Join my Learning Drops weekly newsletter here: bit.ly/450BZiB Every week, I distil what really works for improving results, memory, depth of understanding, and knowledge application from over a decade of coaching into bite-sized emails.
@smile-td2ty
3 ай бұрын
Is this work to studying for usmle exams
@FizaKhan-j5c
2 ай бұрын
How we should make a proper start for theses strategies because our study technique are so different what important steps we should take?
@FizaKhan-j5c
2 ай бұрын
How do build actual learning habit so that we can maintain self study as well academic studies because l am confused by the academic teaching methods they are totally different and they demand very different kind of hard work so please simplify this that which one l should follow academy or these technique
@haruhidaso
2 жыл бұрын
I'm a physics PhD student, but if you cannot do this, you just would not survive doing physics. The professors are typically experts in what they are teaching, and you would notice that they are trying to build the big picture for you during class. At this point, I have not taken any notes in over 2-3 years, and I just listen to professor and try to understand the map that the professors are trying to create for you. Then, I typically just jump straight into homework, and try to do it. At this point, you notice that you are missing part of the big picture and cannot answer questions, so you go back to textbook/lecture notes to fill in that gap. 9 times out of 10 you still have significant holes or missing connections between the patches of understanding/knowledge you have, so go to the office hour and ask for help from your professor to connect the dots. Added benefit is that you get close to your professors so you already got your recommendation letter set if you ever need one. This method really helps because going to class is really easy, you just sit there and listen, so you have a lot of energy left at the end of the day to tackle the homework with full attention.
@Smacy
2 жыл бұрын
I went into physics having absolutely no idea how to study any of it. It was a nightmare. I wasted so much time trying to break down topics instead of just practicing. The effing. Problems!
@juliusphua2447
2 жыл бұрын
Sick! I’m thinking of majoring in physics after finishing highschool
@haruhidaso
2 жыл бұрын
@@juliusphua2447 Best advise I can give you is really to just work on Homework a class earlier, and don’t waste time reading textbook. Just jump into practice problems. Take full advantage of office hour
@juliusphua2447
2 жыл бұрын
@@haruhidaso Right. The thought processes are still fresh in your mind. Yeah I agree with the textbook part, my highschool physics textbook was kinda useless.
@5minutecalms
2 жыл бұрын
Good advice thanks!
@elliesaksena
2 жыл бұрын
Summary: In this video, Sung broke down the two steps to effective encoding: higher-order learning and increasing memory tolerance. First, we analyzed higher-order learning which can be visualized with a taxonomy of processing ideas and concepts. The lower order learning skills involve techniques of learning that don't connect new content to known concepts and information. We can skip lower-order learning and go right to higher-order learning, looking at the big picture and the lower-order learning concepts will fill in almost automatically. Higher-order learning sets up an organizational system to allow information to be processed and remembered. The levels of higher-order learning include applying, analyze and evaluating. Apply is interpretation, sketching where the concept fits, analyze is comparing and contrasting other concepts and facts to new information, and evaluate is discriminating which connections between concepts are the most important. Increasing memory tolerance is also important in the encoding process. A key mistake many people make is consuming information individually or committing information into notes prematurely. One consumes information individually if they try learning pieces of information before a higher-order learning organization has been established. This disadvantages one from the start and frequently means reorganization and encoding will be required to learn the concepts. Additionally, we should not commit information into notes before our mind has processed, sorted, and organized the information. This involves asking 2 questions before taking a note: how does this relate to what I learned, how does this fit into the big picture? By emphasizing higher-order learning and working on increasing memory tolerance, we can more effectively encode and learn concepts and information.
@felipeduma
2 жыл бұрын
I do feel like you've just compiled the whole video into a neat and nice summary. Thanks for that. Nonetheless I'll watch the video, of course.
