GARTHWILSON wrote:
I never put the entire computer on one schematic. There's really no reason to, and there are too many variations it could take.
Your tutorial may be the only tutorial on this site and I'm thankful and really grateful for that.
I think you need one computer on three schematics or three examples on how to build a complete computer because without complete schematics, there are possibly gaps in the learner's understanding.
When I was in college, if I didn't understand something, the instructor wouldn't behave like the school teachers in high school where they repeat the same thing you don't understand as a learner. My instructor in college would teach it differently each time until I understood, it caught on and I learned.
Teaching is more than giving a bunch of facts. Teaching is about presenting facts in a way that people can learn.
You might also have to accept that some people might not catch on for a while and may need three examples to play with until they understand it.
I've seen horrible teachers in High School who said, "If I explained it to you, you would never learn it."
In teaching there is also a difference in telling someone to do something and telling someone how to do it. I had professors in college who refused to teach programming and it could have been better if they gave the students a talk in what they needed to do. Students who had never touched a computer wanted me to help them with their homework and it was too much because the instructor never gave the students the steps to do something.
Today's engineers make a living by taking steps and instructions out of sequential order and they put them in alphabetical order so that only someone who already knows can do something giving techs a job. Steps have to have a linear flow from start to finish.
Please accept this as an constructive help in order to make it better.