Atlas / Shrink Becoming / Learning Science
SC-0162Evidence: under reviewShrink Becomingfoundational scientific

Interleaving

Variation strengthens learning.

Shrink Definition

Interleaving is the practice of alternating between related topics, skills, or problem types during learning rather than studying one topic exhaustively before moving to the next. Although interleaving often feels more difficult than blocked practice, it typically produces stronger long- term discrimination, retention, and transfer of learning.

Plain language

Mixing subjects often teaches better than studying one thing at a time.

Shrink Insight

The brain learns distinctions by repeatedly switching between similar ideas.

Why it matters

Interleaving improves: • medical education • mathematics • athletics • music • language learning • diagnostic reasoning • decision making

Common misunderstanding

Learning that feels organized isn't always learning that lasts.

Shrink Perspective

Real life rarely presents one type of problem at a time. Learning shouldn't either.

Shrink Reflection

Which skills could you combine instead of practicing separately?

Shrink Journal

Design tomorrow's learning session by alternating between three related topics.

Shrink Step

Replace one long study block with shorter alternating sessions.

Shrink Minute

Mix to master.

Shrink Takeaway

Variation builds flexibility.

Medical boundary

This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.

Evidence summary

Interleaving is supported by decades of research in cognitive psychology and educational science. Although learners often perceive blocked practice as easier, interleaving generally improves long-term retention and discrimination.

Sources

peer-reviewed learning science literature on interleaved practice; American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature; Peer-reviewed learning science literature

Reference status: landmark attributed