Blocked Practice Feels Better Than It Works
Practicing one problem type feels productive but builds false confidence — mixing problem types forces the deeper skill of choosing the right approach.
Practicing one problem type feels productive but builds false confidence — mixing problem types forces the deeper skill of choosing the right approach.
Recognizing the basics is not the same as mastering them — experts return to fundamentals because that's where real leverage lives.
Saving resources feels productive but collecting is not learning — pick one thing, finish it, then move to the next.
Re-reading creates a false sense of familiarity — closing your notes and recalling from memory is what actually builds knowledge.
Tutorials feel like progress but real skill only develops when you close the video and try building something yourself.
You can practice a language alone by narrating your day, keeping a diary, and using exchange apps — no partner required.
Boredom usually lifts when you find a real problem the subject solves — connect dry material to something you already care about.
Even a silent phone on your desk drains focus — physical distance is the only reliable solution.
A boring study space removes visual competition for your attention, making it easier to focus on the work.
Flashcards work through retrieval, not recognition — phrase them as questions that force your brain to search for the answer.
Mix different problem types together instead of practicing one type at a time — the struggle of distinguishing between them is the real skill.
Real learning happens in the zone between too easy and too hard — just beyond your current level.
Repeating what you already know is not practice — real improvement comes from isolating weak spots and working at the edge of your ability.
Celebrate starting rather than finishing, and consistency will follow naturally because the threshold for success becomes effortless.
Writing down repeated mistakes with analysis turns invisible patterns into visible, fixable problems.
If a learning session produces nothing tangible, the knowledge likely did not stick.
Watching without practicing creates an illusion of understanding — stop the video and try it yourself.
Practicing slowly and precisely builds reliable speed — rushing just reinforces mistakes.