Hey Yonatan, cheers for the feedback! If you haven’t already then key ideas guide 2 sums up my rebuttals to the “anki is just for facts” view. Definitely agree that I’m only coaching on computer-based learning (Anki + Obsidian mostly), but would argue that as Anki uses the best techniques for learning (spaced repetition, active recall, active encoding), it’s fair for me to advertise this as learning coaching. The aim is effective learning, the tool is Anki (+ Obsidian if people are interested!). There are things like experiential learning and generative learning that I won’t be covering, but I don’t claim to be a one-stop shop for all learning methods
Hey Yonatan, cheers for the feedback! If you haven’t already then key ideas guide 2 sums up my rebuttals to the “anki is just for facts” view. Definitely agree that I’m only coaching on computer-based learning (Anki + Obsidian mostly), but would argue that as Anki uses the best techniques for learning (spaced repetition, active recall, active encoding), it’s fair for me to advertise this as learning coaching. The aim is effective learning, the tool is Anki (+ Obsidian if people are interested!). There are things like experiential learning and generative learning that I won’t be covering, but I don’t claim to be a one-stop shop for all learning methods
Ah! Sounds like I just didn’t understand it well. +1!
Although saying that: I have just discovered this learning coach who recommends some beyond-anki paradigms, which I’m very interested to try out!