One thing that I have trouble with is remembering that an idea applies.
If you've ever learned a bunch of integration techniques (or methods of solving differential equations) you might remember that the hard part of doing an integral analytically isn't understanding the technique, its realizing which technique to use.
It's one thing to know to watch out for the fundamental attribution error if you know that you're looking for someone committing the fundamental attribution error, but its entirely different to realize when you should be applying it in your every day life.
I almost suggested a way to fix that, but then I remembered to hold off on proposing solutions.
Any other advice/thoughts?
Could you identify environmental cues (a word in conversation, a feeling, some other features of a given situation) that you think identify the moment when a technique should be used?
If you could, there might be a way to associate the cue to the technique (a sort of "trigger").
How could this association be internalized? SRS cards, decision trees, an if-then table... I think anything, so long as it were reviewed regularly.
It's not part of the Sequences per se, but does anyone have exercises for Causality by Judea Pearl? It doesn't have any in the text, and searching didn't turn up any either.
Pearl's blog http://www.mii.ucla.edu/causality/ may be a good place to ask for this sort of thing.
Okay, I got the comments on my first draft, but the gmail reply structure is confusing so I don't know who to thank for them. I'm expanding the exercise to cover the first 3 posts in "A Human's Guide to Words".
A few people have committed to posting various exercises by April 17. Once we have a nice-sized buffer of exercises done in advance, I expect that when you start re-running you can link to the exercises whenever they exist. That will provide some exposure to the exercises, and give the other developers and I more motivation.
Based on this thread from this month's (April 2011) Open Thread, we have started work on exercises to go along with the posts and help readers internalize the material better. The idea is to have exercises covering all of the sequences eventually (though there doesn't have to be a 1:1 correspondence between exercises and single posts)
help is very much appreciated. If you want to take up writing exercises for a post, please claim it on our wiki page.
A few drafts have started to circulate, and soon we will have our first exercises posted.