I think most of the concepts will carry across, though some of the syntax will be a little different. For example, memoization is done in Perl 6 with " is cached", but the concept is the same. Tail recursion will hopefully be better supported in Perl 6, but that should be entirely transparent. It's a little easier to write closures in Perl 6, but they work very much like Perl 5's closures. It'll be a little easier to write arrays that extend themselves via generators, but they work on the same principle. And so on...
In short, I don't think it would be a waste of your money.
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