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#1
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In light of the likelyhood that all US Amateur Radio testing may soon become
code-free, this 16-year-old article from WA6ITF has new applicability. GEARVAKf Research Basis of No-Code Tape --------------------------------------- Turlock, California-- April 32, 1989 - In a surprise announcement that has completely rocked the foundation of the educational community, the Wet-Link C.B. Radio Network has prematurely introduced a new "No-Code CW Training Tape Cassette' which was developed using lack of research material supplied by the world famous Gorbinsky Learning and Forgetting Center of Ohio. This GEARVAKf-sponsored facility is the hub of the GEARVAKf-funded research into "things." In a 1955 report authored two decades before the center was opened, it'sformer Director of Research Into Things, Dr. R. U. Kidding, PhD. (phud), posed the question: "Why is the sky blue and what does this have to do with learning morse code?" Using grant monies provided by the GEARVAKf Grant Monies Institute to Research Things, Dr. Kidding attempted to contact the late Samuel F.B. Morse to ascertain the answer. By 1966, Dr. Kidding had discovered that Morse had been dead for several decades and therefore was not a plausable source for garnering his information. While Dr. Kidding never did learn why the sky is blue, his 1979 paper titled "To Code or Not to Code--Is That a Question?" went unnoticed by the communications community for almost two decades, mainly because it as written in a VIC-20 computer, printed in 23-letter columns, and looked like a grocery list. The paper was resurrected about four days ago by the production staff at Wet-Link C.B. Radio as an excuse to put out a useless tape cassette to teach people No-Code at 0 WPM. Hosted by Niles East, the cassette is designed to instruct the listener and impart enough knowledge so that he or she can pass the Morse Code portion of the FCC No-Code ham radio exam. Since nobody in their right or left mind would buy such trash, the only way to get one is at the WESTLINK REPORT/220 NOTES booth at the 1989 Amateur RadioVention in Dayton, Ohio. The tapes are almost for free, but not quite. GEARVAKf members are advised to show their lack of ID cards while non-members need not. -- WA6ITF |
#2
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![]() K=D8HB wrote: In light of the likelyhood that all US Amateur Radio testing may soon bec= ome code-free, this 16-year-old article from WA6ITF has new applicability. GEARVAKf Research Basis of No-Code Tape --------------------------------------- Hans, perhaps now amateurs can learn Morse Code without having unnecessary distraction/hurdles to jump through like the 5WPM, 13WPM, or 20WPM barriers. How long will it take the code teachers and code advocates to catch on to the concept, or will they coninue on with the stepped hoops? |
#3
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![]() "b.b." wrote How long will it take the code teachers and code advocates to catch on to the concept, or will they coninue on with the stepped hoops? "Stepped hoops"? In my experience, people tend to learn Morse not in steps, but by gradual increases. Granted that there are some "plateaus" (approximately 10WPM and 25WPM) but these are found to be related to the "mental mechanics" of learning. Up to about 10WPM trainees can still "count the dits", so moving beyond that speed requires them to learn to recognize the "sound of the character" without deliberate "counting the dits". This is what makes the Farnsworth training method effective, in that the trainee is early acquainted to the "sound of the character" at the higher speeds. The 25WPM plateau seems related to sublimating copying to a "middle conscious" level, where the characters flow at an almost sub-conscious level from the ear to the fingertip without active thought about the actual characters heard. 73, de Hans, K0HB |
#4
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![]() K=D8HB wrote: "b.b." wrote How long will it take the code teachers and code advocates to catch on to the concept, or will they coninue on with the stepped hoops? "Stepped hoops"? In my experience, people tend to learn Morse not in ste= ps, but by gradual increases. Granted that there are some "plateaus" (approximat= ely 10WPM and 25WPM) but these are found to be related to the "mental mechani= cs" of learning. Up to about 10WPM trainees can still "count the dits", so moving beyond t= hat speed requires them to learn to recognize the "sound of the character" wi= thout deliberate "counting the dits". This is what makes the Farnsworth traini= ng method effective, in that the trainee is early acquainted to the "sound o= f the character" at the higher speeds. The 25WPM plateau seems related to sublimating copying to a "middle consc= ious" level, where the characters flow at an almost sub-conscious level from th= e ear to the fingertip without active thought about the actual characters heard. 73, de Hans, K0HB Like I said... Maybe Morse can go back to being an encoding scheme, and Farnsworth can go back to being a teaching method. And maybe without artificial testing steps, Morse can develop more along the lines human learning and consciousness. |
#5
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b.b.:
