First, take a gun and bowhunters safety course- more practical experience in a couple eveneings than you can gain anywhere else. Next,if you want to learn to hunt and not just aspire to shooting, learn the basics: how to sharpen a knife, start and maintain a fire in an emergency (hypothermia kills more hunters than anything else), gun safety than marksmanship.
Buy a good compass (not a gps) and learn to use it. they are still reliable without batteries. The basics are very cheap. Next, spend all the time you can outdoors observing.Turn off the TV and computer. You will learn darn little on them, especially the TV shows. Zero hunting skills are taught, only merchandising. The time spent sitting could be spent in the woods. The most succsessful hunters spend far more time in the woods off season than in the woods during it. The Boy Scouts Field Book (not Handbook) is a great source of all the basics of outdoorsmanship. Hunting comes later. The best part about it is most of the basics you can teach yourself at home, then apply later in the woods.