@hiroharro6340
2 жыл бұрын
How to "apply" in bloom's taxonomy or can skip to analyze, if so how should I analyze ? (sorry for my bad eng)
@elliesaksena
2 жыл бұрын
@@hiroharro6340 analyze is figuring out what you know and what you dont know. By sorting the information into these two categories, one can foccus on learning what they dont know
@Im-BAD-at-satire
2 жыл бұрын
This kind of thing never gets discussed in language learning circles but should be discussed, I've tried SRS for my Japanese and it just doesn't stick effectively for me. Immersion is effective and words stick better within the context of the videos I watch, let's players and such. It's rather common for Japanese KZitemrs to put up captions on their videos, it makes associating pronunciation with the kanji much more easily. The SRS don't give this sort of contextual information which makes things not stick for me.
@tyronefrielinghaus3467
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the time to write the summary. 👍👍👍
@HarishPentapalli
2 жыл бұрын
1. Basic principles of encoding Takes 1-3 months at max. Orders of Learning: Higher-order, Lower-order See Bloom's Taxonomy. Create -> Evaluate -> Analyze -> Apply -> Understand -> Remember. Get to higher order as early as possible. 2. Increasing cognitive load tolerance a) If you tend to write lots of notes, get into the habit of holding onto it for a little longer in your head before writing it down. b) Then consume a little bit more information, process this and ask questions like "how does this relate to what I learned?" and "how does this fit into the big picture?" If you're not proficient with higher order learning, this may be overwhelming and lead to excessive confusion. For these cases, start with slightly lower - order learning and work upwards
@jamespak8175
Жыл бұрын
At the end of the day --- knowledge that is applied is what really matters... So how does one learn ACTUAL skills that are PRACTICAL --- with the same notion of speed and precision from Justin's ENCODING and DEEP PROCESSING techniques for memorizing and understanding LARGE AMOUNTS of information to pass tests and exams??
@sovereignknight9290
2 жыл бұрын
This is amazing. No other youtuber comes close to your expertise when it comes to actually learning information efficiently and effectively. Everyone just regurgitates the same stuff of doing "active recall and spaced repepition". Thank you so much for creating this video.
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@auntyjasmine2566
2 жыл бұрын
That's exactly what I was thinking
@azncedric
2 жыл бұрын
SAME
@shanonchris6083
2 жыл бұрын
could you please elaborate it for me
@azncedric
2 жыл бұрын
@@shanonchris6083 This video is mainly to give an idea of how learning works, not the methods that you can use to learn more effectively with the basis of this knowledge. There are other videos i would recommend to you from his channel including "5 things successful students do" and pretty much all of the other videos he makes.
@stomorevs
2 жыл бұрын
The way I like to learn: I jump straight to practice problems. Even if I don’t know anything about the subject, being quizzed on a topic automatically reveals to me what is important to know. I immediately begin filling in gaps in my knowledge to help me answer the practice problems. To fill in the gaps I read lecture slides, google stuff, and jot down important points. When I’ve exhausted one set of practice problems, I try to find another set. I like the challenge of trying to answer questions. Just memorizing stuff bores me!!
@ainternet_userisnteveryone524
Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@krystalgomez2300
Жыл бұрын
Actually YES this works absolutely well for me Quizzes and problems excite me a lot. Thanks btw
@fathimarisana5268
Жыл бұрын
This makes so much sensee🎉 thanks for sharing 😊
@halah709
Жыл бұрын
What exactly does he mean by big picture?
@jamespak8175
Жыл бұрын
At the end of the day --- knowledge that is applied is what really matters... So how does one learn ACTUAL skills that are PRACTICAL --- with the same notion of speed and precision from Justin's ENCODING and DEEP PROCESSING techniques for memorizing and understanding LARGE AMOUNTS of information to pass tests and exams??
@patrickm4648
Жыл бұрын
Justin’s idea of focusing on upper levels of thinking is spot on. I apply it consistently with a piece of advice my uni professor once shared to us, and the results are unbelievable! A professor once told us that when reading any given chapter of a topic in a textbook, it is best practice to read the objectives and also the summary of that chapter before diving into its core of the chapter. This triggers the high levels of learning Justin is talking about. It works folks!
@BlueDrexler
9 ай бұрын
Could you explain it more, i didn't understand??
