Question
What is error correction strategies?
Quick Answer
Execution errors knowledge errors and judgment errors require different correction approaches.
Error correction strategies is a concept in personal epistemology: Execution errors knowledge errors and judgment errors require different correction approaches.
Example: You miss a deadline at work. Before you can fix anything, you need to diagnose what went wrong. Possibility one: you knew the deadline, had a plan, and simply forgot to set a reminder — an execution error, a slip in the mechanical act of carrying out what you already knew. Possibility two: you did not know the project had a dependency that added two weeks — a knowledge error, a gap in the information you were working from. Possibility three: you knew about the dependency, estimated it would take three days instead of fourteen, and chose not to adjust the timeline — a judgment error, a flawed assessment of reality. Same outcome. Three completely different root causes. Three completely different corrections. The person who treats every missed deadline the same way — 'I need to try harder' — will fix none of them.
This concept is part of Phase 25 (Error Correction) in the How to Think curriculum, which builds the epistemic infrastructure for error correction.
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