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Generation X- 1965 to 1980 The Best Ones To Save The Nation.

So maybe before someone set's out to be an appraiser there should be an aptitude test. This idea is not to prevent you from being an appraiser. It would just be a way to help you decide making that choice/decision.

AI's take

Now that’s a tune worth exploring. An aptitude test before entering the appraisal field could be a game-changer—not just gatekeeping, but guiding people toward excellence by spotting hidden strengths. Let’s riff on what that could look like:




What Might the Test Reveal?​


  • Analytical Acumen: Can they spot patterns, synthesize market data, and weigh comps with precision?
  • Narrative Sense: Can they craft a coherent valuation story—from property quirks to zoning impact?
  • Bias Awareness: Do they recognize how language, assumptions, or systemic factors can shape outcomes?
  • Mathematical Literacy: Comfort with regression analysis, depreciation, or time-adjusted valuations.
  • Musical or Spatial Intelligence (optional but insightful): As you hinted, these might correlate with skills in rhythm, proportion, and form—all useful in parsing market dynamics.



Hidden Talents, Not Just Hard Metrics​


What if the test also teased out:


  • Ethical depth: Like how they'd respond to subtle pressures to tweak a value.
  • Local intuition: Are they attuned to neighborhood nuances, population shifts, or geopolitical factors?
  • Creative problem-solving: Can they reconcile messy data or rethink an outdated valuation model?



Now that’s a tune worth exploring. An aptitude test before entering the appraisal field could be a game-changer—not just gatekeeping, but guiding people toward excellence by spotting hidden strengths. Let’s riff on what that could look like:




What Might the Test Reveal?​


  • Analytical Acumen: Can they spot patterns, synthesize market data, and weigh comps with precision?
  • Narrative Sense: Can they craft a coherent valuation story—from property quirks to zoning impact?
  • Bias Awareness: Do they recognize how language, assumptions, or systemic factors can shape outcomes?
  • Mathematical Literacy: Comfort with regression analysis, depreciation, or time-adjusted valuations.
  • Musical or Spatial Intelligence (optional but insightful): As you hinted, these might correlate with skills in rhythm, proportion, and form—all useful in parsing market dynamics.



Hidden Talents, Not Just Hard Metrics​


What if the test also teased out:


  • Ethical depth: Like how they'd respond to subtle pressures to tweak a value.
  • Local intuition: Are they attuned to neighborhood nuances, population shifts, or geopolitical factors?
  • Creative problem-solving: Can they reconcile messy data or rethink an outdated valuation model?



Why It Matters for Education​

So maybe before someone set's out to be an appraiser there should be an aptitude test or not necessarily a mandatory test. Totally voluntary.

You would use this tool before you commit and also determine whether you should go further and combine that with your research about the probable income. The pros & cons also;


An aptitude test wouldn’t just screen—it could tailor learning paths. Someone with strong musical and pattern recognition might thrive with a curriculum built around structure and flow, while a social-empath might excel through case studies and narrative techniques.


Imagine an onboarding process where people see themselves not just as appraisers, but as analysts, storytellers, or systemic interpreters. That’s not just training—it’s identity-building.





 
Any young person that might ask me about entering appraisal profession, I would recommend they should explore other professions also.

I am just rambling, a little bored,
 
Those guys were good players. My issue with hair metal is the song writing quality was generally not good (there are exceptions), often very boring drumming. But I'm glad it happened because I enjoy very heavy progressive and technical metal, which required hair metal to happen.

Also, this is one of the most creative things I've listened to in a while. Dude is pure talent, not even sure how to classify his guitar or rap style - but just think about the varieity of genres that lead to the creation of this:

I'm going to forward this to my son as he and his friends like the rap stuff. It's not really my bag though.

In regards to guitar playing, he plays the guitar like he's playing slap Bass for a funk band. More percussive rhythm as opposed to melodic, chord structure.... his rapping sounds like Cypress Hill to me. He certainly has an energy to him.
 
Those guys were good players. My issue with hair metal is the song writing quality was generally not good (there are exceptions), often very boring drumming. But I'm glad it happened because I enjoy very heavy progressive and technical metal, which required hair metal to happen.
Not sure if you include Rush in 'hair metal', but Neil Peart was a brilliant lyricist.
 
I'm going to forward this to my son as he and his friends like the rap stuff. It's not really my bag though.

In regards to guitar playing, he plays the guitar like he's playing slap Bass for a funk band. More percussive rhythm as opposed to melodic, chord structure.... his rapping sounds like Cypress Hill to me. He certainly has an energy to him.
Yeah, this is somewhat of a new style:

 
Michael Hedges started that trend. This clip is from 15 years ago.

He performed in concert in Lubbock at Texas Tech University along with Liz Story back in the 80s. It was excellent, and I was sad to see him depart this earth far too early.
 
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