Examples and Practice: Choosing a Direction¶
Worked Practice¶
- Write one paragraph explaining Choosing a Direction to a beginner.
- Draw the smallest diagram that shows input, transformation, output, and failure mode.
- Build or outline a tiny artifact connected to: Write a specialization plan with an advanced project.
- Measure it with: Track depth, reproduction quality, benchmark rigor, and explanation quality.
- Add one failure case to your learning log.
Mini Project Drill¶
Create a file named notes/choosing-a-direction.md in your project workspace. Include:
- the problem Choosing a Direction solves
- the simplest implementation or design
- the measurement you used
- one example input
- one expected output
- one failure case
- one decision you would make from the result
Check Your Understanding¶
| Question | What a strong answer includes |
|---|---|
| Why does Choosing a Direction matter? | It connects to a capstone ai system with architecture, implementation, evaluation, deployment, observability, cost, security review, and portfolio narrative. and names a practical risk. |
| How would you test it? | It uses a small repeatable case and a measurable expected result. |
| What breaks first? | It names a specific failure mode, not only "the model is bad". |
| When should you move on? | When the artifact works on a realistic case and one edge case. |
Stretch Exercise¶
Revisit the same drill after finishing the next part. Update the note with what changed. This is how isolated concepts become connected system judgment.
Return to 10.5.1 Choosing a Direction.