There are a lot of ways to learn a skill. Watching, reading, taking notes, etc. You have probably practised many forms of learning, and by now know what suits you best. I bring up two forms of learning: passive and active, where active forms prove to be more effective, no matter the "type of learner" you may be. Passive learning is, well, passive. The gist is that you're trying to absorb information without really putting much effort to retain it. This would be like watching an instructional video, listening to a lecture, or reading a book. You can learn this way, but without following up with action to commit the information to memory, much of it will be lost. Active learning is, as the name implies, active. You perform action to ingrain information. This would be like writing down information, rehearsing a presentation, or hands-on practice like in video games or sports. Active forms of learning are much more likely to store information to memory because you are working your mind and learning hands on. The active form of learning which reigns supreme is teaching. Not only does it hold the higher rate of retention of an active form of learning, but also carries other factors that help you learn. First, it holds you accountable. That is because you do not want to spread misinformation to a student; this will ensure your knowledge is correct, and give you anxiety to retain it. Second, it forces you to relearn from the ground up, or at least from where your student is starting, allowing you to attain true mastery. Third, you discover gaps of knowledge: areas which you thought you had mastered but turned out not to be the case. I understand that not everyone has a student to teach, so if you are able to believe you are in the situation of a mentor-disciple relationship, in which you are the mentor, you can put yourself to the truest test of knowledge by teaching a fictional disciple every aspect of a skill from the ground up. As the disciple is fictional, you'll have to be honest enough with yourself to stay accountable- no "hand waving" explanations are passable. ********* ✌NEW VIDEO EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY! ☞Check out my Ebook: http://a.co/d/83alQ53 ☞Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=_DKbill ☞Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuu6K0QPPrXreZUC-K3AgQw?sub_confirmation=1 ☞Smash Philosophy Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLCGxMve95WT5XaXPal7lo2NMtFuJQy0ba

ANALYZING ZERO'S COMEBACK TOURNAMENT! (SSBU BLINK RESPAWN 2024)
13.4K views

"NO BULLSH*T" MIN MIN GUIDE 【SSBU】 (AGGRESSIVE JAPANESE PLAYSTYLE)
10.9K views

I studied 100 prodigy Smash Bros players - here is what I found.
5.7K views

"NO BULLSH*T" SONIC GUIDE 【SSBU】
56.4K views

NO BS How to Play STEVE in Super Smash Bros Ultimate【SSBU】
17.7K views

How to build a 3 Block Wall Guide as Steve in Smash Ultimate | Steve Series
24.1K views