While teaching morse code to folks over the years, I made a study of a few things:
- They are initially convinced that faster code puts the letters too close together, which make them feel "run-over" and overwhelmed.
- They basically want time to "mull over" the character before writing it down.
Note that these two initial problems are tightly related, and interestingly enough are really more of a psychological hangup, than anything else. I'm sure that you would agree that most of us do not want to be run-over by fast running characters, and that we like being "comfortable" in our learning process.
Special Note:
Consider that while all of these code characters are popping at the same speed, the speed at which you start copying is actually only 1/5th of the character speed. This computes to only 3WPM if you choose the 15WPM chracter rate! When you get to the 3 characters per set in the run, you will have reached a comfortable 5WPM. These series of runs will quite literally take you from 3WPM to about 10WPM without changing speeds, just by staying in there longer into the run. If you get used to the 15WPM series and the 18WPM series, you will find that 13WPM seems just entirely too slow.In summary, I have over the years found this method so successful that I have found a 100% success rate with everyone that used it. By the way, in the past where folks did things this way, there was no 13WPM barrier, and their base speed was never less than 10WPM!
InitialDifficulties.html - SfE-DCS, ddf - 11/04/2001