How to Teach Yourself Anything (The Self-Study Blueprint)
By The Study Coach - Tom Vorselen
Summary
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Full Transcript
Every skill that you admire in someone else was learned. They were not born knowing how to code. They were not born fluent in a second language. They were
not born understanding financial markets or how to design a website or how to fly a plane. At some point, they sat down
a plane. At some point, they sat down and taught themselves or someone else taught them. But increasingly, and this
taught them. But increasingly, and this is the most important part, the most valuable learning happening right now is self-directed. The formal education
self-directed. The formal education system teaches you a curated set of topics on someone else's timeline. And
that has its place, all right? But the
skill of being able to pick up any subject, any tool, any domain of knowledge and teach it to yourself from scratch, that skill will carry you further than any single degree. Because
degrees expire in relevance and the ability to learn does not. Today, I'm
going to give you the complete blueprint for teaching yourself anything. And this
is not the generic stuff about being curious or staying consistent. I'm
talking about an actual system that you can follow step-by-step starting today.
Step one, define what you mean by done.
And make sure that you do this for yourself before you even start. This is
where most self-learners go wrong immediately. They decide that they want
immediately. They decide that they want to learn something and they find some resources. They start consuming content
resources. They start consuming content and three weeks later, they're still watching tutorials and reading introductions without having actually produced anything or reaching any kinds
of milestones. The problem is that if
of milestones. The problem is that if you say I want to learn Python, learn photography, or learn economics, it has no finish line. Your brain cannot track progress toward a goal that it cannot
define, so it keeps kind of like drifting away. You watch one more video,
drifting away. You watch one more video, you read one more article, you feel like you are learning, but you have actually no evidence that you actually are learning. So, before you open a single
learning. So, before you open a single resource, answer these two questions.
What will I be able to do when I'm done that I cannot do right now? And how will I prove it to myself? So, instead of planning to learn Python, plan to build
a working web scraper that pulls data from a real website. Instead of planning to learn photography, the goal could be to shoot and edit 20 photos that I'm
proud of enough that I can post them publicly. If you want to say learn
publicly. If you want to say learn economics, it could be explain the 10 core principles of microeconomics from memory and solve basic supply demand problems. Now, you have a real target
and everything that you do from this point forward is measured against whether it moves you closer to that target, yes or no. And if a resource is not helping you get there, you can drop
the resource and instead find a new one that actually does. Step two is find the right resources without drowning in options. The internet is full with
options. The internet is full with options these days. It has an abundance problem, basically. For any subject that
problem, basically. For any subject that you want to learn, there are hundreds of courses, maybe even thousands of videos, and millions of articles. And most
self-learners, they waste their time searching for the perfect resource instead of actually study. And that
search itself becomes a form of procrastination disguised as preparation. So, here's the method that
preparation. So, here's the method that I use and recommend to every student that I coach. Spend a maximum of 1 hour finding your resources. Don't spend 1 minute more. And within that hour, do
minute more. And within that hour, do the following. You search for best free
the following. You search for best free course for insert your topic for beginners. And look at what happens and
beginners. And look at what happens and appears on Reddit, YouTube, and Quora.
The crowd-sourced recommendations from people who have actually completed the courses are way more reliable than any curated list. So, read the three to five
curated list. So, read the three to five responses, and you will notice the same two or three resources showing up repeatedly, and those are going to be your starting points. Then you pick one
primary resource and one backup resource. Your primary resource is the
resource. Your primary resource is the course, the textbook, or tutorial series that you will follow from start to finish. And your backup is what you
finish. And your backup is what you switch to if the primary one does not really click for you after the first week or it's not really a match. You do
not need 10 different resources or courses. You need one good one and the
courses. You need one good one and the discipline to follow through with it. If
your subject has a widely recognized free course, then start there. For
programming, there could be some course from a popular uni or free code camp, maybe. For data science, there are free
maybe. For data science, there are free courses on Kaggle or even courses by Google. For academic subjects, MIT Open
Google. For academic subjects, MIT Open Courseware has full university courses available for free, including lectures, problem sets, and exams. The point is to stop searching and start doing as fast
as possible. And the thing is, a perfect
as possible. And the thing is, a perfect resource does not exist. A good resource that you actually complete will always be better than the perfect resource that you leave after three videos, okay? Step
number three is that we need to build our own curriculum. When you are in school, someone hands you out a syllabus, and you have topics like literally sequenced for you. Deadlines
are set, assessments are scheduled, but when you are teaching yourself, none of that exists. So, you need to build it
that exists. So, you need to build it for yourself. I want you to take your
for yourself. I want you to take your primary resource and map out the full scope of what it covers. If it's a course, look at the module list. If it's
a textbook, look at the table of content and write down every major topic or unit. Now, the next step is that you
unit. Now, the next step is that you divide those topics across your available timeline. If your course has
available timeline. If your course has 12 modules and you want to finish in 6 weeks, that is two modules per week. So,
block specific days for each module.
