I Don't Have Time!
Learning How to Learn
The way most of us learned at school - being told information and trying to retain it - is far from optimal, and certainly not fun (unless you are lucky to have exceptional teachers).
Just find your learning style...right?
The VARK model of different learning styles (Visual - Auditory - Reading - Kinesthetic) was widely popular in the 1980s and is still prevalent today. It claims that each learner has a different preferred style of learning through which they achieve the best results.
Bad news: VARK is wrong.
Psychologist Dr. Christian Jarrett debunks "neuromyths", including the VARK model: "People are in fact poor judges of what form of learning will be best for them," says Jarrett. "In reality...a mixture of learning styles is the best solution."
Often, learners perform better in the learning style that best matches the material being taught. (See also: "Learning Styles Don't Exist" by Prof. Daniel T. Willingham)
At CG Cookie, the topic we teach - 3d creation - is nothing if not visual, which is why the video format makes the most sense.
A podcast describing a Blender workflow, on the other hand...not so much.
Find Your Personal "Why"
Why is learning such a pain sometimes? Heck, we all start off pretty bad!
So put it into perspective: why do you want to learn hard surface modeling?
Nobody learns topology for topology's sake (unless your are Jonathan Williamson who has previously admitted to actually *gasp* enjoying it).
Maybe that truck you are modeling is to be part of your Blender short that gets you excited. Knowing proper topology for your truck to be rigged and animated gets you one step closer to that goal.
That goal can make your whole process more worthwhile.
If not, well, it's going to be difficult to push forward during tough points (and yes, they will come).
The Struggle Towards Mastery
In his book Mastery, Robert Green argues that what we consider a gift or talent is really just the result of deliberate, relentless practice.
✨ Also read: "Talent is a Myth," says Epic Games' Tom Wright
Becoming a master at anything takes time. The irony - and the reason why the absolute majority of people doesn't get there - is that until we become great at something, it will more than likely feel like a chore to continue practicing and learning.
Hard work beats talent when talent doesn’t work hard”.
~ Tim Notke, iconic high school basketball coach
As you've probably experienced, certain elements of learning become easier the longer we learn, creating a snowball effect when things start to fall into place and make sense.
How do you get to that point? From learning in pieces, to chunks, then massive pieces.
Think of it as a mountain.
When you first start, you can't even see the top and you have a massive amount to learn from the bottom, but once you're halfway up you can see there's less and less to learn and your experience improves dramatically.
The Goldilocks Rule and Seeing The Path Before You
Humans experience peak motivation when working on tasks that are right on the edge of their current abilities. Not too hard. Not too easy. Just right.
The Goldilocks Rule, by James Clear
Bottom line: it's tough to truly enjoy learning when you step too far out of your current abilities.
This applies to all forms of learning.
Try something too far out of your current comfort zone and you're likely to feel confused and, what's worse, discouraged.
Learning is far more manageable and easier to keep up when you have a logical pattern of progression.
It's one of the reasons we have Playlists with multiple Blender courses so you can see the beginning and the end - and all the bits in between.
Some of our courses also have brief quizzes which help you to put into action what you've just learned.
Build the Habit
We are what we habit: from when we wake up, to what we most often eat, to how we think.
The majority of our actions is, in fact, ingrained habits. Good or bad, habits make who we are, so make them work for you - and make learning that much easier.
If you're a fan of analyzing and measuring, you may like track of your habits. After all, “What gets measured gets done," as the saying goes.
You can keep track of your habit progression by using the X Effect (explained on this X Effect thread of Reddit). The gist: mark an X for every day that you accomplish your habit over 49 days.
Make these habits specific. Instead of "learn 3d modeling", you say "create one 3d model this week". Make it measurable and easy to track.
"I have found that a day of not drawing can quickly spiral into two days, three, then a week, a month…and before you know it, you have fallen off the wagon completely.
I’ve made it a habit to draw every single day and I’ve been doing this for the past 11 years now. Not one day missed. Not one."
~ Sycra Yasin, Concept artist
Start small, don't try to create 5 new habits all at once because then you won't create any. Instead create one, two at most and track them daily. Some people like to keep their X Effect grid taped to their desk to be constantly reminded of what they want to accomplish.
✨ Read: Improve your art by forming new habits.
Just in Time Learning: the Right Things and the Right Time
Often, we get too ambitious and want to learn everything: I want to be a great programmer, animator, 3d modeler. I want to build a massive skill set to slap on my resume.
Instead, think about all the times you really understood something.
If you're building a game and you don't quite understand why you're getting a bug, you'll eventually figure it out after searching online and testing out various methods of fixing it.
Had you heard about that bug from someone else prior to it happening to you, you would've dismissed it or completely forgotten about it. You simply didn't get the information at the right time.
As you set out to learn a new skill, do a quick check and ask yourself, Why am I learning this? Why am I learning sculpting if I'm not actually using it actively in my current projects?
Just Get Started!
Getting started is often the hardest part.
Tasks seems like big mountains to overcome, but once we get started, these mountains soon turn to hills and we wonder why we ever feared them.
To get started, set yourself small, manageable tasks you can accomplish everyday.
Don't watch an entire course in one day. Instead, dedicate yourself to watching one lesson.
Make it so easy that it'll be ridiculous to avoid doing it. It could be as simple as rotating the default cube in Blender.
Once you've started you may end up doing more than you initially thought, and if you did it right it might actually be a ton of fun to learn.
Learning is never ending process: what is your trick for making the time for it?
Noted some useful stuff, thank you so much :)
thanks a lot great post, i have heard that statement so much, i believe its commitment and persistence that makes you perfect. those with a lot excuses are lazy.
@lasernate217 haha ditto on the procrastinating, hope it goes well
very much what i needed to read. Iv had an account for ages and various other tutorials. i think my problem is the mountain. Making a game is definitely the goal but not knowing how to break that down into small chunks has been difficult. Gonna set the bar low and go from there. cheers for the insight and its been encouraging reading other comments. i plan to get mroe involved in the community side of CG cookie now as an absolute beginner
Wow a lot of these comments I'm just seeing for the first time, didn't quite realize how many people enjoyed this article. Glad it could be useful for your all. I think this notion of not having enough time to learn usually comes down to your commitment to really improving even if it's difficult.
Wow, very inspirational! Thank you!
Excellent post! A strategy that's really helped me is to start a somewhat ambitious project that's as close to the "Goldilocks Zone" as possible, but still forces me to learn something new. With Blender, that's been using my modelling skills to make a low-poly Battle of Hoth diorama (Will post it soon!). I didn't know how to rig a character before, or much about post-processing effects for starters, but I have been learning a whole ton "just in time" as I need it, as the project calls for it. :)
My biggest sticking point is drawing and coding. Those are my hardest subjects to motivate, but I know I need them so! Will try out this "X habit" method. :)
Very informative. Thanks Jonathan
very good might get me back on track, like the old saying in sales , plan your work and work your plan.
roboyed Thanks mate! I'm glad that someone can relate to how I felt when I first started learning Blender. :D