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
I'm focusing on writing up the full research report at the moment because there were a surprising number of people that were interested! So that should hopefully be up in a week or so. There are about 400 references to go through so it is taking some time to organise it all. I've previously only had this information collated non-sequentially so putting it into a single... reasonably concise report is proving quite a challenge. Will be done soon though :)
@littlegirl3263
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for doing the work to help us become more effective learners. You’re the bomb!
@princessmbali3630
2 жыл бұрын
Alright I would trully appreciate it
@elma4996
2 жыл бұрын
You could hire someone to help you out seems like a a lot of research to get through damn
@rizqikhoirunnisa3801
2 жыл бұрын
Can't wait for the paper! Thank you so much
@medha4551
2 жыл бұрын
I'm looking forward !
@FreshApplePie
2 жыл бұрын
Hello, I'm an Artist and I just want to talk about some of the things in this video from the perspective of someone who does creative work, in case anyone wanted to know how these things might work for less "academic" pursuits. One of the main things I was pleased to hear is just how many parallels I could draw from the artist's idea of a "visual library", which is basically what we would call the long-term memory, but for visual stimuli. Character design is something I often get asked about, and there's a lot of reasons why character design is difficult. How do you create something from scratch? So this is where the visual library comes in, because if you have a large visual library, then it shouldn't be difficult to not only come up with ideas, but to compare ideas and even combine ideas that might seem strange at first, and forcing them to belong together in an aesthetically pleasing way. A novice illustrator might ask, "how do I draw X?", well, you need reference. This would essentially be the learning material you encode and use, and one of the neat things about illustration is you typically try to apply what you see as soon as you can, you look at the reference and you attempt to draw it, trying to transfer visual information by your own two hands, and not only that, but applying it to perhaps a new environment or alternative use, like a piece of clothing for a character. For example, and especially for character design, you could say "well, what if the front bumper for this car was a jacket?" and forcing that kind of association in an attempt to marry it into a visually appealing design is probably one of the best things you could do for trying to remember the important aspects of it's design; you pay attention to the details, what aspects of the front bumper are visually interesting enough to keep? which details are sacrificial? what makes these shapes interesting? This kind of thinking not only forces you to make creative decisions, but they are also decisions unique to you that you are trying to justify for the sake of design. This is a ridiculous example, but it's exactly the kind of thinking that is rewarded in something as esoteric in the wider field of illustration as character design. You can't do this without growing your visual library, or at least you wouldn't be able to do it as well as someone who does. Sure, you can draw a camera and learn what a camera looks like, but in the wider context of design, what could the camera also look like? You don't have to compare it to just other cameras, what if the camera was shaped like a bird? how about the colors of an exotic bird, would that look good on a camera? Would this camera be a character's head? Again, these are the sorts of creative visual/mental links that people in visual design fields would come up with despite the objects or references being completely unrelated to each other, and is how design in general expands. One thing I like to remind people who come to me for advice is that "everything is inspired by something", and what I mean by this is that nothing in the world exists that hasn't been seen by human eyes at some point, and while you could say "well this thing doesn't exist" doesn't mean it isn't in some way a mishmash of the totality of every piece of visually inspiring thing the designer had come across throughout their entire lifetime. All of this, in my opinion, very much fits with this idea that taking a concept, reproducing it visually, applying it to your own work in a novel way by combining it with other ideas and therefore creating something new, makes illustration a very hands-on approach as an example of how the information in this video can be directly applied in the real world. Every time you're looking at reference to create something new, means that you are in that higher level of thinking, and the more you do this the more you get better at things, even looking at reference, you eventually begin to understand which design elements are more significant to the aesthetic appeal, and you can be sure that the very best artists and designers will be people who are very good at deconstructing design and reconstituting it as a part of a different, bigger picture. On some level, you could probably replace a lot of the words in this video and it would be very good advice for design students. Thank you for this content.
@_Chris_V43
2 жыл бұрын
Wow very in-depth.
@vaibhavi.singh.