Maybe Monday and Tuesday could be module one, Wednesday and Thursday for module two, and so on. You start to get the idea. This not need to be very rigid.
idea. This not need to be very rigid.
Keep in mind that life will get in the way, and you will need to adjust from time to time. But having a written plan means that you always know what to do next. You won't have to sit down and
next. You won't have to sit down and think about, "Oh, what am I going to study?" because that uncertainty is what
study?" because that uncertainty is what often causes people not to learn things by themselves. Also, add one more
by themselves. Also, add one more element to your curriculum, and that is checkpoints. Every one to two weeks,
checkpoints. Every one to two weeks, schedule a checkpoint where you assess your progress. Can you explain the
your progress. Can you explain the concepts you covered this week without looking at your notes? Can you solve problems or complete exercises related to what you studied? And if the answer
to these questions is yes, then you move on. But if the answer is no, then you
on. But if the answer is no, then you know exactly what you need to revisit before moving forward. Step number four is use the Feynman technique to find out what you actually understand. Richard
Feynman was a Nobel Prize-winning physicist who was famous for being able to explain the most complex ideas in simple, clear language. His approach to learning was built on one single
principle. If you cannot explain
principle. If you cannot explain something simply, you do not properly understand it. And the technique that is
understand it. And the technique that is named after him works like this. After
studying a concept, you put away all of your material, you take a blank piece of paper or open a blank document, and you explain the concept as if you are teaching it to someone who knows
absolutely nothing about this topic. You
can also speak it out loud. And I want you to make sure that you use very plain language and avoid any kind of jargon or shortcuts. When you get stuck, and when
shortcuts. When you get stuck, and when you find yourself unable to explain a step or a connection or a reason why something works the way it works, you have found the gap in your understanding, the knowledge gap. So, I
want you now to go back to your resource, study that specific gap, and then try the explanation again. And this
works because of a process that researchers call self-explanation.
A meta-analysis by Bisra and colleagues reviewed 64 studies with nearly 6,000 participants, and they found that when learners are prompted to explain concepts in their own words, their
learning outcomes improve with an average effect size of g = 0.55. and
that is meaningful consistent effect across different subjects and different age groups. The reason that this
age groups. The reason that this techniques matter so much when you are learning on your own is that it solves the biggest problem self-learners face.
In a classroom, you have a teacher who will catch you when your understanding is off and they ask you a question, they give you a half-baked answer and they push you to think a bit deeper. But when
you are studying by yourself, nobody is doing that for you. So you can go weeks thinking you understand something when you actually do not and then the Feynman technique closes that gap. It really
forces your misunderstanding to the surface before you even have the chance to let them compound over time. So if
you do this after every major concept that you study, it takes like 5 to 10 minutes and those 10 minutes will save you hours of confusion at a later stage.
Now step number five is I want you to test yourself constantly even when there is no exam. This is the step that most self-learners skip because there's no external pressure to do it. Nobody is
grading you, nobody is giving you a quiz on Friday, so you just keep consuming content and moving forward without ever checking whether you actually learned and retained anything. In 2014, a
researcher named Christopher Rowland went through almost 159 separate experiments on how people retain information. The conclusion across all
information. The conclusion across all of them was very consistent. Students
who tested themselves on the material remembered significantly more than students who just went back and read the material again and again. And the reason is interesting because when you force your brain to pull something out of your
memory, that act of struggling to remember actually makes the memory stronger. It is like a muscle, the
stronger. It is like a muscle, the harder the rep, the more growth that you will get out of it. So reading your notes feels productive, but your brain is barely working and trying to recall
those same notes from scratch, that is where real learning happens. Here's how
you can use this to learn better. After
every study session, close your material and write down everything that you can recall from what you just learned. Don't
look, just write and then check it again. The difference between what you
again. The difference between what you wrote and what was in the material is again what you need to revisit. Kind of
similar like the Feynman technique, but now you just like blurting it out and you're really trying to focus on memorizing stuff. At the end of every
memorizing stuff. At the end of every week, give yourself a mini exam. Write
five to 10 questions based on everything that you studied that week and answer them from memory. If your course or textbook includes practice problems or quizzes, make sure to do all of them. If
it does not, then you can always create your own. You can use AI to generate
your own. You can use AI to generate practice questions on any given topic in seconds. You can just type in, "Give me
seconds. You can just type in, "Give me 10 practice questions on topic at a beginner level." and you have an instant
beginner level." and you have an instant self-test. Keep a running list of
self-test. Keep a running list of everything that you get wrong and this list is kind of your personalized study guide because before moving to new material, you want to review the list of
your mistakes first. And addressing them is the highest valuable use of your study time because you're closing these knowledge gaps, okay? Step number six is to stay accountable when nobody is
