What Study Gurus Get Wrong About Learning?

Study Gurus say learning is like solving a puzzle, but they forget that puzzles are just one kind of game.

Imagine you have a bag full of different toys: blocks, balls, cars, and stickers. A Study Guru might say, "You need to learn all the blocks first before you can play with the cars!" But that's not how kids usually play, they mix everything together and have fun while learning different skills at once.

Learning is like playing with a toy box

When you're learning, it's like having a toy box full of surprises. Sometimes you want to build something tall (like learning math), sometimes you want to race your car (like practicing spelling). You don't need to finish one toy before moving on to the next, you can jump between them and still have fun.

Study Gurus think you should learn in a straight line, like climbing stairs. But really, learning is more like jumping from one slide to another, sometimes you go up, sometimes you go down, but it's all part of the game. Study Gurus say learning is like solving a puzzle, but they forget that puzzles are just one kind of game.

Imagine you have a bag full of different toys: blocks, balls, cars, and stickers. A Study Guru might say, "You need to learn all the blocks first before you can play with the cars!" But that's not how kids usually play, they mix everything together and have fun while learning different skills at once.

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Examples

  1. A student believes they need to study for hours every day to remember everything.
  2. They think taking too many notes is the best way to learn new material.
  3. They feel overwhelmed when a teacher says, 'You just have to understand it.'

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