For anything you're trying to learn, try to fit the most important concepts, facts, and procedures onto a single page. This deceptively simple technique forces you to identify the most important material and arrange it into a coherent structure. These are both [[What are the most effective learning strategies?|effective learning strategies]], and part of what Richard Mayer (2019) refers to as "generative learning." I first came across this technique back in 2012 when reading Tim Ferriss's book "The 4-Hour Chef" (which is really a book about learning), and I've applied it in a wide range of domains since. For example, below is a one-pager for coaching.^[I might update the document with references at some point.] I continuously updated this document throughout the first years of my coaching practice while trying to understand and integrate what I was learning. I also regularly reviewed the document to "refresh" my memory and ensure a level of consistency in my coaching. An interesting observation is that my rate of updating and reviewing of the coaching one-pager went down drastically at some point on my learning journey — a clear sign that I wasn't learning as much anymore. ![[Coaching One-Pager.pdf]] --- Created: [[2023-09-08]] Type: #permanent Topics: [[Learning (Index)]], [[Coaching (Index)]] Related notes: - [[Summarizing and drawing involve selecting relevant material, organizing the information, and integrating it with prior knowledge]]