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Passive learning that works

Learning is hard. Mostly because you have to sit down and concentrate on your subject. Then you have to take notes and repeat it, while preferably do exercises and make use of it in everyday life. It turns out that there’s a better way.

Free children making a star with hands creativ...
Image by Pink Sherbet Photography via Flickr

In my experience, the best way to learn passively is by reading highly topical blogs. This allows you to study each day a topic in about 400 words with one single message. Depending on a blog, they have from a few posts a week to a few a day, but they’re all fairly short. Just enough to process during morning coffee or lunch break. As you continue reading them throughout a year, you’ll suddenly realize that you’ve learned a lot about the subject even though you never enrolled in a class or had to pay someone for it.

What about exercises? Since you’re interested in subject your studying (why study it otherwise?), you’ll also get plenty of opportunity to practice what these blogs teach you as they’ll often have little tasks you can do, or ask you to write your thoughts in their comments or even in a guest posts. You might not get to turn-in your term paper, but writing a good guest post or to participate in their forums might be the next best thing for thinking about subject at hand.

To get you started, here are a few good subjects and blogs on different topics:

Personal Development: Steve Pavlina

Frugal living and personal finances: Get Rich Slowly,  No Credit Needed

Information Design and data mining: Data Mining

Presentations: Presentation Zen

Usability: Adaptive Path

AJAX and Web 2.0 technologies: Ajaxian

Web 2.0 ecosystem: TechCrunch UK

Social Media: Chris Brogan

Running: Inside Nike Running, Complete Running Network

Healthy lifestyle: Dietriffic

Python development: The Py Side of Life

Youth Marketing: Y Pulse

 

So, what are the topics you’re learning about and which blogs? 🙂

2 responses to “Passive learning that works

  1. thanks for the recommendations, I added a few.

    I would also add that people shouldn't feel obliged to read everything in their feeds. that way lies overwhelmedness.

    Open Access News – http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/fosblog.html – for open access (duh)

    Read Write Web – http://www.readwriteweb.com/ – for new web (2.0) things

    Arts & Letters Daily – http://www.aldaily.com/ – for a smattering of the best newspaper op-ed pieces and reviews

    Fast Wonder – http://fastwonderblog.com/ – for community manager/management topics

    Global Watchtower – http://www.globalwatchtower.com/ – for language technology industry news

    Fresh + New(er) – http://www.powerhousemuseum.com/dmsblog/ – Powerhouse Museum (Sydney, Australia) blog. regularly updated, excellent content. topics relating to how cultural institutions can have meaningful presences online (that's my take anyway).

    There are also some very popular programming related ones I would add such as DailyWTF, Coding Horror, Stack Overflow.

  2. Hey! Thanks for linking to me.. I totally agree with you about learning little by little, it's acutally something I've talked about on my blog before…the power of 10 minutes per day to change your life by learning a little about your topic so that you move closer to your goal EVERY day.

    Great list of blogs.

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