Y11W29WR What athletes know about recovery

Design
The writing prompt

Design a specific study recovery protocol for yourself this term, drawing on the sports science principles and testing whether they transfer to cognitive work.

1Retrieval check

Q1.What do sports scientists find about when adaptation happens?

  • ADuring training itself
  • BDuring recovery, not during training
  • COnly during competition
  • DAdaptation is random

Q2.What is the article’s counter-thread about recovery?

  • ARecovery doesn’t matter
  • BRecovery can be used as rationalisation for avoiding real work; the principle applies to people already working seriously
  • CMore rest is always better
  • DRecovery should be passive only
Show answer key

Q1 → B. During recovery, not during training.Insufficient recovery produces overtraining syndrome — worse performance despite more work. The principle extends to cognitive work.

Q2 → B. Recovery can be used as rationalisation for avoiding real work; the principle applies to people already working seriously.This is advice for serious workers, not permission to do less — the article is explicit on the distinction.

2Prompt deconstruction

Command verb
DESIGN — a specific recovery protocol, not ‘rest more’
You pick
sleep targets, active-recovery days, deloading, what to do when cognitively over-trained
Goal
specify practices; honestly assess which parts of the protocol you’ll maintain past the first hard week
Must reference
the sports science research on recovery

3Position nudge

Where on the range does your proposal sit?

Pole A
Pole B

Pole AMinimal adjustments

Pole BFull sports-science-style cycle

Commit to a specific point; defend it in your planner.

4Planner — design the thing, then the trade-offs

Current intensity pattern
Hours per day, weekly variation, pressure-week behaviour
Sleep target
Minimum hours, bedtime, wind-down
Active recovery day
Which day? What counts as low-intensity review?
Deloading before exams
What does a deload week look like?
When cognitively over-trained
Specific signs; specific response
Which part you’ll abandon first
Honest prediction; pre-commitment to prevent it

5Sentence stems

  • My proposal is ___.
  • I am grounding this in [researcher]’s finding that ___.
  • The main trade-off is ___: this design gains ___ but loses ___.
  • The most predictable objection is ___, and my response is ___.
  • I would know it was working after [time] if ___.
  • What I am most likely to abandon is ___, so I will build in ___ to prevent that.

6Exemplar paragraph (not about this article)

(1) My proposal: 8 hours of sleep weeknights (currently 6–7), Saturday as an active-recovery day (review notes at low intensity, no new learning), a three-day deload the week before end-of-term exams (cut study hours 50%, increase sleep and walking). (2) I am grounding this in sports-science finding that adaptation happens during recovery; applied to study, the hard-revise-then-deload model should outperform straight-through cramming. (3) The most predictable abandonment is the Saturday rule, which will feel indulgent when an assessment is close. (4) My pre-commitment: Saturday low-intensity review is scheduled in my calendar as a non-negotiable. (5) The article’s caveat applies to me — I am already working seriously, which is why the protocol makes sense, rather than being a permission slip.

What this paragraph does, move by move

  1. Specific targets, not general rest.
  2. Active-recovery day defined.
  3. Deload described concretely.
  4. Research grounding stated.
  5. Predictable abandonment pre-empted.