I am working on improving my competencies in certain fields such as AI, statistics, and VR. To do so, I've decided to buy a bunch of textbooks in those fields as well as foundational textbooks (mostly math books).
The problem I'm having is I am having trouble connecting some of the content in the book with a tangible end result. For example, I have difficulty staying focused learning about certain theorems in a linear algebra textbook when I can't see myself ever using the theorems in real life.
Do you guys have any advice on how to stay motivated? Or perhaps how to learn these subject areas avoiding these "time pitfalls" (are they even pitfalls)?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
Also, a lot of textbooks I've encountered have a huge problem with the initial motivational part and jump straight into proving stuff which does not seem useful. Maybe try Coursera or Khan academy for the intro and then read the book after you get the basic.
https://explore.skillbuilder.aws/
i couldn't imagine learning this stuff from a textbook without exercises and more to do.
at least the videos here talk about examples, and build a context by talking about types of tools you might use, how to use them, etc.
i started looking into the intro to Data Science course thing, and damn -- i had no idea -- i was completely lost -- it was like a foreign language.
so i started flipping back and forth between it and free courses on youtube, wiki and other pages to explain basic statistics, which apparently i do not know/remember. just having multiple different people teach the same concepts in different ways seemed to help a bit, and actually learning and getting more familiar with all the lingo helped (get things to be more interesting).
all that said, i've pretty much decided i am _not_ going to pursue any serious data science-related jobs (i'm looking at the moment).
i _could_ potentially still look into some roles which don't require a mastery and love of all things data science, but i am somewhat confident already that i'm not interested in this stuff, even if i had some magical practice-exercise world to help keep things interesting/practical.
so maybe that's a non-answer? that is, don't do it, don't worry about it, don't stay motivated, and don't keep studying boring stuff -- like is too short. go thru all the textbooks at least once to get familiar, then start diving down on just the topics you seem to actually care about.
and/or use a Pomodoro timer. i sometimes use the following Chrome extension to plow thru various boring content in short bursts, then reward myself somehow after:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/pomodoro-chrome-ex...
It's more for memorization, but rule 1 applies. You can't learn something if you're not interested and the value of learning such a thing is negligible.
What I always do is associate it with a thing. It should be a conversation. You can also be reading things in the wrong order... sometimes you should try to be stuck on a different problem before approaching the problem with linear algebra and such. Learning linear algebra before meeting the problem is a terrible way to learn.
You can still learn with exercises to turn it into an instinct, similar to how kids learn ABCs and multiplication tables. But as you grow older, this becomes much less effective.
Not to sound rude, but that sounds like a child complaining in a boring class.
> Do you guys have any advice on how to stay motivated?
Treat it like a job. Show up on time and do the work regardless of if want to or not. Set a time you will accomplish your micro goals you've cut up from your macro goals. Have a small treat when you do so. Be patient with yourself.
Sometimes I plan to walk somewhere a few hours away. That way I have to keep going.