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How to improve your writing - Create deliberate practice-like activities that simulate only a portion of the writing process since you can have more reps and have faster feedback loops as it's only a subset of the whole thing. Ex: Chess Puzzles
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Why writing online is like skiing downhill - You want to grab the reader's attention early on in the piece. You can use stories to facilitate this. - Ask yourself if there is enough "speed" to bring the writer to the next section. You can tease what's upcoming to help.
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Insights from 50 writing tools by Peter Clark - Don't repeat words that might be too near each other. - Put noun and verb really close to the start of the sentence if you want to make it really long. - Use simple language if talking about something more emotionally salient.
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Thoughts on being a good online writer - Don't worry about it at the beginning as nobody is going to read it. - Write high-quality pieces - ideally something nobody has written about before. - Share your links on communities (ex: Reddit)
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How to get better at structure in writing - The New Yorker and The Economist are good at structure. When reading a piece, try to figure out what are the ideas the author is trying to communicate. - Then think how would you structure the ideas vs how the author did.
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Questions I had: - Books/papers on naturalistic decision making? - How do you find the best papers/books on a certain topic? - Any good reads on other sorts of deliberate practice-like activities?
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Re: finding resources to read. This is a bit of an art. I tend to Google first, and then look up citations at the bottom of Wikipedia. But I also pay attention if some blog post/Tweet thread cites a book/paper. Then it's usually a simple case of following their citations.
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