in dog training and piano practice there is a method called “back-chaining” that can make a huge difference. it is basically learning in reverse
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e.g. a complex task is broken into parts A, B, and C. instead of learning A, then B, then C, you reverse and learn C first, then B, then A
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this works because as you practice the new chunk, you can flow it into the piece you already learned.
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this doesn’t work in the normal direction because in order to get to the new stuff you have to retread what you’ve already learned. for a task ABC you will end overly proficient at A and frustrated and weak at C
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this doesn’t even necessarily build proficiency at A because of how recall works. spaced repetition systems for example work on the premise that you have to (almost)FORGET in order to actually ingrain a habit.
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back chaining naturally allows the bulk of your conscious attention to flood into the “Task at Hand” while also irrigating the more established tokens of knowledge in a maximally efficient way
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using a programming analogy, regular chaining requires you to navigate your entire linked-list in order to iterate on appending something new. in back-chaining you always have the tail in hand and can immediately iterate on adding the new head.
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