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I was going to post this in the "How Bad Can You Be?" thread now that it calmed down, but I decided to open a new topic to move the conversation forward with a fresh perspective.
Thinking about the original intent of where I was going with the other thread, If you still consistently lose more than half your games after you have played in enough leagues to expect improvement, what might you do to affect this situation positively? I decided to start from the beginning.
After doing some simple internet research for definitions of learning progress I came upon something called the Dreyfus Model of Skill Acquisition (from wikipedia):
In the novice stage, a person follows rules as given, without context, with no sense of responsibility beyond following the rules exactly. Competence develops when the individual develops organizing principles to quickly access the particular rules that are relevant to the specific task at hand; hence, competence is characterized by active decision making in choosing a course of action. Proficiency is shown by individuals who develop intuition to guide their decisions and devise their own rules to formulate plans. The progression is thus from rigid adherence to rules to an intuitive mode of reasoning based on tacit knowledge.
Michael Eraut summarized the five stages of increasing skill as follows:
1. Novice
*rigid adherence to taught rules or plans
*no exercise of discretionary judgment
2. Advanced beginner
*limited situational perception
*all aspects of work treated separately with equal importance
3. Competent
*coping with crowdedness (multiple activities, accumulation of information)
*some perception of actions in relation to goals
*deliberate planning
*formulates routines
4. Proficient
*holistic view of situation
*prioritizes importance of aspects
*perceives deviations from the normal pattern
*employs maxims for guidance, with meanings that adapt to the situation at hand
5. Expert
*transcends reliance on rules, guidelines, and maxims
*intuitive grasp of situations based on deep, tacit understanding"
*has vision of what is possible
*uses analytical approaches in new situations or in case of problems
Whether any of this works as the best approach or not is not pertinent to me. I just thought it would be a simple framework to build our Strat-O universe off of.
If we can, let's start with Novice. Somebody wants to play Strat-O-Matic Online for the first time and their intention is to play regularly into the unknown future. What would we tell that person?
If he were to ask me, I would submit the following: First off, purchase a five-pack of teams because this is the most cost effective way to play regularly. If you should see any sales offers along the way which are discounts to the regular five-packs, purchase more teams accordingly. In the Novice stage you will be using at least five teams and maybe more. Play one team at a time. Do not start the second team until the first team's entire season is complete.
Read and understand the basic rules of the game. Then go ahead and purchase your first team. If what brought you to the game was your desire to see how many Houston Astros you could get on your roster to see how they would perform, by all means go ahead and do it. If you didn't come to the game with any preconceived ideas, consider letting the computer quick-pick your roster. BE AWARE of how your autodraft is ordered. Write it down, and after the draft is run, go back and record which original players you received in the autodraft. For those you did not get, record who the replacement pick was. As you gain experience with later teams, familiarity with the ins and outs of autodrafting will be extremely important to you. You should always be building your working knowledge of which players can be drafted at what rank in the order.
When the autodraft is returned, review your picks and prepare your selections for the waiver draft. Learn the basics here: where do you pick? If you pick first, you will automatically receive any player you want who keeps you within budget. If you pick last, 11 other managers might take the players you wanted ahead of you. Learn the mechanics of selecting your players, selecting the matching drops, and ordering the picks. After the waiver draft, review the entire list of results. Note things like who was taken first overall, second, third, etc.
Become familiar with the settings options. There are a lot of tabs to get to know and you will be drinking from a firehose. Don't worry about any of the particulars here except to focus on familiarity and education.
In addition, you will have to consider reading the boards to learn additional details of the game. Learn to navigate the threads in order to find information like "can both catchers be injured at the same time?" The more you can learn and absorb from other players' experiences, the less tuition you have to invest in your own education.
Simply let the season unfold in front of you. Review the boxscores each day, and especially review the rosters of the teams who are winning more. Learn from their player selections, learn from their ball park selections. Keep reviewing the available tabs on your team's home page. Review the statistics pages.
Do not worry about your team's particular performance. The job here is to build AWARENESS. You have no previous experience to draw upon yet. You have no way to recognize and identify patterns yet. You have no framework to base analytical decisions on yet. You must build awareness to develop all of these skills and be able to graduate from newb level.
Beginning with your second team (and even with your first team if you want) and through team five, you will follow the guidebook called veteran's best practices:
1. Spend approximately $32 million on pitching ($20-22 mil on starters, $10-12 mil on relievers) and $48 million on your hitters.
2. With regard to your hitters, try to spread out your salaries. If you have a basic framework of $9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1, that equals $45 mil spent on nine starters, leaving $3 mil or so for five low dollar utility players.
3. With regard to defense, pay particular attention to 2B, SS and CF. Only use players who have defensive ranges of 1 or 2 at these three positions.
4. Select a neutral ballpark in the beginning, something like 2013 Wrigley, but read and learn about the advantages to playing in slanted ballparks like 2013 Progressive.
5. Do not drop or trade players once the season begins at this level (novice). Your goal is to be able to review your team at the end of the season for analytical patterns. If you break up your roster, in hindsight you might never come to understand the source of your corresponding success or failure.
Remember that as a Newb, you MUST adhere to these rules. You MUST NOT exercise discretionary judgment at this level.
