How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by karaklis »

jts wrote:Out of curiosity, are the motivation problems people are mentioning "I don't have the motivation to plow through hundreds of tsumego" or "I don't have the motivation to play two games a day anymore"?

The motivation problem is related to playing online.
I am still doing tsumego (Graded Go Problems Vol 4, Endgame Tesuji etc.), but not on a regular base.
I am also playing on tournaments over the board.
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by Signifier »

I like the responses in this thread.

As a science teacher, I am used to approaching problems with diagnostic assessments, directed lessons and summative assessments to show learning has happened. All three things seem to be missing from my study of go (which right now consists of: reading Attack & Defense and Kageyama, and doing tsumego). I study, but I don't know how my go is diseased: so I don't know the correct medicine, and I don't know how to know when I've been cured. I feel like I am wandering in the dark, with the only steady, graspable metric being my rank.

A teacher would be nice, but they are pricey. Would anyone like to play a "diagnostic game" with me and perhaps help me find out the contours of my illness? ;)
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by SoDesuNe »

What is your rank? By the way, dropping Kageyama is the first step to a brighter future :P
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by judicata »

I've been stuck at 3kyu for awhile. I feel like I've improved maybe 1/2 a stone over the past few months. I really haven't had time to play or study, but I can't say for sure that it would make a difference (i.e., I don't know if I'd be stuck if I had time to play and study, though I suspect I would be progressing at marginally more). This is really the first time I've felt "stalled," though I knew it was coming. At this point, I don't feel terribly frustrated or distraught, though. I'm still having fun.
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by Signifier »

SoDesuNe, tell me what you mean about dropping Kageyama?
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by shapenaji »

5k, 1k and 6d

There's sort've a chicken and the egg thing here.

The field is largest at 5k and 1k, with gaps between, so it's hard to find the stepping stones to move past there. At 6d, the competition kind've drops off, it's rare to find folks at your level, and so it's hard to get a leg up. (It also, of course, gets harder to advance as you get further on, there's a finite amount of knowledge to be gained, as you get stronger, you get the easier stuff out of the way, and you're only left with the hard stuff)

This suggests that wherever there are bulges in the rank density, there also you will have people getting stuck.

On the other hand, we might ask, "Why are the bulges there?". I suspect there are a few major concepts that hold folks up.

EDIT: I say "I stalled", but it was for like 3 months at 5k, 3 months at 1k. I remember them as stalls though, they were definitely mental blocks
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by jts »

Signifier wrote:SoDesuNe, tell me what you mean about dropping Kageyama?

He means you need to drop Kageyama like you drop acid. Just gobble it up and enjoy the ride, man.
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by Koosh »

I have slowly progressed from 2 kyu to 1 kyu...to 1 dan....to 1kyu...to 1 dan...to 1 kyu...
Ko is the best solution.
With Ko, I can keep eating and drinking until I am full.

Visit >>>Koosh's Study Journal<<<
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by SoDesuNe »

Signifier wrote:SoDesuNe, tell me what you mean about dropping Kageyama?


As jts points out very well: "Lessons in the fundamentals of Go" is pure poison : D

And on a more serious side: As far as I know, there a two kinds of Go-players. The ones who like and praise "Lessons in the fundamentals of Go", who say that it made them a couple of stones stronger and the ones who consider this book a great waste of time because it actually teaches nothing specific (but has horrible rude writing).

I'm with the latter : D I read the book twice and all I can say is, the chapter about nets and ladders is fine. The rest is just jibber-jabber. But... that's my personal opinion and a lot of players - interesting enough, a lot of stronger players - will say the opposite.
(I favour Tesuji-problem-books by the way.)

So, coming back to jts, you now have been warned about potential side-effects, if you still want to drop it like acid then enjoy the ride ; D
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by p2501 »

SoDesuNe wrote:
Signifier wrote:SoDesuNe, tell me what you mean about dropping Kageyama?


As jts points out very well: "Lessons in the fundamentals of Go" is pure poison : D

And on a more serious side: As far as I know, there a two kinds of Go-players. The ones who like and praise "Lessons in the fundamentals of Go", who say that it made them a couple of stones stronger and the ones who consider this book a great waste of time because it actually teaches nothing specific (but has horrible rude writing).

I'm with the latter : D I read the book twice and all I can say is, the chapter about nets and ladders is fine. The rest is just jibber-jabber. But... that's my personal opinion and a lot of players - interesting enough, a lot of stronger players - will say the opposite.
(I favour Tesuji-problem-books by the way.)

So, coming back to jts, you now have been warned about potential side-effects, if you still want to drop it like acid then enjoy the ride ; D

Seems to depend on the type of player. Some find exact examples more and variations more enlightening. Lessons of the fundamentals touches more on the principles and general concept of playing go. Kind of comparable to Otake Hideos Opening Theory made easy I think. Both very good books in my opinion.