The internet is wonderful. I just completed an exhaustive search and located that CW training tape in question, I downloaded it in .mp3 format and listened to it. Don't bother with getting it yourself, when I played it, all it said was, "Grab a BEEG RADIO (cb & leen-e-air) and go to it, if you want to have fun. Then it asked for a "donation" to be sent to the arrl for the tape! There was also a disgusting ad on the tape (the background sounded like it had been recorded at a flea market), some old ham trying to sell bicycle seats which had only been sniffed one time before! Keep your money! John "b.b." wrote in message oups.com... KØHB wrote: "b.b." wrote How long will it take the code teachers and code advocates to catch on to the concept, or will they coninue on with the stepped hoops? "Stepped hoops"? In my experience, people tend to learn Morse not in steps, but by gradual increases. Granted that there are some "plateaus" (approximately 10WPM and 25WPM) but these are found to be related to the "mental mechanics" of learning. Up to about 10WPM trainees can still "count the dits", so moving beyond that speed requires them to learn to recognize the "sound of the character" without deliberate "counting the dits". This is what makes the Farnsworth training method effective, in that the trainee is early acquainted to the "sound of the character" at the higher speeds. The 25WPM plateau seems related to sublimating copying to a "middle conscious" level, where the characters flow at an almost sub-conscious level from the ear to the fingertip without active thought about the actual characters heard. 73, de Hans, K0HB Like I said... Maybe Morse can go back to being an encoding scheme, and Farnsworth can go back to being a teaching method. And maybe without artificial testing steps, Morse can develop more along the lines human learning and consciousness. |
#6
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"KØHB" wrote in message
nk.net... The 25WPM plateau seems related to sublimating copying to a "middle conscious" level, where the characters flow at an almost sub-conscious level from the ear to the fingertip without active thought about the actual characters heard. 73, de Hans, K0HB Sigh, I hope to get to this level eventually. I'm at the point where I'm just starting to "hear" words like tnx, abt, the, fer, qsl, qsb, name, op, rst, etc. rather than spelling them in my head. -- Vy 73 de Bert WA2SI FISTS #9384/CC #1736 QRP ARCI #11782 |
#7
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Bert casually remarked at the "self-improvment session", "I'm at the point
where I'm just starting to "hear" words..." My gawd man, we are making progress. The first step is always the hardest--admitting you have a problem. For right now, we have some meds to stop the voices, while we work on that little problem. John "Bert Craig" wrote in message ... "KXHB" wrote in message nk.net... The 25WPM plateau seems related to sublimating copying to a "middle conscious" level, where the characters flow at an almost sub-conscious level from the ear to the fingertip without active thought about the actual characters heard. 73, de Hans, K0HB Sigh, I hope to get to this level eventually. I'm at the point where I'm just starting to "hear" words like tnx, abt, the, fer, qsl, qsb, name, op, rst, etc. rather than spelling them in my head. -- Vy 73 de Bert WA2SI FISTS #9384/CC #1736 QRP ARCI #11782 |
#8
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![]() "Bert Craig" wrote in message ... "KØHB" wrote in message nk.net... The 25WPM plateau seems related to sublimating copying to a "middle conscious" level, where the characters flow at an almost sub-conscious level from the ear to the fingertip without active thought about the actual characters heard. 73, de Hans, K0HB Sigh, I hope to get to this level eventually. I'm at the point where I'm just starting to "hear" words like tnx, abt, the, fer, qsl, qsb, name, op, rst, etc. rather than spelling them in my head. -- Vy 73 de Bert WA2SI FISTS #9384/CC #1736 QRP ARCI #11782 Excellent Bert....CW is like music when sent well. It ebbs and flows like a river. A thing of beauty. Think of it this way....no many folks can talk with their fingers. Dan/W4NTI |
#9
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Bert Craig wrote:
"K=D8HB" wrote in message nk.net... The 25WPM plateau seems related to sublimating copying to a "middle conscious" level, where the characters flow at an almost sub-conscious level from the ear to the fingertip without active thought about the actual characters heard. Sigh, I hope to get to this level eventually. I'm at the point where I'm just starting to "hear" words like tnx, abt, the, fer, qsl, qsb, name, op, rst, etc. rather than spelling them in my head. You're talking about two different skill sets. Hans is talking about written copy - specifically, copying on a mill (typewriter). Those who get good at that skill set reach a point where they really don't think about the incoming copy - it just flows. In some cases the op literally doesn't know the content of the copy. What you're experiencing is the beginnings of conversational Morse Code. This is where you understand the incoming Morse "directly", like listening to someone talk. Similar skill sets occur with sending. -- Morse Code is much more than "an encoding scheme". -- 73 de Jim, N2EY 313 |
#10
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![]() "b.b." wrote Maybe Morse can go back to being an encoding scheme, and Farnsworth can go back to being a teaching method. Thus it is, thus it always has been.... I don't understand "go back to".... 73, de Hans, K0HB |
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