The next unlock is definitely not a tool but a practice! I think it will be knowledge practices for lifelong learners. You might be interested in the work of Bianca Periera at Lifelong Learners Paradise. I’ve been a member of her community for a while.
Thanks for the recommendation. I went to look at her community website, but all I really see is the paywall and some rather generic introduction of what she teaches. Active reading, and it is not very clear what knowledge system she is guiding on. Does she have free access work that I can check out?
Hmm. Sorry about that. Her YouTube channel is here: https://www.youtube.com/@BiaResearcher. I can't seem to find an online archive of her newsletters, which are free. You can sign up here if interested: https://playbook.prolificresearcher.com/ Her main model is a pyramid of skills based roughly on Bloom's taxonomy: note-taking, ideas organization, active reading, then networked reading (multiple sources), argumentation, and knowledge creation. She emphasizes mindset and methods first, *then* tools (and uses Scrintal herself). Knowledge practice is distributed over those six skills.
Thanks so much. I really loved scrintal when I tried it early on, but have not gone back to it since so much of my system is established in Obsidian and I wanted to try Excalidraw style visual zettelkasten.
The next unlock is definitely not a tool but a practice! I think it will be knowledge practices for lifelong learners. You might be interested in the work of Bianca Periera at Lifelong Learners Paradise. I’ve been a member of her community for a while.
Thanks for the recommendation. I went to look at her community website, but all I really see is the paywall and some rather generic introduction of what she teaches. Active reading, and it is not very clear what knowledge system she is guiding on. Does she have free access work that I can check out?
Hmm. Sorry about that. Her YouTube channel is here: https://www.youtube.com/@BiaResearcher. I can't seem to find an online archive of her newsletters, which are free. You can sign up here if interested: https://playbook.prolificresearcher.com/ Her main model is a pyramid of skills based roughly on Bloom's taxonomy: note-taking, ideas organization, active reading, then networked reading (multiple sources), argumentation, and knowledge creation. She emphasizes mindset and methods first, *then* tools (and uses Scrintal herself). Knowledge practice is distributed over those six skills.
Thanks so much. I really loved scrintal when I tried it early on, but have not gone back to it since so much of my system is established in Obsidian and I wanted to try Excalidraw style visual zettelkasten.