The Unreasonable Effectiveness of 1-1 Learning

How to learn anything 98% better than average

70 1

Sponsored By: Brilliant

This article is brought to you by Brilliant, the app that boosts your analytical skills with bite-size lessons in math, logic, CS, and more. 

Hey! Dan here. I'm off from writing this week, so I wanted to resurface an article from our archive that I think is increasingly important. This one is about why 1-1 tutoring is so wildly effective—and how you can use it to learn anything. I originally wrote it almost a year ago, before tools like ChatGPT and GPT-4 were around. At the time, I argued that you could hire someone for surprisingly little money to be your personal tutor and learn anything. But with the advent of AI—this gets dramatically easier. Personalized tutoring is going to be broadly available to anyone with an internet connection and $20 / month. I think that's a great world to be in.

Read on to learn about why tutoring is so effective, and how you can structure a tutoring relationship with a human (or an AI) to help you learn anything.


Education is expensive because you’re paying for more than learning. You’re paying for the status of the degree, the ability to participate in the community, a planned course list and curriculum, the quality control that the university provides, and on and on. You’re paying for a turn-key, minimum effort experience.

But if, for some reason, you don’t care about those things and you’re optimizing primarily for learning—you can learn anything 98% better than you would in a class, for significantly less money. The way to do this is through 1-1 tutoring.

I know this because I did it. A few years ago I decided I wanted to write a novel. So I had the author of one of my favorite books tutor me on fiction writing. I made more progress during those tutoring sessions than I had in workshops, classes, and solo learning combined. And I spent far less money on it than I would have spent on an MFA.

AI is getting smarter. Are you?

Brilliant is the app that boosts your analytical skills in minutes a day with bite-size lessons in math, logic, data science, CS, and more. Thousands of visual, interactive lessons sharpen your mind while helping you master the concepts behind AI, neural networks, computer logic, and beyond.

Join 10M+ and try Brilliant with a 30-day free trial. 

And that’s not an accident. One of the most famous studies in educational psychology found that students who learned through 1-1 tutoring performed two sigma—98%—better than students who learned through a traditional classroom environment. 

You can do this too for the topic of your choice. You just have to put effort into finding the right person, and into working with them. It won’t be an out of the box experience like a class. You have to be willing to bring a lot more to the table than you would ordinarily. 

But you’ll learn a lot more than you might otherwise, without spending a lot of money. Let me explain.

. . .

Find Out What
Comes Next in Tech.

Start your free trial.

New ideas to help you build the future—in your inbox, every day. Trusted by over 75,000 readers.

Subscribe

Already have an account? Sign in

What's included?

  • Unlimited access to our daily essays by Dan Shipper and a roster of the best tech writers on the internet
  • Full access to an archive of hundreds of in-depth articles
  • Unlimited software access to Spiral, Sparkle, and Lex

  • Priority access and subscriber-only discounts to courses, events, and more
  • Ad-free experience
  • Access to our Discord community

Comments

You need to login before you can comment.
Don't have an account? Sign up!
@wasiti14 almost 2 years ago

There is the possibility that your approach of self dependence and only asking the mentor every two weeks had a big impact on making the learning better and not only because of the availability of the mentor. Lots of courses has final project where you can get feedback during and at the end of the project from peers it the instructor when you are stuck. Which I think it is almost equivalent to your approach.