সহকারী শিক্ষক
০৩ ফেব্রুয়ারি, ২০২৬ ০৮:৫৫ অপরাহ্ণ
সহকারী শিক্ষক
ধরনঃ সাধারণ শিক্ষা
শ্রেণিঃ দ্বিতীয়
বিষয়ঃ English for Today
ইউনিটঃ Unit 1
পাঠঃ Lesson 1
Just like compound interest in a bank, knowledge builds upon itself. By doing 5 questions a day, you tackle 150 questions a month and 1,825 questions a year.
Lower Cognitive Load: Solving 5 questions feels easy, making you less likely to procrastinate than if you faced a 50-question marathon.
Long-Term Retention: Daily exposure moves information from short-term memory to long-term storage.
Every time you solve a problem, your brain strengthens the connections (synapses) related to that topic.
Spaced Repetition: Daily practice acts as a natural form of spaced repetition, preventing the "forgetting curve" from wiping out what you’ve learned.
Fluency: Over time, basic steps become "automatic," allowing your brain to save energy for more complex parts of a problem.
The hardest part of any task is starting.
Habit Formation: When you commit to a small number like 5, you remove the "barrier to entry." Eventually, you don't need willpower to start; it becomes a routine, like brushing your teeth.
Confidence Boost: Finishing 5 questions provides a daily "win," releasing dopamine that keeps you motivated for the next day.
If you cram 100 questions once a week, you might overlook a fundamental mistake because you're rushed.
Deep Analysis: With only 5 questions, you have the time to truly analyze why you got an answer wrong.
Agile Correction: You can fix a misunderstanding today before it ruins 20 more problems tomorrow.