Apparently you are putting
2. Predict how you’ll feel in an upcoming situation. Affective forecasting – our ability to predict how we’ll feel – has some well known flaws.
Examples: “How much will I enjoy this party?” “Will I feel better if I leave the house?” “If I don’t get this job, will I still feel bad about it two weeks later?”
into your “Easily answerable questions” subset. Personally, I struggle to obtain a level of introspection sufficient to answer questions like these even after the fact.
Does anyone have any tips to help me better access my own feelings in this way? After I have left the house, how do I determine if I feel better? If I don’t get the job, how do I determine if I feel bad about it? Etc.
I have an exercise in “thinking about the problem for 5 minutes before proposing solutions” for everyone.
I am a member of a small group of physics graduate students in charge of a monthly series of public science lectures. The lectures are aimed at local high school students, and we have many high school teachers who encourage their students to attend by offering extra credit. The audience of each talk (typically around 100) is composed almost wholly of students who have come solely because they want a few extra points in chemistry or whatever.
In the current system, we prepare attendance sheets with school and teacher names on the top, and at the conclusion of the lecture, the students who want credit for attending come to the front of the hall and sign their name to the appropriate sheet to prove they were there. Then we photocopy these sheets for our records and mail the originals back to the teachers.
There are a number of issues with this system:
Students often don’t pay attention to the top of the sheets (where the school and teacher are listed) and write their names on the wrong list.
Students who arrive to the lecture very late still receive credit for attending.
Unless watched very closely, students can sign the names of friends who did not attend in addition to their own name.
Even if watched very closely, they can still do this if they are clever enough to do one name at a time and then loop back around to the end of the line.
If many students from a single teacher’s classes all attend, there is a huge pile-up at the end around a single sheet.
I am looking to design a new process to eliminate some of these issues. I have something particular in mind (which fixes most of these problems but generates a couple new ones) but I’d like to see what other people have to say.