Whatever you end up doing, I strongly recommend taking a learning-by-writing style approach (or anything else that will keep you in critical assessment mode rather than classroom mode). These ideas are nowhere near solidified enough to merit a classroom-style approach, and even if they were infallible, that’s probably not the fastest way to learn them and contribute original stuff.
The most common failure mode I expect for rapid introductions to alignment is just trying to absorb, rather than constantly poking and prodding to get a real working understanding. This happened to me, and wasted a lot of time.
Whatever you end up doing, I strongly recommend taking a learning-by-writing style approach (or anything else that will keep you in critical assessment mode rather than classroom mode). These ideas are nowhere near solidified enough to merit a classroom-style approach, and even if they were infallible, that’s probably not the fastest way to learn them and contribute original stuff.
The most common failure mode I expect for rapid introductions to alignment is just trying to absorb, rather than constantly poking and prodding to get a real working understanding. This happened to me, and wasted a lot of time.