Trading Academy

Trading education built around discipline, risk, and process.

A structured curriculum for learning market mechanics, execution, technical analysis, risk management, position sizing, psychology, journaling, and backtesting without speculation-first messaging.

Learning paths

A staged curriculum from beginner to professional process.

The Academy separates skill-building from capital deployment. Users learn rules, test ideas, document decisions, and graduate only when process quality improves.

01

Trading fundamentals

Order types, timeframes, liquidity, spreads, sessions, volatility, and the difference between trading and investing.

02

Market structure

Auctions, order books, market makers, gaps, trend phases, range behavior, and institutional participation.

03

Technical analysis

Price action, trend, support and resistance, volume, relative strength, moving averages, and invalidation.

04

Risk management

Maximum loss, stop placement, risk of ruin, drawdown limits, trade frequency, and when not to trade.

05

Position sizing

Risk units, volatility sizing, stop distance, account heat, correlation, scaling, and expectancy.

06

Trading psychology

Impulse control, loss acceptance, overconfidence, revenge trading, boredom, patience, and rule adherence.

07

Journaling

Pre-trade thesis, execution notes, screenshots, emotional state, rule breaks, post-trade review, and lessons.

08

Backtesting

Hypothesis design, sample size, survivorship bias, market regimes, slippage, outliers, and review criteria.

09

Execution

Entry quality, liquidity, order choice, spread cost, partial fills, exits, trade management, and slippage control.

10

Professional frameworks

Playbooks, risk committee rules, setup grading, expectancy review, weekly prep, and monthly process audits.

Risk-first system

Every trading lesson starts with what can go wrong.

The Academy frames trading as controlled decision-making under uncertainty, with capital preservation as the first skill and profits as a byproduct of process quality.

Risk unitDefine 1R before entry, size the position from the stop, and never reverse-engineer risk from desired profit.
Daily guardrailStop trading after predefined daily loss, rule breaks, emotional tilt, or poor market conditions.
Setup qualityGrade trend, level, volatility, volume, catalyst, market regime, and invalidation before taking a trade.
Execution reviewSeparate idea quality from entry quality, management quality, and emotional discipline.
Capital progressionBacktest, paper trade, trade small, review results, then scale only when rules survive pressure.
Trading workbench

Tools and habits that make the Academy useful every week.

These systems create repeat visits: preparation, journaling, backtesting, watchlists, review sessions, and execution drills.

PL

Trading plan template

Markets traded, timeframes, setups, risk limits, playbook rules, review cadence, and shutdown criteria.

Open resources
JR

Journal system

Record thesis, setup grade, entry, stop, target, result, emotional state, rule breaks, and next lesson.

Save in dashboard
BT

Backtest protocol

Define the hypothesis, sample market regimes, track slippage, measure expectancy, and reject weak edges.

Use Research Lab
EX

Execution checklist

Confirm liquidity, spread, order type, stop distance, size, event risk, and invalidation before entry.

Check Market Pulse
PS

Psychology review

Track patience, fear, greed, boredom, overtrading, hesitation, revenge trading, and rule adherence.

Return to Academy
PF

Performance audit

Review expectancy, win rate, average win/loss, drawdown, mistake cost, and setup-level results.

Open frameworks
Professional progression

Advance only when process survives review.

FoundationLearn order types, market structure, technical language, and the difference between signal and noise.
Process builderWrite a trading plan, define setups, use 1R sizing, journal every trade, and cap daily loss.
Evidence stageBacktest hypotheses, paper trade, measure expectancy, and identify market regimes where the setup fails.
Execution stageTrade small size, review slippage and emotional discipline, reduce mistakes before increasing exposure.
Professional stageMaintain playbooks, weekly prep, monthly performance audits, risk committee rules, and ongoing skill review.
Content depth

Trading Academy visitor guide.

Study market structure, technical analysis, risk management, position sizing, psychology, journaling, backtesting, and execution.

What this page should answer

Useful information for real visitors.

Use the academy for discipline and process, not speculation.

  • What decision or question this page supports.
  • Which evidence, framework, or tool to use next.
  • How the topic connects to long-term investing behavior.
Related content

Continue from here.

Sources and references

Verify the inputs.

  • Investor.govPlain-language investing education from the SEC.
  • BLS CPIInflation definitions, data, and methodology.
  • FRED Economic DataData library for learning macro and market history.
Value guide

How to use this page well.

This section turns "Trading education built around discipline, risk, and process." into a practical resource: what it is, why it matters, how it works, how to use it, and what to do next.

Beginner guide

Start here

Start with the plain-language explanation, then follow the next lesson or glossary path.

  • Read the page summary first.
  • Open one related article or tool.
  • Save the page if it supports an ongoing decision.
Advanced use

Go deeper

Use the page as a framework library: compare definitions, examples, edge cases, and practice tasks.

  • Define the concept in your own words.
  • Review one example.
  • Connect it to a tool, article, or portfolio decision.
Common mistakes

Avoid these

  • Skipping definitions and jumping to advanced strategy.
  • Reading without applying the concept.
Comparison table

Beginner vs. advanced use

Beginner
Understand the concept, source, or workflow and choose one next action.
Advanced
Compare assumptions, risks, alternatives, and update triggers before acting.
Best practice
Connect this page to a written rule, saved resource, or repeatable review process.