← L² Lab
🤔 It Depends
Card 08
🏃 💨 🎨

Is fast always better?

💭 Think About It

Racing to win vs. drawing a picture. In a race, fast wins the medal. But when you draw, going slow makes it beautiful. Is finishing fast always the best?

🏃‍♂️💨 Racing to win Fast = good!
vs
🎨✍️ Drawing a picture Careful = good!
Is finishing fast always the best?

🎯 Explain your thinking

Why did you choose this answer?

🌈 Different Perspectives to Consider
🏃 The Racer Says Fast wins!

"In a race, fast wins! The first one to finish gets the medal. Being slow means losing."

🎨 The Artist Says Slow is beautiful

"When I draw, going slow makes it beautiful. If I rush, I make mistakes and it looks messy."

📚 The Reader Says Both speeds!

"When reading a story I love, I go slow to enjoy every word. When finding my seat number, I read fast!"

🍳 The Chef Says It depends on the food

"Some foods need to cook slowly or they burn. But if someone is hungry, I hurry with snacks!"

🤔 Which thinking lens(es) did you use?

Select all the lenses you used:

👨‍👩‍👧 For Parents & Teachers

🌱 A Small Everyday Story

"I finished first!"
"Did you check your work?"
"...no."
Speed has its place.
But sometimes slow wins the real race.

See more guidance →

🧠 Thinking habits this builds:

  • Understanding that "better" is goal-dependent
  • Recognizing that speed and quality can trade off
  • Appreciating that different contexts need different approaches
  • Learning to match pace to purpose

🌿 Behaviors you may notice (and reinforce):

  • Asking "what's the goal here?" before rushing
  • Choosing to slow down for quality when appropriate
  • Understanding that first isn't always best
  • Adapting speed to the situation

How to reinforce: "You took your time on that drawing and it shows! When might you want to work faster instead?"

🔄 When ideas are still forming:

Young children often equate fast with good. Help them see specific examples where slow is better.

Helpful response: "Racing is about speed. But making a gift for grandma - would rushing make it better or worse?"

🔬 If you want to go deeper:

  • Explore the tortoise and hare story - what's the real moral?
  • Discuss deliberate practice vs. just practicing fast
  • Consider how experts know when to be fast vs. careful

Key concepts (for adults): Speed-quality tradeoff, goal-dependent evaluation, metacognitive awareness, contextual appropriateness.