- ~ do something, get stuck, then learn something
- ~ find the best resource
- ~ learn the field's lingo to find the best resources for subfields
- ~ you need a learning system, not a collection of tips
- ~ chunk it up
- ~ there must be a product
- ~ passive learning is better for beginners, active learning better for experts
- ~ understanding the basics helps with missing nothing
- ~ gradually increase the grain size of learning
how to learn?
Backlinks
- how to build learning software?
- how to make a language learning tool?
- ~ chunk it up
- ~ do something, get stuck, then learn something
- ~ encoding should include synthesis, reorganization, comparison, application and context variation
- ~ find _the_ best resource
- ~ gradually increase the grain size of learning
- ~ learn by focusing attention on one component of the skill at a time
- ~ learn the foundational fields
- ~ long-term commitment massively boosts learning success
- ~ passive learning is better for beginners, active learning better for experts
- ~ redundancy enhances learning
- ~ solve the same problem twice
- ~ there must be a product
- ~ to learn, dip into related fields
- ~ try doing things the _recommended_ way
- ~ understanding the basics helps with missing nothing
- ~ unorthodox strategies often give you initial success, but then you can't even know that you fail because you no comparison
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