In: Psychology
nterleaving for Learning" Please respond to the following:
Please read this Wired article, “Everything You Thought You Knew About Learning Is Wrong”, then respond to the following questions:
What’s the difference between block learning and interleaving?
Explain how you can use interleaving to learn or improve your mastery of a sport, instrument, course, or skill (e.g. basketball, golf, guitar, math, painting, public speaking, etc.) Specify the mini-skills you would interleave together.
1. Block practicing is a procedure in which you focus on learning one skill at a time. You practice a skill repetitively for a period of time and then you move onto another skill and repeat the same process while Interleaving practice involves working on multiple skills in parallel at a single time. Interleaving practice helps a person to gain more knowledge than the block practice.
2. In the Block practice, we go over a single idea again and again until we master it, before proceeding to the next concept. But another learning method called “interleaving” improves our ability to retain and perform new skills over any traditional means by leaps and bounds. It space out learning over a longer period of time, and it randomize the information we encounter when learning a new skill.
The advantage of this method is that your brain doesn’t store information in short-term memory. Instead, it causes your brain to intensely focus and problem-solve every step of the way, resulting in information getting stored in your long-term memory.