The best part is that the sequences answer the real problem learners face after motivation: deciding what to do when the study window finally appears. Sorting routines by level, energy, and focus makes the list feel usable instead of inspirational. I especially liked the photo-description and pre-task vocabulary ideas because they turn vague practice into a small repeatable system.
Those are great ideas! I will pick some of them to put them in my method toolbox (a page on Notion where I collect this type of ideas to pick up from when I lack some inspiration). Thank you :D
Your resources are amazing! I'm already planning on using a random number generator to choose which sequence to do first.
Just spun a wheel and I got 18. Translation and back-translation. I'll make sure to do this in the next few days! 🙂
The random number wheel is a great idea!
The best part is that the sequences answer the real problem learners face after motivation: deciding what to do when the study window finally appears. Sorting routines by level, energy, and focus makes the list feel usable instead of inspirational. I especially liked the photo-description and pre-task vocabulary ideas because they turn vague practice into a small repeatable system.
Those are great ideas! I will pick some of them to put them in my method toolbox (a page on Notion where I collect this type of ideas to pick up from when I lack some inspiration). Thank you :D
Great idea to make a toolbox. I used to do this for teaching…that’s where I’ve taken a lot of these ideas from!
There are some really great ideas here! Thanks!
Amazing resources! Thanks for sharing. Loved them all :)
A great article. Thank you.
I'm the author of QLANGO app for learning languages where I tried to implement many of the things you wrote about.
I’m super excited about these sequences. Could I make a series for my own Substack publication where I try these sequences out?
Of course! Please do. This is a slightly more elaborate version of the bingo from last year. ☺️