BNFO 300 
Molecular Biology Through Discovery
Before asking for help
Fall 2019 

No problem is too small to warrant our attention, and no problem is so large that it cannot be solved, somehow.

However, don't expect magic wands. There aren't any. Requests for help that begin and end with "I'm sooooooo confused!" are likely to elicit nothing more than "I'm so sorry to hear that." Recall two of the objectives of this course:

  • Define problems rather than have them handed to you
  • Take control over your own education

Successful consultations will begin with your setting forth the problem you're confronting, the steps you have taken to overcome it, and what you feel you need to make further progress. You're responsible for the success of the consultation.

Here are some steps to create a request for help that might be effectively answered:

  1. General frame
    Describe the overall area in which your problem lies. Don't rely on me to remember anything.
     
  2. Specific frame
    Describe the part of the overall area that is giving you problems. Again, don't rely on me to remember anything.
     
  3. Specific example
    Describe at least one instance of what you actually did that caused you to believe you have a problem. Explain how the result you got is deficient.
     
  4. Attempts to resolve the problem
    Describe different ways you attempted to overcome the problem.
     
  5. Rant (optional)
    Here's your chance to vent, but be specific. Exactly what is causing your frustration?
     
  6. Specific request
    Tell me in specific terms what you hope I can do for you.
     

Perhaps you feel a problem is not fair because it doesn't give you enough information to answer it. That's a start! In that case, try writing out an unassailable proof that the question cannot be answered. Cast it in the form of a letter to whoever wrote the question ("Dear Idiot,..."). Often in doing so, you find a hole in your argument, a hole through which you can escape and answer the question (I've written hundreds of Dear Idiot letters, never sent). And, like a worm on a hook, keep wiggling. The more you try new twists, the greater the chance that you find a way to work yourself loose. But if you reach the end of the letter and the proof is still sound,... send it.