Welcome to Week 2, Day 1 of the Six Sigma Green Belt review!
During the first week we covered Six Sigma and the Organization as well as Six Sigma Teams. If you didn’t have a chance to review those topics, go back now and catch up. The context supplied with those topics gives an excellent foundation for our studying. Plus it can be a hefty portion of your exam grade that your peers tend to overlook, so it’s a good way to differentiate your score.
Week 2: Six Sigma Define Phase
Today we’re starting with the Define Phase of Six Sigma’s DMAIC process. Just like last week, before we start I’d like to begin with a note that many different certifying bodies exist and I am trying to help people that are candidates in all of them. This means that I may refer to things that aren’t specifically on your exam.
Your Assignment
First, you’ll need to log in to the site.
Free membership or paid, it doesn’t matter. You just have to be logged in. Buttons to sign up and log in are below.
Second, review the articles I list below.
These are the concepts I refer exam candidates to when diving into these particular sections.
Take a look.
If you want to really improve your skills in a particular subject…
Take a minute and write everything you know on a topic from scratch then go to the page and see how what you wrote compares to what is there.
This is known as the Feynman technique. That is exactly how I passed all of my Six Sigma and other professional industry certifications the first time. This is how this website was made. It will 100% work for you.
Feynman Technique to Learn anything in 4 steps
(Sourced from Learn Anything)
1. Pick a topic you want to understand and start studying it. Write down everything you know about the topic on a notebook page, and add to that page every time you learn something new about it.
2. Pretend to teach your topic to a classroom. Make sure you’re able to explain the topic in simple terms.
3. Go back to the books when you get stuck. The gaps in your knowledge should be obvious. Revisit problem areas until you can explain the topic fully.
4. Simplify and use analogies. Repeat the process while simplifying your language and connecting facts with analogies to help strengthen your understanding.
If you’re not as strong as you’d like to be in that subject…
Read through, click around the resources I’ve listed, and learn more. If you have questions, post them on that page.
If you feel strong in a topic…
Go to the article and see if any of your colleagues have posted questions that you can help them with. Trying to answer questions on the spot may reveal that you’re not as strong as you thought you were.
Introducing Six Sigma Define Phase
Project Creation
Tools & Techniques
DMAIC Review
Next Time
Next time we will dive into the specific requirements of these topics across of a few popular certifying bodies (ASQ, IASSC, Villanova).
Happy studying!