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On this day, by Terry Freedman

On this day, by Terry Freedman

On this day #22: When to be over-cautious

February 22, 2021

Too many companies launch half-baked products, thereby placing the customer in the role of unpaid beta tester. Before you say “Too true. Tell me about it!”, it’s worth asking: do you do the same in effect? Because frankly I’ve seen a lot of half-baked initiatives emanating from schools. As for governments, well it’s almost what we’ve come to expect.

I’ve sometimes been criticised — gently ribbed — for opting to try to anticipate as many eventualities as possible. On the 22nd February 2011 I outlined a process — a checklist — you can go through to check the viability of something before you put it into effect. Surprisingly perhaps, it needn’t take very long. You’re almost bound to come across something you hadn’t reckoned on, but you should avoid most pitfalls.

Here’s the link to that article:

25 Ways To Make Yourself Unpopular: #14 Be Over-Cautious


Terry Freedman qualified as a teacher in 1975, has written for educational publications since 1989, and has published this website since 1995.

If you found this article interesting and useful, why not subscribe to my free newsletter, Digital Education? It’s been going since the year 2000, and has slow news, informed views and honest reviews for Computing and ed tech teachers — and useful experience-based tips.

In From the Archives, Leading & Managing Computing & ICT, On this day Tags caution, checklist, 25 ways to make yourself unpopular
← Checklist: Converting an offline course to an online oneResearch, teacher training, teachers' email addresses -- in the year 2000 →
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