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I've been obsessed with figuring out the fastest and easiest possible way to learn new skills
for the last decade.
And after years of teaching people and reading the research on this, I've stumbled across
a mistake that guarantees an almost 100% failure rate on learning any skill.
And sadly, this is a mistake that most people make every single day.
I call this mistake very overload.
And I think it is one of the most important things to know about when you're trying
to learn any new skill.
But first, we have to understand a key often overlooked ingredient to learning any new skill
that allows us to even learn skills in the first place.
And this ingredient is experiential cycling.
So if I practice shooting this boat every day for a month, I should get better.
Right?
Maybe, but maybe not.
Once I let go of this arrow, I cannot control where it goes mid-air, at least as far
as I know.
Where this arrow lands the pens on everything that I did in the setup beforehand.
And by the way, like any skill, learning to learn is the same.
Exam results, our memory, our depth of understanding.
These things depend on the processes we used before when we were studying.
Now imagine I shot this arrow and it landed here.
Not very good.
But to do better next time, I have to know what to change to get it into the center.
I cannot keep just firing arrows off randomly expecting to get better.
I might get a bull's eye once in a while, but it's not going to be consistent and once
the target moves further away, it's not going to work anymore.
And learning, if we get a bad exam result, we need to know what to change just because
we get a better exam result in a different exam.
It doesn't mean we actually solve the problem.
So this is essentially the experiential cycle.
We have an experience, we observe the result.
We think about what we need to change and then we do an experiment to see if it made
it any better.
Without this cycle, we cannot learn any new skill.
This is pretty straightforward and obvious, but here's the part that traps people.
Whether it's learning about learning skills or learning to shoot an arrow or learning
any other skill, the fastest way to learn any skill is to learn more slowly.
This is the theory overload trap.
Now most of you know that I've got to program that teaches people to learn more efficiently.
One of the things that I can do on the program that I can't do on YouTube is I get to observe
how the students behave and I can track their progress much more closely.
So take a look at these two students and see if you can guess which one ended up being
more academically successful.
First on to look at is this one here, Suresh, who was on the program for five weeks and
got through 31% of the program.
The second student that I want you to look at is Enzo, who was on the program for 54 weeks
and got through 20% of the program.
Who do you think improved the fastest?
So despite covering less of the course, it was actually Enzo who ended up with a better
academic result.
He went from a baseline of 62% to the latest exam result of 92% compared to Suresh.
This is the surprising part.
Suresh actually went from 80% to 71% Suresh actually got worse after working on it for
five weeks.
Why did Suresh get worse?
I'll give you a clue, it's not just because Enzo had so much more time to work on things.
Well the answer is theory overload.
Okay, now imagine this bowl is your brain very smooth, just kidding.
Now your brain has a limited amount of cognitive resources that it can spend.
It's like how much memory or RAM your computer has.
So let's say that these wooden blocks represent your cognitive resources.
Now whenever we learn a new skill, we're introduced to new things that we need to think
about.
So each thing takes resources to keep it in mind and think about it.
Hold my arrow more tightly, stabilize my core, keep my shoulders relaxed, breathe more slowly,
aim a little bit lower.
You can see that my bowl, my capacity is becoming filled up.
And on top of that there's a certain amount of resources it takes to just perform the activity.
Now once a new skill eventually becomes a habit, the amount of resources it takes goes
down.
But when you're learning a new skill, it's not going to be a habit, it's going to be unfamiliar
and difficult and awkward and all of those things take additional resources to overcome.
So more and more needs to be invested into just doing the actual skill.
And as you can see now, we are overflowing with overloaded our brains ability to think about
things because we have given it too many things to think about.
In the research, our brain trying to think about lots of different things at the same
time is called multiple element interactivity.
And it's a common reason why we enter into what's called cognitive overload.
But here is the thing about learning a cognitive skill, like learning to learn, for
example, unlike learning a physical skill like archery for a physical skill, we burn energy
using our body, using our muscles, for a cognitive skill, we burn effort with our brain,
which means that the amount of cognitive resources it takes to just perform the skill,
the act of learning is innately very high to begin with.
It takes a lot of mental resources to understand new information and process it and organize
it and think about where it belongs and create new memory.
And all of this effort helps to translate the learning into memory and understanding.
If we didn't feel this effort, we wouldn't have any memory and that would be called passive
learning.
