Ask for help when you've had a go yourself and are still stuck — knowing when to ask is a skill in itself
After finishing a task, look back at what you did and ask yourself: does this seem right?
Keep trying when something feels hard — making mistakes and trying again is how learning happens
Notice the feeling of not understanding — recognise when something is confusing rather than reading or listening past it
Make a simple plan before starting a task: what do I need to do, and what should I do first?
Before starting something new, stop and think: what do I already know about this topic?
Look for connections between new ideas and things you already know — how does this fit with what I've learned before?
Spot patterns and recurring structures — in numbers, words, nature, sounds, or events — and use them to make sense of new information
After learning something new, explain it in your own words — to yourself, a family member, or even a toy
When your first approach isn't working, try a different one — being flexible about strategies is part of being a good learner
When you notice a pattern repeating, describe it as a rule that works every time — then test whether the rule holds in new cases
When you get something wrong, investigate why — what did you misunderstand or overlook? Analysing errors is one of the most powerful ways to learn
Recognise when a skill or strategy learned in one subject or situation can be applied in a completely different one
Go beyond knowing *that* something is true — ask *why* it is true and *how* it works
Before starting a study task, choose a deliberate strategy; after finishing, evaluate honestly whether that strategy actually helped
After completing a piece of learning, reflect on the process: what helped most, what was confusing, and what would you do differently next time?
Survey your own understanding of a whole topic — identify where your knowledge is solid, where it is shaky, and what still needs work
Set a specific learning goal, work towards it with a deliberate plan, then honestly assess whether you achieved it and what you would change