Focusing on the NOVICE level only, please chime in with any additional comments. Then we can try and work through the other four levels accordingly and all in good time.
Thinking about the original intent of where I was going with the other thread, If you still consistently lose more than half your games after you have played in enough leagues to expect improvement, what might you do to affect this situation positively? I decided to start from the beginning.
After doing some simple internet research for definitions of learning progress I came upon something called the Dreyfus Model of Skill Acquisition (from wikipedia):
In the novice stage, a person follows rules as given, without context, with no sense of responsibility beyond following the rules exactly. Competence develops when the individual develops organizing principles to quickly access the particular rules that are relevant to the specific task at hand; hence, competence is characterized by active decision making in choosing a course of action. Proficiency is shown by individuals who develop intuition to guide their decisions and devise their own rules to formulate plans. The progression is thus from rigid adherence to rules to an intuitive mode of reasoning based on tacit knowledge.
Michael Eraut summarized the five stages of increasing skill as follows:
1. Novice
*rigid adherence to taught rules or plans
*no exercise of discretionary judgment
2. Advanced beginner
*limited situational perception
*all aspects of work treated separately with equal importance
3. Competent
*coping with crowdedness (multiple activities, accumulation of information)
*some perception of actions in relation to goals
*deliberate planning
*formulates routines
4. Proficient
*holistic view of situation
*prioritizes importance of aspects
*perceives deviations from the normal pattern
*employs maxims for guidance, with meanings that adapt to the situation at hand
5. Expert
*transcends reliance on rules, guidelines, and maxims
*intuitive grasp of situations based on deep, tacit understanding"
*has vision of what is possible
*uses analytical approaches in new situations or in case of problems
Whether any of this works as the best approach or not is not pertinent to me. I just thought it would be a simple framework to build our Strat-O universe off of.
If we can, let's start with Novice. Somebody wants to play Strat-O-Matic Online for the first time and their intention is to play regularly into the unknown future. What would we tell that person?
If he were to ask me, I would submit the following: First off, purchase a five-pack of teams because this is the most cost effective way to play regularly. If you should see any sales offers along the way which are discounts to the regular five-packs, purchase more teams accordingly. In the Novice stage you will be using at least five teams and maybe more. Play one team at a time. Do not start the second team until the first team's entire season is complete.
Read and understand the basic rules of the game. Then go ahead and purchase your first team. If what brought you to the game was your desire to see how many Houston Astros you could get on your roster to see how they would perform, by all means go ahead and do it. If you didn't come to the game with any preconceived ideas, consider letting the computer quick-pick your roster. BE AWARE of how your autodraft is ordered. Write it down, and after the draft is run, go back and record which original players you received in the autodraft. For those you did not get, record who the replacement pick was. As you gain experience with later teams, familiarity with the ins and outs of autodrafting will be extremely important to you. You should always be building your working knowledge of which players can be drafted at what rank in the order.
When the autodraft is returned, review your picks and prepare your selections for the waiver draft. Learn the basics here: where do you pick? If you pick first, you will automatically receive any player you want who keeps you within budget. If you pick last, 11 other managers might take the players you wanted ahead of you. Learn the mechanics of selecting your players, selecting the matching drops, and ordering the picks. After the waiver draft, review the entire list of results. Note things like who was taken first overall, second, third, etc.
Become familiar with the settings options. There are a lot of tabs to get to know and you will be drinking from a firehose. Don't worry about any of the particulars here except to focus on familiarity and education.
In addition, you will have to consider reading the boards to learn additional details of the game. Learn to navigate the threads in order to find information like "can both catchers be injured at the same time?" The more you can learn and absorb from other players' experiences, the less tuition you have to invest in your own education.
Simply let the season unfold in front of you. Review the boxscores each day, and especially review the rosters of the teams who are winning more. Learn from their player selections, learn from their ball park selections. Keep reviewing the available tabs on your team's home page. Review the statistics pages.
Do not worry about your team's particular performance. The job here is to build AWARENESS. You have no previous experience to draw upon yet. You have no way to recognize and identify patterns yet. You have no framework to base analytical decisions on yet. You must build awareness to develop all of these skills and be able to graduate from newb level.
Beginning with your second team (and even with your first team if you want) and through team five, you will follow the guidebook called veteran's best practices:
1. Spend approximately $32 million on pitching ($20-22 mil on starters, $10-12 mil on relievers) and $48 million on your hitters.
2. With regard to your hitters, try to spread out your salaries. If you have a basic framework of $9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1, that equals $45 mil spent on nine starters, leaving $3 mil or so for five low dollar utility players.
3. With regard to defense, pay particular attention to 2B, SS and CF. Only use players who have defensive ranges of 1 or 2 at these three positions.
4. Select a neutral ballpark in the beginning, something like 2013 Wrigley, but read and learn about the advantages to playing in slanted ballparks like 2013 Progressive.
5. Do not drop or trade players once the season begins at this level (novice). Your goal is to be able to review your team at the end of the season for analytical patterns. If you break up your roster, in hindsight you might never come to understand the source of your corresponding success or failure.
Remember that as a Newb, you MUST adhere to these rules. You MUST NOT exercise discretionary judgment at this level.
Focusing on the NOVICE level only, please chime in with any additional comments. Then we can try and work through the other four levels accordingly and all in good time.