Effective more active learning, it takes a lot of resources to begin with, which means
adding just a few more things can put us into overload very quickly.
So in that case, what is the best way to learn a new skill, especially a cognitive skill?
Well at the end of the day, all of that means that when we're learning a new skill,
we should only ever be trying to experiment with one or two things at the same time.
So Saresh, who covered like 30% of the program in a month, would have learned over a dozen
new techniques.
And each technique has two or three things to think about.
So that means that Saresh would have been trying to juggle 20 or 30 things at any given
time.
And completely overloaded and therefore his brain was not able to actually learn the skill.
And this is exactly why some students, if they don't realize this trap, can spend months
or even years trying to learn a new skill and feeling like it is impossible to get it
right, because no matter how much time they put into it, they do not seem to be improving.
It is incredibly frustrating.
So here's the secret to learning any skill the right way.
Always balance your new theory with practice.
If you practice without any theory, it's aimless.
If you practice with too much theory, you're getting overloaded.
So the trick is to balance new theory coming in with your existing skills becoming habits.
Like I mentioned before, when skills become habits, your brain figures out a more efficient
way to do it.
It doesn't require so many cognitive resources anymore.
It finds a shortcut.
And so the amount of cognitive resources it takes to perform the skill goes down as more
of this new skill just starts to become an old habit.
And eventually what took a lot of concentration to do now takes virtually no thinking
at all, and you can still do it just as accurately and just as consistently.
We have freed up more cognitive resources to take in some new theory and turn those into
habits.
For some skills and techniques, it can take weeks if not months to develop them into habits.
Whereas for some, it can just take a few hours.
And by balancing the theory with practice, we can achieve optimum skill growth, where we
are practicing and every time we practice, we're improving with focus and direction, but
we're not getting overloaded.
So here's what this looks like in practice.
Let's say we've only got five hours a week to practice.
Now that is not probably enough to form new habits very quickly.
And so we're going to need to reduce the amount of new theory we take in.
And because we've got a low amount of practice and therefore a low amount of theory, the
two of them are aligned and we can achieve our optimum skill growth.
Now let's say we now have a little bit more free time and we want to dedicate a little
bit more time to learning this skill.
So we have now 20 hours a week that we can dedicate to practice.
So the amount that we can practice has now gone up, which means we can also go up in
the amount of theory we can take in.
But it's proportional to the amount of extra practice we're getting.
So as a rule of thumb, I usually say for every hour of theory, we should have at least
five hours of practice.
So for example, if we have five hours of practice, we would only be able to take in one
hour of theory in this first example whereas in the second example we've got 20 hours
of practice, therefore we can have up to four hours of theory.
Now unfortunately, that's just a rule of thumb and in reality it's a little bit more complicated
because five hours of practicing a very complicated skill is not the same as five hours
of practicing a very simple skill like a new way to tie your shoelaces in which case
five hours of practice is probably overkill.
And so what's more important and accurate than just the number of hours of practice is actually
monitoring how quickly we're able to form new habits.
When new habits form, we have the mental space to take in more theory.
So if we're very slow at forming new habits, then we're going to be slower at taking
in new theory.
And the way you can know that new habits are forming is when you can feel that things are
becoming easier and faster without compromising your accuracy and your consistency.
And most of the time you're able to get faster without trying to get faster.
The speed comes with the efficiency that your brain develops at just getting better at doing
it.
Now this is where I have to give props to Enzo because Enzo realized that he was developing
new habits more slowly than we would have anticipated.
And so he took a year to cover 20% of the program.
So instead of five hours of practice for every hour of theory, he was doing more like 15-20
hours of practice for every hour of theory.
So even though on the surface it looks like he was going very slowly, his skill growth
was being maintained at an optimal rate because he was never letting himself get overloaded.
And by the way, if you're interested in the program yourself, there's a link in the description
that you can check out.
Now while theory overload has an almost 100% failure rate, the reverse is also true.
Almost 100% of the time, I see someone balancing the theory intake rate with their practice
and habit forming rate, they are able to learn their desired skill very smoothly and very quickly.
Which is why I said that I think this is one of the most important things to understand if you want to learn any skill.
I hope that helps and if you've got the capacity for just one more bit of theory, then check out this video that YouTube thinks you're like.
Thanks for watching and I'll see you next time.