Keep a Practice Journal

Many, if not all, teachers suggest keeping a practice journal. There are dozens of blog posts etc out there about keeping a practice journal, you may have seen some already. If not, no sweat, here is a suggestions to get started, and you can follow up with more detailed reading later.

Tip

Start with something extremely simple, and refine your system later. 1

By “extremely simple”, I mean something like this:

  • have a piece of paper or small notebook in your practice area

  • write today’s date at the top of the page

  • list the things you’ll work on, with some quick tab as reference if needed

  • (do your practicing)

  • for each thing you worked on, write down the time spent, what you tried, how it sounded and felt, and ideas for next time

At the next session – next day, or later in the same day depending on your scheduling, continue the same process, same notebook or paper. You might find that keeping a practice journal encourages you to do some solid reflecting, or helps you articulate your thoughts. It will also be a good record of what you’ve tried.

What gets measured gets improved.

Different people have different systems 2, and you can buy practice journals 3 if you’re so inclined. But if you’re starting out with this idea, it can be overwhelming and paralyzing. So start small, and refine … let your system guide you, don’t be a slave to it.

1

The book Atomic Habits recommends this. It’s a super book.

2

This one is really extensive: https://www.robknopper.com/blog/2016/6/25/what-my-practice-journal-looks-like … wow.

3

The Guitar Practice Journal: Organise your practice, track your progress and become a better guitar player