Question
How do I practice schema evolution?
Quick Answer
Pick three mental models you currently rely on — about your work, your industry, or your decision-making. For each one, write down: (1) When did this model form? (2) What evidence originally justified it? (3) What has changed in the environment since then? (4) What signals would indicate this.
The most direct way to practice schema evolution is through a focused exercise: Pick three mental models you currently rely on — about your work, your industry, or your decision-making. For each one, write down: (1) When did this model form? (2) What evidence originally justified it? (3) What has changed in the environment since then? (4) What signals would indicate this model is becoming obsolete? (5) Have I seen any of those signals and dismissed them? Spend 10-15 minutes on this. The output is a schema fitness report — a snapshot of which models are current and which may be drifting toward obsolescence.
Common pitfall: Believing that awareness of schema evolution exempts you from it. You read this lesson, nod, and continue operating from the same unexamined models. The subtlest version: you evolve your schemas about external topics (technology, markets, strategy) while leaving your schemas about yourself (your strengths, your identity, your role) completely static. Self-schemas are the most resistant to evolution and the most costly when they become obsolete.
This practice connects to Phase 16 (Schema Evolution) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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