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I would say... This is exactly how you should do it, and the "conventional" way is pretty stupid.
Everything we've discovered so far in science was to "solve" some kind of "problem". I don't mean "solve problem" in the way it's usually used, like idk figure out what's the most efficient way to travel from A to B, but in the way "there's some unexplained phenomenon here and our existing models don't cover it, so we gotta figure out a solution that works (predicts it)".
For all these new problems, it doesn't help you to be able to understand a theory by reading, it helps if you know how to problem-solve, i.e. figure out ways to apply your existing knowledge in previously non-existent combinations. Of course you got to have the knowledge of the previous theories or concepts to not go down routes already traveled, so you gotta learn your theory. But the methods you're building by being problem-focused is imo exactly what you need to build to actually work in the real world and not just in an academic, "get your degree" kind of way.