Obscure yet very powerful methods of learning that many people have never tried
Here are five uncommon but highly effective learning techniques:
1. Intuition Flooding
To understand something well on a gut level, spend hours looking closely at a huge number of examples, until your intuition forms a predictive model.
I do this fairly often but don’t think I’ve heard it discussed!
Example: Look carefully at 100 user interfaces.
2. Expert Observation
Ask an expert if you can watch them apply a skill. Ask them to verbalize each choice they make (and why they made it) as they go. Ask them to slow down when they do a step so fast you can’t understand it.
Example: Observe a chess master play an A.I. in chess.
3. Immersive Reading
Get both the eReader (or web/print) version of a book AND the audio version. Listen to the audio book as you read. Gradually increase your speed. This can increase your flow state and enable you to read faster than ever!
Technique from @EmersonSpartz
4. Tweet the Core
After learning something important/having an idea, try to turn it into a tweet capturing the most important part. This will oversimplify, but forces you to think about what the core truly is, and adds value for others.
Example: Explaining hindsight bias in 280 characters.
5. Diagram Learning
As you start to understand an idea, attempt to draw a picture representing it. E.g., make an oval for each sub-concept, connect them with lines based on relationships (e.g., an arrow means “causes”, a line means “correlated”, etc.).
Example: Draw a diagram of your understanding of Karl Marx’s theory of society. (Incidentally, we just launched a site called Society Explained where you can explore diagrams of more than 100 thinker’s theories).
This piece was first written on September 6, 2020, and first appeared on my website on June 25, 2026.
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