The plan:
I'm currently finishing my Phd (and am hopefully finished around march next year) and do plan to take a few months off before starting a life in the big bad corporate working world.
I've read about http://thedanplan.com/ and have the phantasm of doing something similar to viewtopic.php?f=15&t=4329, only on a larger scale. I'm pretty sure it takes a lot of good planning in advance for a full month of studying, so I'm gathering opinions.
I'm currently in the earliest planning phase, so I'd like to ask about your opinion. I'm thinking of spending a maximum of 500.- for this experiment, most of it would probably spend for high quality reviewers/teachers.
Current questions to the audience:
- How would your ideal study month (i.e. 28/31 free days) look like?
- How could I monitor short-term or micro progress. I'm rather unsatisfied with "I've won this game so I understood this concept"?
- How could we define delibarate practice in Go terms? I'll be looking in the chess paper mentioned below but am open to any ideas / definitions.
- I'm thinking about asking at other places, too but am a bit unsure where; Websites like [url]gogameguru.com[/url] seem to be the wrong place. Senseis maybe?
Any other things I should keep in mind?
Todo:
- Find testimonials for the suggested teachers
- List advantages and disadvantages of the different hosting solutions
- Create daily routine, especially keeping in mind the topics didactic quality and deliberate practice.
- "formalize" improvement measurement.
- Alternative to updating this forum post, which offers the same amount of interactivity with the L19² community? It *seems* a bit cumbersome and chaotic.
Things I have (material and technical):
- Books:
- Graded Go Problems 1-4 (finished 1 and 2, in the middle of 3)
- All books of the elementary go series (read through Tesuji, Attack and Defense, but starting to read them again)
- Invincible
- Lessons in the fundamentals of Go
- A nice go board.
- Broadband internet connection.
- Supportive girlfriend (let's see how far I can go
)
Psychological relevant things
- The forum post about Motivtation to improve at http://lifein19x19.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=4409 , especially the video and the talk http://the99percent.com/videos/7061/Jos ... lf-Failing about deliberate practice.
- The book Talent is overrated http://www.amazon.de/Talent-Overrated-S ... 603&sr=1-1 which focuses again on deliberate practice.
- ez4u has found (written?) a paper about deliberate practice in chess: http://www.utm.utoronto.ca/uploads/tx_r ... se2005.pdf
- Shortcuts to Go improvement discussion: http://lifein19x19.com/forum/viewtopic. ... w=viewpoll
Technical remarks:
- What free blog hosting offers easy inclusion of SGF files?
Answer: A wordpress blog with the http://eidogo.com/ plugin. - GoGameGuru offers an account as a writer
Evaluation:
After talking to my girlfriend (which has a phd in psychology) I have at least two ideas for measurements of my learning success:
- Timing and measuring the number of correct answers while doing Tsumego (tactical knowledge)
- Having a list (quite a few) of whole board positions. I'd record where I think are the big or urgent points on the board (maybe even timed) and compare my answers after four weeks. Maybe my future teacher could provide me with such a list after going through a couple of my games and looking for my particular weaknesses.
Fighting boredom:
I need to do different things each day to fight boredom or laziness: Currently I have these activities in my mind, although I'm not yet sure about the ratio of each:
- Playing serious games (esp. participating in the ASR league)
- Playing blitz games
- Reviewing games on my own
- Reviewing games with my teacher
- Doing tsumego
- Looking at commented games (esp. Invincible)
- Teaching weaker players (on a live board), a couple of friends have started playing Go recently and if they still play at the time teaching would be a good opportunity to get away from the computer/books and try to explain newly learned concepts.
- Attaining a tournament
- Additional live games over a real board -- could be hard to find players.
- Doing other leisure stuff from time to time:
- Playing the occasional Snooker game
- Having a dog (in general
) - Continuing Aikdo for relaxation (at least 2 times a week, maybe 3 then)
Current teachers I could ask:
- Tobasuma (suggested)
- Jennie Shen (suggested)
- Yilun Yang (suggested)
- topazg (have very good experiences in the past): probably not available
Things which are good but don't work in my context:
- Going to a chinese go camp.
- Going to Budapest
One of the reasons is that I want to see what is possible and effective with self study at home. Although I'm not sure if having a stronger teacher would be cheating under these requirements.