Lessons of the fundamentals also has a couple stories in between which some might find annoying to read through, I liked them. But I also like to read about go history and other go related topics that are not directly improving my strength.
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by entropi »

When you read Kageyama or other theory books, what happens at kyu level is the following:

You go to tygem, play a random guy at your level.

You play out some well known joseki at one corner, he gets the small corner you get strength.

You are better off because his corner is too small compared to your outside influence. At least that's what the theory says.

Then the guy plays very close to your wall. Wonderful, he plays wrong moves and asks for being punished. Attack from the other side, push him towards your thick wall. That's what theory says.

Then he escapes with his stone and on top of that pincers your attacking stone. Super, he overplays, he will end up with two weak groups to run while you have just one in the middle. You are better off, that's what the theory says.

He manages to live with both groups or even connect them. If you are lucky your single weak group survives. You end up with 2 useless walls which merely consists of dame stones bringing you no points.

But nevermind, now you are even stronger outside, build a moyo invite your opponent to invade and kill him. That's what the theory says.

He invades and .... he invades. You have yet another group consisting of dame stones.

Now he has 5 separate groups on board. The theory says "if you have 6 groups one of them is likely to die". So you are almost sure to win. Then guess what happens...


Moral of the story : Don't give theory too much credit until you have enough fighting strength to base it, i.e. until you are already at dan level.
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by p2501 »

entropi wrote:When you read Kageyama or other theory books, what happens at kyu level is the following:
You go to tygem, play a random guy at your level.
You play out some well known joseki at one corner, he gets the small corner you get strength.
You are better off because his corner is too small compared to your outside influence. At least that's what the theory says.
Then the guy plays very close to your wall. Wonderful, he plays wrong moves and asks for being punished. Attack from the other side, push him towards your thick wall. That's what theory says.
Then he escapes with his stone and on top of that pincers your attacking stone. Super, he overplays, he will end up with two weak groups to run while you have just one in the middle. You are better off, that's what the theory says.
He manages to live with both groups or even connect them. If you are lucky your single weak group survives. You end up with 2 useless walls which merely consists of dame stones bringing you no points.
But nevermind, now you are even stronger outside, build a moyo invite your opponent to invade and kill him. That's what the theory says.
He invades and .... he invades. You have yet another group consisting of dame stones.
Now he has 5 separate groups on board. The theory says "if you have 6 groups one of them is likely to die". So you are almost sure to win. Then guess what happens...

Moral of the story : Don't give theory too much credit until you have enough fighting strength to base it, i.e. until you are already at dan level.

Well I started at ddk strength to focus on primarily fuseki, direction of play, shape and over all go theory. It has worked very well for me. If you understand why something is a bad play, you should be able to find a good response no matter what level you play at.
The reason why I like this way of studying for me is, that I grasp theory very early on. This way it becomes natural to me at a very early stage in my progression.

I would encourage even higher ddk to read kageyama. Its not the holy grail, but still a very good guide to form one's way of thinking about moves on the board.
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by SoDesuNe »

p2501 wrote:Seems to depend on the type of player. Some find exact examples more and variations more enlightening. Lessons of the fundamentals touches more on the principles and general concept of playing go. Kind of comparable to Otake Hideos Opening Theory made easy I think. Both very good books in my opinion.


I agree with you that Otakes Opening Theory Made Easy is a very good book, in my opinion even the best book about the opening for beginners. But then I don't find anything comparable between his book and Kageyamas. Personally, I think they are the exact opposite.

Where Otake explains one subject to sufficient detail for the audience, Kageyama jumps across the whole field of Go theory wihtout any context and explains very little but rants when the reader has not yet understand what he doesn't even try to explain.
Where Otake reasons, Kageyama gets upset why he even has to bother explaining such simple things.

Of course you a right, it depends on which type of teacher you like. If I read Kageyama I can't help but picture a teacher coming to class to let it watch a documentary while he leaves for coffee and a smoke.
He is not even funny with his ramblings (contrary to the video of the guy teaching japanese, which Araban posted somewhere).
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by p2501 »

SoDesuNe wrote:Of course you a right, it depends on which type of teacher you like. If I read Kageyama I can't help but picture a teacher coming to class to let it watch a documentary while he leaves for coffee and a smoke.
He is not even funny with his ramblings (contrary to the video of the guy teaching japanese, which Araban posted somewhere).

It's been a while since I've read it, but that's not at all how I remember it. Sounds almost like you were offended by his writing ^^
When I first read it I was between 20 and 15kyu I think, I shall read it again (it reads fast) sometime soon.
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Re: How many times did you "stall" in your learning?

Post by topazg »

Kageyama seems to have a number of detractors, who feel quite strongly about it :P

He also seems to have a number of advocates, who feel equally strong, and seem to outnumber the detractors (particularly amongst dan players it seems). However, as with everything, it's down to whether his style works for you. I certainly wouldn't recommend dropping the book however, unless you personally feel that it's irritating, patronising, unfunny, or a bunch of things that people have thrown against it in the past :)
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