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    • Home
    • Where Things Click
    • Parents Start Here
    • 3 Learning Situations
    • Resources
    • Orientation Guides
    • Brain Candy
    • Sour Candy
    • Research Sources
    • About
    • Thinker Type Quiz

dummify™

dummify™dummify™dummify™
  • Home
  • Where Things Click
  • Parents Start Here
  • 3 Learning Situations
  • Resources
  • Orientation Guides
  • Brain Candy
  • Sour Candy
  • Research Sources
  • About
  • Thinker Type Quiz

Understanding doesn’t begin with information.

It begins with orientation.

Before a mind can take in details, it needs to know:

– what this is
– where it fits
– and why it matters
 
When that context is missing, learning feels confusing — even when the material isn’t difficult.

The missing step


Most explanations start in the middle.
They assume shared context.
They move quickly.
They prioritize content over clarity.
 
For many minds, this skips the step that allows understanding to happen at all.
 

What orientation provides


Orientation gives the mind a place to land.
 
When you can see the whole before the parts, your brain doesn’t have to guess.
It doesn’t have to hold fragments.
It doesn’t have to work twice as hard.
 
Only then do details make sense.


This isn’t about learning style or intelligence.
It’s about order.
 
When explanations match how understanding actually works, learning becomes possible — without force.

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