Жыл бұрын
I need to come back to this comment later
@reigndelmundo4688
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing it's really mind opening and has depth 😁💙
@user-t6q0h9fope
Жыл бұрын
That's really inspiring
@SevScout
Жыл бұрын
Your words read like fucking silk, man. Nice
@grimmsnow7441
2 жыл бұрын
I would love to try this out. However, we need to always remember the context and learning environment students are exposed to. The reason why active recall is widely used is because it's what the education system wants us to do. Tests are more about remembering than connecting, with the exception of problem-solving. Other than that, most of the tests we go through look at how we recall specific terms, definitions, dates, figures, etc. Combine this with a VERY rushed curriculum that feels like you never stop getting new material to read, then you could understand why so many learn so little.
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
Yes correct, I actually have a literature review on this very aspect. There are many problems with the curriculum, but also remember that I am neck deep in practice. Nothing I teach is only theoretical. If it doesn't produce practically superior outcomes, I'm not interested. My students, using these forms of learning, are achieving 99 and 100% of those same assessments. Why and how? Lots of reasons, but at the VERY LEAST, this saves so much time that they have MORE TIME AVAILABLE to do active recall and spaced repetition, because they fundamentally forget much less. And that's just the bottom-ranked benefit. This works. In real practice. I use it. Thousands of my students use it. Every single one of us goes through this terrible education system that tests on menial bs. And it still works.
@grimmsnow7441
2 жыл бұрын
@@JustinSung Will be looking forward to your videos 🤗
@capgains
2 жыл бұрын
Exactly. One of the reasons I don’t want to attend med school. Time, debt, and frustration from wanting to know but no time to integrate. But maybe by the time I qualify, I’ll feel different
@CreedColisionAC
2 жыл бұрын
@Sarah Hodgins Based on Bloom's taxonomy, the understanding part is closer to the the base of the learning process. And makes us rely more on SRS and active recall. Not saying that you're wrong, I'm just classifying understanding by different metrics. These that Justin have been explaining about.
@capgains
2 жыл бұрын
@Sarah Hodgins verbal, written, seems better with video
@ElMeach
2 жыл бұрын
I have this feeling of learning faster than the majority of the people around me, but now I have understood how to learn even faster and reach those minority who are always ahead of me. Even more,this explains how now that I am becoming a teacher I am learning even faster things that I had forgotten and how to share this with my students. Thank you very much, Justin!
@andongiordano1896
2 жыл бұрын
Part 1: (8:50) Engage in higher order learning Part 2: (14:50) Train cognitive load tolerance
@jessc99
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks
@angrycat4489
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@frog6054
2 жыл бұрын
This save a lots of time.
@kyovak
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@MMOD25
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@ananyabj7790
Жыл бұрын
Seriously you are like the door of light to several student who are told " Once you understand you never forget, you don't understand the concept that is why you are forgetting " Like my parents say that and a doctor said the same to me
@davedesigning
10 ай бұрын
Don’t build your knowledge on sand. At the base of Bloom’s taxonomy is “define”. It’s only when your definitions have almost mathematical equation precision that you can build on this. If you build on fuzzy definitions all else will be fuzzy above. (Another option is to build concrete analogies and associative thinking. Or to know a word or fact by a concrete example.)
@roankai
2 жыл бұрын
Just stumbled upon your videos and everything makes sense now. I discovered mind maps when I was 12 and been using them ever since in school, uni and at work. Never in my life had I spent hours and hours studying something, it was always easy to pick up any subject and organize it visually with mind maps, drawing connections and chunking, applying it all in solving real problems. Hopefully more people will discover more efficient ways to learn, so they can spend more time enjoying life .✨🤗
@cpa8439
2 жыл бұрын
Can you teach us how do you make them?
@tomasbeltran04050
Жыл бұрын
Mind maps? They're a bit un-hierarchical, aren't ðey?
@prostoztablicy6056
2 жыл бұрын
I hope you will elaborate on specific techniques of "higher learning", because "Faynman technique" or flascards are easy to implement (so we can use active recall almost immediately). Its really interesting that there are even more efficient methods. But I am still confused how can I do "applying, evaluating etc." while studying content for the frist time. For now I am bewildered xd. Looking forward to your next video!
