I just spent a week practicing Thinking Physics. (I’m not 100% sure I hit the specific target of “deliberate practice.”) I definitely think it was worth doing for a couple days. I don’t know that I’d do Thinking Physics in particular for more than a couple weeks, but it doesn’t feel “fake” to me to spend 2 weeks on it.
I set the goal of “be 95% confident in the answer”, as a rough proxy for “there were no major lingering confusions about the problem except for generic ‘maybe I missed something’”. I later added a subgoal of “specifically predict the concept that the exercise was aiming to teach.”
I alternated between “training” and “testing”. During training, I’d do a combination of things including:
Work on the problem on my own for at least 20 minutes
Work on the problem with a friend for at least another 20 minutes (sharing notes on how to approach it)
Meta-reflection on how to do better at Thinking Physics problems.
Err more on the side of “looking at the answer”, even if you could think more, since there are diminishing returns to learning independently, and there’s a bit of an intuition to build of “which questions are actually good and worth spending more time on?”
During testing, I would work entirely on my own, aim to thoroughly deconfuse myself without help, and giving myself multiple days per question while aiming to get 0 wrong. (Technically was aiming to get 5% wrong, but with multiple days per question it’d be a pretty slow process to do 20 questions and accept 1 of them being wrong, so I instead just tried to do ~5 questions and get them all right)
My result after ~1 week of work was… well, still getting 1 out of 5 questions wrong in my test set. But I have a pretty clear sense of where I went wrong there (I was still explicitly confused about a sub-problem, I just decided I was exhausted from the question and running out of time in the two-week sprint before I needed to return to focusing on LessWrong)
I just spent a week practicing Thinking Physics. (I’m not 100% sure I hit the specific target of “deliberate practice.”) I definitely think it was worth doing for a couple days. I don’t know that I’d do Thinking Physics in particular for more than a couple weeks, but it doesn’t feel “fake” to me to spend 2 weeks on it.
I set the goal of “be 95% confident in the answer”, as a rough proxy for “there were no major lingering confusions about the problem except for generic ‘maybe I missed something’”. I later added a subgoal of “specifically predict the concept that the exercise was aiming to teach.”
I alternated between “training” and “testing”. During training, I’d do a combination of things including:
Work on the problem on my own for at least 20 minutes
Work on the problem with a friend for at least another 20 minutes (sharing notes on how to approach it)
Meta-reflection on how to do better at Thinking Physics problems.
Err more on the side of “looking at the answer”, even if you could think more, since there are diminishing returns to learning independently, and there’s a bit of an intuition to build of “which questions are actually good and worth spending more time on?”
During testing, I would work entirely on my own, aim to thoroughly deconfuse myself without help, and giving myself multiple days per question while aiming to get 0 wrong. (Technically was aiming to get 5% wrong, but with multiple days per question it’d be a pretty slow process to do 20 questions and accept 1 of them being wrong, so I instead just tried to do ~5 questions and get them all right)
My result after ~1 week of work was… well, still getting 1 out of 5 questions wrong in my test set. But I have a pretty clear sense of where I went wrong there (I was still explicitly confused about a sub-problem, I just decided I was exhausted from the question and running out of time in the two-week sprint before I needed to return to focusing on LessWrong)