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You do not need another course; you need a way to change how you learn. In a world where skills expire quickly and credentials age faster than curiosity, this book offers a practical system for learning how to learn—and relearn—without burning out. It shows how to unstick progress, choose better problems, and turn effort into momentum through a repeatable learning system you can run every week. If you have felt your expertise harden into habit, this is your field guide back to movement.
- Learn the discipline of unlearning—how to retire stale playbooks without losing face or confidence
- Build real-world metacognition that improves judgment under pressure, not just in theory
- Design weekly loops of deliberate practice tailored to knowledge work, with fast feedback and visible gains
- Stack transferable skills with purpose—smart skill stacking for optionality, portability, and compounding reputation
- Navigate career change by reading market signals, choosing what to learn next, and proving it in public
Grounded in research on memory, transfer, and cognitive biases, and rich with case studies, checklists, and small experiments, this is a manual for lifelong learning that pays off in the real economy. Whether you are switching roles, rebuilding after redundancy, or simply refusing to coast, you will leave with an OS for adult learning—clear choices, sharper focus, and habits that compound. If you are ready to treat learning as a craft, not a cram, start here.

Learning How to Learn Again

SKU: 9789374123317
$24.99 Regular Price
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  • Avery Grant writes for people who learn with their sleeves rolled up. A former coach of overworked professionals who believed rest was a reward, not a prerequisite, Avery’s work turns scattered advice into field manuals you can use on Tuesday afternoon. His earlier books examined attention, recovery, and the economics of effort; this one asks a harder question: how do we keep updating who we are without losing ourselves? Drawing on a love of shop-floor apprenticeship and the old idea of phronesis—practical wisdom—Avery threads stories of modern work with echoes from Seneca to Mary Parker Follett. He believes a good day’s learning leaves artefacts, not exhaustion, and that ordinary people deserve extraordinary tools.

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