@psycho_chef
2 жыл бұрын
He did make a video and he mentions it in the beginning of the this video and provides the link
@rian6524
2 жыл бұрын
That's my question as well. I wish in the coming videos he'd be a little more specific on how to analyze and evaluate stuff when we are studying it for the first time and have no idea on what to compare it with.
@nuwang2381
2 жыл бұрын
I think it is interesting because this really shines in courses like physics and math at the highschool level. When we compare to like bio and chem their are often times easy to understand structures to active recall itself acts as a way to understand information. And I would argue active recall done properly woth the roght questions lead to higher level learning
@teejay5516
2 жыл бұрын
Sounds legit. My sister is in med school and I'm still in highschool, I want to get into med and I asked her how she studies and she says she writes her own questions and answers them in as much detail as she can off by heart and then adds in any missed detail after. Thats all and she memorizes facts.
@郭柏宏-s7y
2 жыл бұрын
After watching this video, I immediately tried it by studying some philosophy. The whole "evaluate right away, and analyze, apply, understand, and remember will come naturally" idea suddenly made sense because *it* *worked.* I feel enlightened, stunned, and super excited right now for learning this method. It's hard to describe lol. I also couldn't help but ask: "how come I never thought of this before? It's so true and obvious." For references, I was reading about Socrates' view on death, how it separates the body and soul, how opposites (life and death) come from each other.
@nithyasreesathyanarayanan5611
2 жыл бұрын
Wow I never thought looking at the big picture and relating things to each other was actually a study method. It’s really really effective the few times I’ve actually tried it (I only tend to do this when I’m really interested in a topic/subject). I am so lucky I found your channel a few days ago. This is the second video of yours that I’m watching and I right away clicked the subscribe button. Never have I done that before! Blooms taxonomy is an amazing educational structure! Higher order learning feels really really good; it’s like something actually clicks and has filled the space of a mystery rather meaningfully. But I’ll keep the advice of actually holding onto and analysing information for a longer time into mind; it makes you understand the dynamics of the big picture and you will have so many questions that would be left unanswered! The feynmann technique works really well here. If you somehow get how the whole thing works, innovation and application come as an easy thing. Thank you so so much for all this valuable knowledge! You are awesome! ❤️
@AngelsAndButterflies
2 жыл бұрын
I came here after your active recall video and I've just looked at some of your older videos and ooooh boy your channel is a gem!! Thank you so much for making videos and sharing your knowledge! 💎💖
@kirticarter1924
2 жыл бұрын
This is kinda depressing. It seems like a hard skill to learn if one is used to being in lower order learning for years and years :( My husband is a higher order learner NATURALLY since he was a kid. I am so in awe of how he does it. Until I watched your videos I just thought he was a genius and now I see the how of that ability discussed in your videos. I hope I can get there sooner than later. Right now it seems a very far fetched thing but I am willing to put in the work...because I understand neuroplasticity.
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
To be honest, it is challenging. With private coaching, it takes me around 6 to 8 weeks, working with someone intensively multiple times per week. In 2015, it probably would have taken me 6 to 8 months to achieve the same thing. There are literally thousands of permutations and ways to do it wrong and honestly not as many ways to do it right, especially when it comes to cognitive retraining to the point of automaticity. Even for those going through my course, I'd say it takes at least 4 to 6 months of diligent work to become a higher-order learner by default, where it is easier than lower-order learning. And that's with DILIGENT work. I've got students on the course who have been working through it not so seriously and they've improved only by like 10 or 20% after 4 or 5 months. But what i WILL SAY, is that for you, and for ANYONE reading this. It is more achievable than you might think. I'll be honest, doing it alone can potentially take you 10+ years. What I train for my students in 1 or 2 months took me 5 or 6 years to figure out by myself. But I WILL be uploading videos to make this easier and following this advice WILL help you. It will save a lot of time and it will be very very very doable. There is a process to this and when this process is followed carefully, I find that the results are consistent. So don't be demotivated. Yes it will take work, but once it clicks, your growth is exponential. I'll try to make sure the next series of videos coming out help you.
