From meta
Compresses domain mastery using Ultralearning and Metacognition principles — moving from passive consumption to active production through directness, retrieval practice, and feedback loops. Use when learning a new domain rapidly, building a study plan, or preparing for a high-stakes professional skill.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/meta:learning-acceleratorThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Learning is the meta-skill that powers all others. This skill applies the principles of **Ultralearning** and **Metacognition** to compress years of traditional study into months of high-intensity practice. It moves learning from passive consumption to active production.
Learning is the meta-skill that powers all others. This skill applies the principles of Ultralearning and Metacognition to compress years of traditional study into months of high-intensity practice. It moves learning from passive consumption to active production.
NO LEARNING PLAN WITHOUT A RETRIEVAL AND SPACING STRATEGY
Reading and highlighting create an "illusion of competence." True mastery requires active retrieval (testing) and a spacing strategy to prevent the "Leaky Bucket" of memory decay.
digraph learning_flow {
"Domain Identified" [shape=doublecircle];
"Metalearning: Map the Field" [shape=box];
"Setup: Tools & Feedback" [shape=box];
"Execution: 9 Principles" [shape=box];
"Gate: Retention Check" [shape=diamond];
"Mastery/Skill Acquisition" [shape=doublecircle];
"Domain Identified" -> "Metalearning: Map the Field";
"Metalearning: Map the Field" -> "Setup: Tools & Feedback";
"Setup: Tools & Feedback" -> "Execution: 9 Principles";
"Execution: 9 Principles" -> "Gate: Retention Check";
"Gate: Retention Check" -> "Mastery/Skill Acquisition" [label="retained"];
"Gate: Retention Check" -> "Execution: 9 Principles" [label="leaky bucket"];
}
Before starting, spend 10% of your estimated study time researching how the best in the field learned the skill. Map out:
Identify the environment where you will actually use the skill. Practice there. If you want to learn to code, build a project immediately. If you want to learn a language, speak to a person. Avoid "proxy" apps that offer a fake sense of progress (Source: Young, Ultralearning).
Do not review notes. Instead, use Active Recall:
Treat notes as a web of ideas, not a list.
Switch between Focused Mode (intense concentration) and Diffuse Mode (letting the subconscious work while walking, showering, or sleeping). Problem-solving happens in the diffuse mode after the focused mode has "loaded" the data (Source: Oakley, A Mind For Numbers).
| Thought | Reality |
|---|---|
| "I'll read the book first, then practice." | Direct practice is the only way to identify what you actually need to learn. |
| "Highlighting the important parts helps me remember." | Highlighting is passive and is statistically the least effective study method. |
| "I don't have time for a full plan." | 1 hour of planning saves 10 hours of wandering through irrelevant material. |
| "I'm just not a [Subject] person." | This is a fixed identity trap. Skills are acquired through iterative drills. |
npx claudepluginhub joellewis/skill-library --plugin metaCreates evidence-based learning plans using spaced repetition, retrieval practice, interleaving, and elaboration. Guides goal definition, material breakdown, review scheduling, and progress tracking.
Applies metacognitive techniques (calibration, self-explanation, planning, monitoring, evaluation) to improve self-regulated learning and reduce the illusion of knowing. Useful for studying complex material or preparing for high-stakes performance.
Generates researched, module-based learning plans for technical or general topics. Saves plans and quiz progress to ~/.claude/learning/ directories. Resumes existing plans with status.