Using The Three Minute Rule To Rocket Your Skills

Posted by Thom on Jan 10, 2008 in All, Mastery, Teaching, Wisdom1 comment

As stated in the classroom analogy, it is difficult to efficiently process multiple sources of information and consciously retain all of it. It is for this reason that we learn to split concepts and techniques in their practice. Aside from your normal routine of running through music and scales, take the time to skyrocket your techniques through the Three Minute Rule.

Say you have a triplet spiccato arpeggio. You first want to make sure that you understand the proper form and etudes dedicated to this particular technique. Using this knowledge, spend three full focused minutes practicing with perfect accuracy.

  • Use a stopwatch or egg timer to keep track. When the three minutes are up, move on to your next technique.
  • Think of it as watering your plants daily; soon it will blossom into a beautiful garden of flowers!

The strategy breaks down like this:

1. Choose a technique.

2. Dedicate three minutes per technique to proper form and improvement.

3. Practice daily.

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  1. Hi Thom, thank you for the tips, as i think its a good piece of advice in-order to improve the playing skills, thank a lot for sharing.

    **by the way i am quite new to violin, just curious how many skills are there in violin (basics will do) thank you.

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