@littlegirl3263
2 жыл бұрын
@@JustinSung thank you, good doctor!🙏💖🙏
@kirticarter1924
2 жыл бұрын
@@JustinSung Thanks for the detailed reply. I am in touch with Archer about getting the coaching. However, I am preparing for my medical boards currently and am not sure if at this time I can commit to putting in the work for this without it taking away from my existing study schedule. I want to learn this for lifelong healthy learning practices. I may have to wait and start the coaching after I am done with the boards in a few months. Your work is amazing and respect for decoding such a hard skill and making it available step by step.
@Satyaprakash__1929
2 жыл бұрын
@@JustinSung Yes thank u for detailed reply. I too was demotivated bcz my exam are few 3 months to go (one of the world's toughest exams)...but yes will give my best with application of point u said.And after my JEE journey overs i will take ur course for sure and will become the high order learn by default
@___Anakin.Skywalker
2 жыл бұрын
What does higher order learner mean? Lower order learner? I haven't heard of it until now.
@YashCurious
2 жыл бұрын
Remembering theory without knowing and working on it's application is much hard and complex relative to information with Higher Order Learning, I was used to read always How to learn and will continue, but You've explained it brilliantly and provided us exact roadmap of encoding information in long term memory, Thankyou so much for the Explanation. ;) I'm gonna make a little summary of what I learned to increase my cognitive load tolerance, Topic covered 1:43 1. Basic Principles of How to do encode anything. 3:00 Types of Learning order Higher Learning Order (M. Imp) Lower Learning Order Framework 1 4:04 Bloom's Taxonomy HLO - Most Important Create 6:58 Evaluate 6:22 Analyse LLO Apply Understand Remembering Framework 2 8:12 SOLO (Structure of Observed Learning Outcome) taxonomy Pre structural Uni structural Multi structural Relational _M. Imp_ Extended Abstract _M. Imp_ Try to work on Relational and Extended Abstract to store the information in long term 9:24 Your objective must be do the Higher Order Thinking as early as possible , your brain will automatically fill in lower order of thinking. Higher order thinking also makes the information organised in brain for long term. So the information organised to begin with. 14:43 2.Increase Coginitive load tolerance Challenge yourself to recognize more and more every time you consume information (10-15 -30 - 60min). That's why I'm also making this summary to test my own tolerance. and also Instead of taking notes( that's mostly linear) , consume little bit more and Question 1. How do this relate to what I learned? 2. How does this fit into the big picture? In case you can't proefficient with Higher order learning, Ask How can I apply this ? Improving cognitive load tolerance is the fundamental skill to use any other learning skill to go with. "Hold in the bucket!"
@janechapman7801
2 жыл бұрын
Realise this is the first of a series but spaced repetition is useful for allowing your brain to find the associations and connections making further connections when you review. When used with techniques like mind mapping.
@jose_w3128
Жыл бұрын
I've always thought that understanding is far more efficient and satisfying than regurgitating what you memorized because I've noticed that it takes a lot longer to forget it, so when I'm learning something, I usually try to understand it and then contrast it with seemingly related ideas to force myself to have a sense of clarity about the subject. And funnily, I do that out of either curiosity or fear of being challenged in a conversation and embarrassing myself when discussing it, but I haven't delved into it anywhere near the level of depth you have, so it was rather eye-opening to hear someone elaborate on that more professionally. I'm eager to know more about this!
@lauryns2479
2 жыл бұрын
you are literally saying everything that I feel!! This is why school is so annoying because we are learning backwards🙄 I need to see the goal so that I can connect and piece it together like reverse engineering.
@nigelcardoso7653
2 жыл бұрын
How?
