Learn Shorthand More Efficiently

Whether you’re learning Pitman or Gregg, these 10 tips will dramatically accelerate your progress.

Tip 1: Master the Phonetics First

Before memorizing any symbols, understand the phonetic system behind them. Shorthand is not about memorizing shapes — it’s about encoding sounds. Once you understand this, patterns become logical rather than arbitrary.

Tip 2: Write Every Day (Even for 15 Minutes)

Daily practice beats long occasional sessions. Muscle memory develops through frequency, not duration. Even 15 minutes daily beats 2 hours once a week.

Tip 3: Practice Transcription Alongside Writing

Don’t just write — also transcribe. Read your own shorthand notes back. This reinforces recognition and catches bad habits early.

Tip 4: Use Audio Dictation

After 4-6 weeks, start using audio dictation instead of just copying printed text. This builds the critical skill of converting spoken sounds to symbols in real time.

Tip 5: Learn High-Frequency Words First

The 300 most common English words make up approximately 65% of all text. Learn their shorthand outlines first. This gives you maximum coverage quickly.

Tip 6: Group Similar Strokes Together

When learning new strokes, group them by similarity. Practice k and g together (light and heavy versions of the same shape) rather than learning them weeks apart.

Tip 7: Record Yourself

Record dictation passages and play them back at your target speed. This is better than finding external audio resources because you can control the vocabulary.

Tip 8: Use Flashcards

For high-frequency words, create physical or digital flashcards. Apps like Anki with spaced repetition are excellent for this.

Tip 9: Join a Community

Find other shorthand learners online or locally. Accountability and shared resources accelerate learning. Check our community links in the footer.

Tip 10: Set Realistic Speed Goals

Progress in shorthand is not linear. Expect plateaus, especially at 60 and 80 WPM. Push through with more volume and variety of practice material.

The Bottom Line

Shorthand is a motor skill as much as a cognitive one. The learners who succeed are those who practice consistently, not those who study intensively for short periods.