to put data into R, and an even worse idiot if you do
>> >things to make data comprehensible to a human."  There were snide
>> >cartoons, there was condescension...  It was infuriating. ...
>> >By the end I was livid, tired, and very stressed.
>
>
>
>More awareness around the shortcomings of Excel can be advocated as a way
>to attract people into R courses, but if they only find out about it after
>they sign up then you've falsely advertised what you're teaching.
>
>You can't force someone to take training wheels off, it just terrifies and
>confuses them. You can only show them videos of people doing stunts 
>without
>training wheels, and help them find their balance and pick them up and 
>give
>them a hug when they fall -- after they agree to take off their own
>training wheels.
>
>~ Tim
>
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