@cothinker680
Жыл бұрын
@@nigelcardoso7653 how you're doing
@maelucchino6339
2 жыл бұрын
This 20 minute video took me about an hour to get through, but I'm okay with that. I was trying to really encode this information properly. I realized that I am SO prone to just transcribing what I see and read. Even at the start of this video, I was transcribing, but at the point where you discussed increasing your cognitive load threshold, I took my fingers off the keyboard and just listened. It was uncomfortable -- I now realize I've been hurting myself by avoiding this discomfort! Thank you for this video, I look forward to watching everything else on your channel!
@andongiordano1896
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. I’m a medical student having trouble and frustration with spaced repetition / Anki. Am looking forward to your next videos. Please keep it up!!
@kikithepupper6774
2 жыл бұрын
Oh God me tooo..! I'm so burnt out from ANKI
@TirianSoverign
2 жыл бұрын
I've always struggled with learning, because I start with isolated pieces of information about a given subject and try to mold them into an efficient system for gaining proficiency in said subject. I've quite literally spent hours upon hours trying to understand how to learn so I can fuel my thirst for practical knowledge, which is ironic. So far, the information and insight you've provided is second to none. You've given me a new perspective on how to learn, and for that I thank you. I just subscribed, and I'm looking forward to future content. Keep up the good work!
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for leaving your comment :) It keeps me encouraged!
@prestopasta259
2 жыл бұрын
Same here. I have put off my school stuff because of this frustration. I felt that there is something better and more effective way to learn. Justin Sung coincided with the information (isolated) I gathered. He solved my problems and I finally solved the mystery as to how I did well in my class when I was younger without taking notes and just plainly reading the book. The key was actually encoding. I used to have a high cognitive load tolerance and relate information automatically in my brain but when I reached senior high school, the misconception I have about active recall and spaced repetition interfered with my previous way of learning and I unlearned what was effective in learning.
@prestopasta259
2 жыл бұрын
But I still find it a blessing that I unlearned because it pushed me to be more conscious of my own progress in learning. I hope to also inspire my classmates who are having the same troubles as I.
@mariakarenquijano687
2 жыл бұрын
@@prestopasta259 hi what is your way of learning?
@kelsyfish
2 жыл бұрын
I know you have future videos coming, but I’d love to hear an example of how this might relate to language learning. Anki/SRS and active recall seem to be the “gold standard” right now for that…
@thecoffeefixer
2 жыл бұрын
You might be interested in "Refold". It's a completely free language learning methodology where you focus on input and spending time in the target language first (learning basic vocab and grammar to be able to do that ofc), before actually trying to memorise/build vocabulary for your area of interest
@thecoffeefixer
2 жыл бұрын
*and before learning advanced grammar
@shyestshawty
2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been searching for this type of video for a long time. One that engaging and straight to the point. Not only does he explains the fundamental of encoding but showing viewers how to do it is even better. Looking forward to all your examples. Hoping this will change my studying habits for good!!
@joy-tq2fr
2 жыл бұрын
Can you give more concrete examples? While this content is really good, you should also give contexts on how and where to use these techniques. Thank you so much!
@lightraptor1
Жыл бұрын
I’m new to this technique and am in S4 (3 years till higher education in Scotland) and I tried to properly understand the concepts in relation to why and the bigger picture towards the course, I did this in a few subjects and I still haven’t forgotten it after not even entering that classroom again. I am truly fascinated.
@lekhrambarman6877
Жыл бұрын
" BIGGER PICTURE " means that you have to really think of photos , pictures 🖼️ or something else 🤔. Can you explain a little
@grabenaman
Жыл бұрын
@@lekhrambarman6877 Imagine you're working on a puzzle. Each piece of the puzzle represents a small part of the whole picture. But to complete the puzzle, you need to step back and look at the entire picture on the box. The big picture is like that. It's when you zoom out and see the whole thing instead of just focusing on the individual puzzle pieces. It helps you understand how everything fits together and the main ideas behind it. For example, let's say you're studying a historical event like World War II. Looking at the big picture means understanding why the war started, the countries involved, and the major events that took place. It helps you see the overall story and the important factors that shaped the outcome. When you consider the big picture, you can see how different pieces connect and affect each other. It's like looking at a map instead of just one street. You can understand how all the streets lead to different places and how they are connected. Having a big picture perspective can be useful in many areas of life. It helps you make better decisions by considering the larger context and long-term consequences. It also helps you understand complex topics by seeing the main ideas and relationships between them. So, the big picture is about stepping back, seeing the whole picture, and understanding how everything fits together. It's like looking at the puzzle box to understand how the pieces form the complete picture.
