How to use random practice to help long-term learning
Practising shouldn’t be boring. With techniques drawn from sport psychology you can retain more of what you learn, says musician and performance psychology expert Christine Carter
So how can the random practice schedule be applied in the practice room? Rather than spending long, uninterrupted periods of time on each excerpt or section of a piece, pick a few passages you would like to work on and alternate between them. If you want to spend a total of 20 minutes on a particular excerpt, practise in shorter segments, continually returning to that excerpt until you have achieved your 20-minute goal. Experiment with lengths of time. If you are practising very short excerpts, you may be able to switch between them at a faster pace than would be required for longer sections. You can use an alarm clock to time intervals, or take a more freestyle approach.
This practice schedule can also be applied to technique. Many musicians complete all of their scales and technical exercises at the beginning of their practice sessions, and often in the same order (for example, long tones, scales, 3rds, arpeggios). You can switch between these different exercises and also intersperse them with your work on excerpts and repertoire. An example of an hour-long practice session might look something like this:
Length Exercise/Passage
2 minutes Long tone, scale, long tone, scale
6 minutes Concerto exposition
2 minutes 3rds, arpeggio, 3rds, arpeggio
5 minutes Excerpt 1
5 minutes Excerpt 2
Repeat this 20-minute sequence twice to fill one hour
The permutations are endless and the exact division of time is not important. What is crucial is that you are staying on your toes by varying the material. This is more challenging, of course, as you are repeatedly forced to restart different pieces, retrieving the mental script for the task at hand. But it is precisely this challenge that produces such valuable outcomes. In addition to increases in long-term learning, your mind stays more engaged and time seems to fly by much faster. Because of the short individual practice segments, you are also forced to be more goal-oriented. Although all time is finite, we are better at recognising the finite nature of 3 minutes, as compared with 60 minutes. When we know we only have 3 minutes to accomplish something, we are more likely to make good use of those minutes.
There are occasions, however, when a more blocked practice schedule is helpful. When preparing for a concert or audition, for example, full run-throughs of material become critical in the weeks leading up to ‘game day’. You can still use random practice schedules to work out any problematic passages, but these can be balanced with mock run-throughs.