Apprenticeship Pattern – Sweep the Floor

This pattern really focused on the idea of your value as the new guy in a fresh team environment. Each party has no idea about the other’s techniques, patterns, thought processes, or communication abilities. While you’ll naturally get acclimated to the team through experience, it’s always a good technique to pick up some of the menail, but important work. It should show the team that you’re willing to pitch in, and if you take your time to make that menial work look stellar, then that’s an even better indicator of your talent and value to the team. It warns of becoming the team’s “gopher,” which I would say is a valid caveat; I guess I would prefer to think that most people are more professional than that.

For the majority of the pattern, I wholeheartedly agreed with this advice. It should garner comradery with your peers, and an improved understanding of the project – I would apply this to any sort of team effort in general, because if the members operate in good faith then it should promote the team to be a more effective unit (theoretically).  The only thing that I have a bit of a disagreement with is the assertion that you might be relegated to that menial work by default, after trying to sweep the floor for too long. I’d say as long as you engage with teammates about where they are on the project, ask questions, and actually learn from those conversations, you should be at least relatively qualified to work on more challenging tasks. On top of your understanding of the different project parts, I’m confident your peers will recognize your engagement and welcome you to cooperate with different or more challenging content.   

Finally, I can understand the sentiment that one won’t appreciate the bigger picture of the project, or would get uncomfortable attempting new types of work outside of their comfort zone. These are very different problems, and require a good amount of introspection to address in my opinion. I’m going to look at the referenced patterns near the bottom to see if he elaborates further.

I think the most important lesson I got from this pattern is not to make yourself useful initially, but make everything that you tinker with is as close to your best work as you can get it. Who knows who’ll be impressed?

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