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ewb2015-05-19 10:18:06
IT education
ewb, 2015-05-19 10:18:06

How to learn something new while having a full-time job?

Hey!
There is a full-time work, the direction of work in general suits me, but I want to switch to native development for android (in other respects, this is not important).
The problem is that after a working day you feel tired and not up to learning new things.
I want to relax on the weekends, otherwise there is a risk of burnout.
As a result, it turns out to allocate 3-8 hours a week to study something new, at such a pace you won’t go far.
What to do?
Get minimal knowledge and look for a job in a new specialty?
UPD:
It seems to me that some of you forget that learning something new is not only theory, but also practice, and on the way to/from work you don’t really practice writing android applications.
UPD:
Introduced the most interesting advice in my opinion.
For myself, I took out the following:
1) Fill all the useless time with benefits (like driving to/from work).
2) Divide tasks into smaller ones with a period of half an hour / hour.
3) Try to get up a couple of hours earlier and spend this time studying.
You also need to go to bed earlier.
4) Try to talk to the employer about the official allocation of time for education.
The step is risky, they may not be understood correctly, but if the management is adequate and the direction of education is in the interests of the company, then they can obviously go to a meeting :)

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9 answer(s)
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trevoga_su, 2015-05-19
@ewb

Study at work. When the work "allowed" me to do this, I studied and / or wrote my project.
Yes Yes. Exactly. Let your conscience go to hell.
The rest of the advice is bullshit.
If a person asks, then he really does not have time. If there is a family - even more so.
If you're tired, then you're tired. I remember what it means to spend 4 hours a day on the road.
It’s better not to work too much on the weekends - you can really burn out. It burned down more than once.
The best time for all this business is weekdays.

H
hjk, 2015-05-20
@hjk

For me, the key to any activity is good sleep. I always appreciate the opportunity to properly relax and sleep. Without it, my day is extremely unproductive. Excessive irritability, drowsiness, fatigue even in the morning, lack of motivation. Hence the lack of enthusiasm to do something after work. The situation began to really change for the better when I scored on part of the cases and just started going to bed earlier. Since I don’t have to get up very early - at six in the morning, such a decision cut off a significant chunk of my evening time. But I don’t regret anything, I go to bed even at ten in the evening, but during the day I manage to rest and fresh much more.
My advice is, if possible, try to sleep more. From eight hours is desirable. I know, there are apologists for sleeping four hours a day or in small segments throughout the day, but - I personally tried this and for me personally it doesn’t work at all, only my head boils with or without reason.

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Trrrrr, 2015-05-25
@Trrrrr

I'm not hinting at anything, but having a full-time job where I give my best, I manage to play sports (muay thai and jogging, sometimes a gym). And at the moment I'm doing my little project to study network programming.
I’ll immediately answer a possible question: I have a girlfriend and we live together :)
What did I do to keep up and get less tired:
1) I began to go to work at 8 in the morning, so without traffic jams it’s much faster and calmer.
2) Be sure to go in for sports almost every day to unload the brain and get distracted.
3) I stopped watching TV shows, well, a maximum of 1 episode a day during dinner :)
4) Somehow it’s not up to alcohol, because if you drink on Saturday, then on Sunday you are not efficient and lose the whole day.
In any case, if you get very tired at work for 8 normal working hours, then just change your lifestyle, stop sticking to the computer in the evenings just like that and you will have a lot of extra time.

V
Vladimir Yakushev, 2015-05-28
@VYakushev

1. Be sure to go in for sports: running, gym, swimming. This will refresh your brain and give you an extra boost of productivity.
2. Go to bed and wake up early.
3. Do not neglect the small, but done with constancy. Even two hours a week, but consistently, will give you 104 hours a year. In a year or two, you can change your profile. And the year will fly by before you know it.
At first, it is better to do some kind of study project to lay the foundation. And then find on GitHub some OpenSource project with a small library and open tickets. Just a small one to make it easier to understand. And cut the solution. Along the way on the road or somewhere else you can read information on the problem being solved.
As a result, you will have real experience, you will have something to show when applying for a job, and you will learn something from the code being finalized.

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Eugene Burmakin, 2015-05-19
@Freika

If you really want to, you will find time in any situation. And if such questions appear, then, apparently, you don’t really want to, there is only an understanding that “it would be necessary” and “it would be nice.”

B
Barada, 2015-05-21
@Barada

Learning often requires immersion. I use vacation at my own expense for such cases. After work, understand what you want, find material, build a work plan. Start reading. When you realize that you start to run into a stale brain and lack of time, you take a week off. In a week you take a barrier and again continue to read / pee in the background. Six months later, another week.
Advice with learning at work trevoga_su is wise. Therefore, at work, you need to look for loopholes for your projects. Suggest to the boss. Go to the department with more interesting topics. Finally change jobs.

O
OnYourLips, 2015-05-19
@OnYourLips

On weekends, 6 hours can be allocated without problems. On weekdays during the road, at breakfast, at dinner, at night with a bottle of beer - already 4 hours goes out in total.
A total of 32 hours per week.

H
Homsa Toft, 2015-05-19
@kostein

I work 2/2 12 hours, every two hours I have a break of 10 minutes, I think about what needs to be done in two hours, I open my laptop during the break, I write code .. I run tasks .. on weekends, my wife and children steal most of the time. The only way out is to try to use your time more efficiently, set microtasks and complete them. Burn out .. I don’t know, it happens that you come to a dead end, you rewrite everything from the beginning .. but this is an inevitable process for self-taught people. Although if you have a job of a similar focus, it is probably more difficult.

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Mark Levin, 2015-05-19
@marklivein

The Internet is full of interesting and educational videos on YouTube channels. I myself watch all sorts of videos about science and technology, as well as other topics of interest to me, where everything is chewed and served ready-made - all that remains is to "swallow".

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