checking in. Self-study has a massive
checking in. Self-study has a massive problem where people just leave it. Most
people who start a self-directed learning project abandon it within the first three weeks. And the reason is simple. When there's no teacher, there's
simple. When there's no teacher, there's no classmate, no grades, and no deadline, the only thing keeping you going is internal motivation. And
internal motivation is pretty unreliable. You need external
unreliable. You need external accountability. And there are three ways
accountability. And there are three ways that you could build it. The first is a public commitment. Tell someone what you
public commitment. Tell someone what you are learning and when you plan to finish. Post it on social media if that
finish. Post it on social media if that works for you or tell a friend, a family member, or a mentor. The act of making your goal public creates social pressure to follow through with it. You're not
just letting yourself down if you quit, you're also doing it a friend of someone who actually knows you. And the second is finding a learning partner. Find one
other person who is learning something, can be anything, and set a weekly check-in. Every Sunday, you each send a
check-in. Every Sunday, you each send a short message. It could be what you
short message. It could be what you studied this week, what you accomplished, what are you working on the next week. You don't even need to be studying the same subject. You just need someone who expects to hear from you and
gives you an update. And the third one is building a streak. This works the same way as I described in a previous video. You grab a calendar, and every
video. You grab a calendar, and every day that you complete your planned study session, you mark it with a big X. And
after a week, you have a chain of X's.
And after 2 weeks, the chain becomes something that you do not want to break anymore. And this visual streak creates
anymore. And this visual streak creates its own accountability because losing progress feels worse than actually doing the work. And research on habit
the work. And research on habit formation found that it takes roughly 66 days for a new behavior to really start automatic. So, if you are 2 weeks into
automatic. So, if you are 2 weeks into your new study plan, and it still feels like you are dragging yourself to kind of like the desk every single day, that is pretty normal, all right? You're not
failing, you are just early in the process. And for the first 2 months,
process. And for the first 2 months, lean on the external structures, the learning partner, the streak, and the public commitment that you made, because they will carry you until the habit is
strong enough to start carrying it by itself. Step number seven is build
itself. Step number seven is build something with what you learn. There's a
researcher named Michelle and Chi who spent years studying the difference between types of learning activities, and she found that the deeper you go, the more you retain. So, passively
watching a lecture is the weakest form.
Actively taking notes is better, but the strongest form of learning, the one that produces the deepest and the most lasting understanding, is when you create something new from what you just
learned. Something that goes beyond what
learned. Something that goes beyond what was in the original material. And that
is why building a project matters more than finishing a course. Whatever you
are teaching yourself, find a way to build something real with it. If you are learning to code, then try building an actual project or a personal website or a simple app or a tool that solves a
problem that you actually have personally. If you are learning
personally. If you are learning photography again, maybe shoot a team photo series and post it. If you're
learning a language, you could write a short essay in that language or have a 15-minute conversation with a native speaker. If you're learning economics,
speaker. If you're learning economics, write a blog post explaining a concept to a non-expert audience such that you can see if you really understand. The
project does not need to be impressive.
It needs to be something very real.
Something that you can point to and say, "I made this." Because a finished project proves your knowledge in a way that completing a course can never do.
The course proves that you watched all of the videos and the project that proves that you also understood them and you can implement them. Now, let me recap everything. Teaching yourself
recap everything. Teaching yourself anything follows seven steps. Define
what done looks like before you start.
Find your resources in under an hour and commit to one primary source. Build your
own curriculum with a timeline and then some checkpoints. Use the Feynman
some checkpoints. Use the Feynman technique of every major concept to find out where you really lack knowledge.
Test yourself constantly even when nobody is making you make these exams and build external accountability through public commitments, learning partners, or streaks. And finally, build
something real with what you have learned. This system works for any
learned. This system works for any skill, any subject, and any timeline.
The specific resources change, but the process stays the same. And whether you are learning machine learning or learning to cook, the steps are roughly identical. Define the target, find the
identical. Define the target, find the resource, build the plan, explain it, test it, stay accountable, and build something. The most successful people
something. The most successful people that I have coached are not the ones with the most natural ability. They are
the ones who figured out how to learn on their own because when you can teach yourself anything, you are never stuck and you're never dependent on a school, a teacher or a course to move forward.
You just learn. If you want to learn more about the specific study techniques that help you retain what you learn in half of the time, then check out this next video and if you're looking for a
study coach or a study partner, then check out the link in the description.
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