Well we've got a great thread with good discussion going with the form pics.
When practicing form I do move up close the target bale and shoot without a target. Try blank bale shooting from just a few yards maybe 4-5yds. Take aim at the bale and close your eyes and feel the shot. Blank bale shooting removes the stress of having to hit the target so you can totally concentrate on your form.
Now "Shoot the Line"

I have two permanent lines on my target bale, one horizontal and one vertical. As I practice my form I shoot along the lines up and down or across horizontally to work on bow arm control. Byron Ferguson I believe discusses this exercise in his book "Become the Arrow". Once I start feeling pretty "spiffy" about shooting a line at a certain range then I move out to see just well I'm really doing. :( This exercise teaches you bow arm control on both axis. I don't try to hit any specific spot along the lines, just stitch arrows as close as I can to the line that I'm shooting. As I shoot the line I practice my shot sequence on each shot.
What is shot sequence? Its how you present yourself to the target. Your stance, is it aligned properly, is my anchor correct. Am I at full draw, is my balance correct, and so forth. As your new form develops you can drop items in the shot sequence as they become second nature to your shooting.
Give it a try it works! Organized practice of a sort.
REMEMBER! Its better to shoot 10 good arrows than 100 poorly shot arrows!!!! It just reinforces bad habits. What your looking for is quality not quantity in good practice
