Question
How do I practice schema creation process?
Quick Answer
Recall the last three mental models you formed — about a new technology, a person, a situation, anything. For each one, reconstruct how it formed: (1) What triggered the need for a new model? (2) What raw material did you draw on — experience, reading, conversation, analogy? (3) Did the model.
The most direct way to practice schema creation process is through a focused exercise: Recall the last three mental models you formed — about a new technology, a person, a situation, anything. For each one, reconstruct how it formed: (1) What triggered the need for a new model? (2) What raw material did you draw on — experience, reading, conversation, analogy? (3) Did the model emerge gradually or snap into place? (4) Did you test it before trusting it, or did you start acting on it immediately? Write down the pattern you see across all three. That pattern is your schema creation process.
Common pitfall: Operating with an unexamined schema creation process means every mental model you build inherits the same blind spots. If you always form schemas from personal experience alone, you will systematically miss patterns visible only through data. If you always adopt frameworks from authorities, you will hold schemas that do not match your actual context. The failure is not in any single schema — it is in the factory that produces all of them.
This practice connects to Phase 17 (Meta-Schemas) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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