The Benefits of Interleaved Practice, Dr. Doug Rohrer
Suppose you want to improve your golf game—say, driving and putting. If you’re like most people, you would practice all of your driving and then all of your putting (or vice versa) before calling it a day. This is called blocked practice and it’s everywhere in the real-world. However, as Dr. Doug Rohrer (University of South Florida) discusses in this video, it is far better for long-term learning to mix-up, or “interleave,” the skills you are trying to master, whether they are sports-related or academic. Watch to find out more.

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How to study using interleaved practice

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Interleaving: how it can help you study more effectively

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Interleaved Learning and Vocabulary Acquisition

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Blocked vs Interleaved Practice: What Actually Works for Musicians?

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Benefits of Interleaved Practice with Dr Noa Kageyama

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How to practice effectively...for just about anything - Annie Bosler and Don Greene

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Think Fast, Talk Smart: Communication Techniques

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Secrets of Interleaved Practice | How Learning Works

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Interleaved Practice: The Practice Tool that Separates Pros from Everyone Else

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All About Interleaved Piano Practice Technique - Why It's the Best Way to Practice Piano

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You Need to Be Bored. Here's Why.

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Make It Stick. Dr. Mark McDaniel

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Interleaving vs Blocked Practice – The positive benefits of interleaved practice

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How One Practice Tip Can Completely Change How You Learn

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How to Explain Anything To Anyone (Even If It's Complex!)

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Interleaving | Mixed Up Practice | Science of Learning Series

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How To Think SO CLEARLY People Assume You're A Genius

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robert bjork - the benefits of interleaving practice

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Becoming a Bulletproof Musician, with Noa Kageyama

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