mountainFrugal wrote: ↑Wed Dec 15, 2021 5:42 pm
That makes sense. This is where venturing out to other communities and trying to make connections would become the way to move higher because the person realized the/their limitations of solo work. Apologies if I am being dense, but is the idea to get as many individualists to level 8/9 so they can branch out, or is it to get people to realize the limitations of only a {individual/community] approach and embrace that earlier so as to not be siloed vertically or dispersed communally? Or is the goal both? Am I confusing things? I am happy to go back and do more reading if I am confusing things and sit the remainder of this thread as an observer.
Another stab at understanding the problem in my own words. If the goal is getting larger numbers of individualists to level 8/9 then focus on a conveyor belt with examples from all walks of life similar to the journals to get people beyond 4/5. What would a community of individualist first WL9s look like? They were individualists coming in but realized the limitations to get to level 9 and beyond. What would their community look like? Could having a community to join that is already formed be the model to then bring along various community first minded people? Or would it be a disaster because part of an attractive community is defined by community first minded people creating the community in the first place because "they get it"? So any attempt to not include this other way of thinking at the outset is doomed to fail. On the flip side there are also limitations to communities first approaches because they eventually run into the we are too large and there are no doers around to take us to the next level. Where along this continuum would be the best intervention? It could be earlier on for one side than the other. Like if you could intervene earlier in the individualists track earlier they might take just as long to get to 8, but would jump to 9 much easier because they at least knew conceptually about limits and how community could help.
[edit] rephrased some of the problem definition questions to hopefully be more clear
We're thinking along the same lines here.
Creating a community that's attractive to community-first people tend to turn off people using other modes of thinking. Not really different than creating a plan that's attractive to rules-first people turns off people who are more interested in the purpose of following the rules and not satisfied with a "because rules are beautiful" answer.
There are two "cases" which sit on a continuum.
The first one is what everybody is doing, namely, "silo up vertically" respectively "include communally" until it is realized that one is trapped in one's own skillset---basically being at a local maximum. E.g. the individualist can't do everything but at least they can do at lot and doing less is too high of a price.. OR .. the community can't do much of anything but at least they can have meetings to plan another plan and get the feeling of doing something.
The second one is doing both. Here we start at WL(1,1) instead of WL(8,1) or WL(1,8). This would require going up the diagonal. This is roughly what the Danish school system tries to do albeit not very well and obviously not on adults.
Somewhere in between the two is trying to connect WL(8,1) and WL(1,8) by "bringing someone over". This would likely require having some special rules for the person who doesn't fit in rather than "crimping" their contribution with a leveling mechanism---this is what usually happens. Highly skilled doers are not allowed to talk more than anyone else in communities. Highly inclusively includers are not allowed to talk or ignored by skill-oriented people unless they know what they're talking about.