@sleepat2313
2 жыл бұрын
I know people say that you're videos are toi long but i personnally don't think like that. If you think that you have that much info to tell us and that it takes you 20 min then it will . Anyways thank you so much for this
@Boogeeezy
6 ай бұрын
I pray blessings for you man, you are a great teacher.
@weightlossandhealth8723
Жыл бұрын
Just a suggestion. When you say "find the relationship between concepts", or statements such as the previous, please, add a concrete example. For example after saying: find the relationship between concepts", say something like "a dog and a cat are animals and the relationship is that both are mamals" thats a concrete example that helps people like me to understand better.
@nibirnandi4344
2 жыл бұрын
8:44 video starts 10:00 higher order thinking Dont isolate information....relate it to bigger picture 12:30 take notes not at the moment of reading first time 15:41 linear notes is not good 16:16 what to practice to increase cognitive load and better notes 17:15 expansion of mind for learning 18:50 video ends
@YouAdrianziom
2 жыл бұрын
I actually find it quite fun travelling trough my brain trying to find puzzles that resemble concepts, boxes for them and groups of boxes. It's like being in a jungle, with houses that you need to provide Internet to. Where should I place the server? What houses should I connect? Which of those really need it most? Where do I get the Internet in the first place? The more houses you connect in a meaningful way, the better the information is stored and doesn't need much reorganisation afterwards. It's like trying to find the most similar patterns to a concept, instead of just trying to memorise the whole pattern at once. The more patterns resemble the concept you wanna learn the better you actually know the concept. Such a beautiful and really logical (how people actually learn, children are the masters of that-they learn how everything connects to everything instead of trying to learn what a cup is and moving on), I'm so mad I didn't figure it out sooner. Thank you for providing that info for free.
@rubberduck5837
2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate these videos, but similar to your previous channel, you’re sometimes vague with your examples and how to apply these points. I look forward to your next upload having finished the video and read the description. I understand why you’re not offering any examples - there are various methods, however, that shouldn’t discount the value of offering at least one example to build on. I guess it’s also why strategies like spaced repetition and active recall are so popular. They’re easy to understand with a 2-minute video, making it effortless to include in one’s workflow.
@toby2120
2 жыл бұрын
Idk but this guy seems kinda weird to me. It's like he is trying to sell me his course talking too much.
@rubberduck5837
2 жыл бұрын
@@toby2120 I know what you’re talking about. He brings up some good points like relating information to your already existing pool of knowledge and the logical flow that mindmaps should follow on his “study with me” videos, but doesn’t really expand beyond that. He even states that said videos aren’t meant to serve as an explicit how-to. What is so difficult to simply list what is considered as good practice and demonstrate to me in actionable terms what I could do to become better at it? I even tried searching up on what other people thought of his courses or videos and there only seems to be one forum discussion on Reddit that isn’t exactly glowing with positive opinions.
@toby2120
2 жыл бұрын
@@rubberduck5837 i know like everything he talks about feels like something i have been doing mostly in my unconscious. But i worry that he is trying to just yk sell the course
@SimGunther
2 жыл бұрын
@@toby2120 It feels like we're both getting the nervous version of the vibe that says "I'm gonna tease you with this course without explicitly selling you my courses ;)" Just wish he could contextualize those examples of his in a not so vague way, but at the same time, I'd understand that we're "supposed to apply the techniques ourselves" to get a "mind blowing discovery" moment so that it sinks in. At the very least, he could just guide us along with a typical set of knowledge that shows us how the techniques could be used so we know the mechanics of HOW it can be used.
@toby2120
2 жыл бұрын
@@SimGunther all i can do for now is wait for another of his videos.
@akina2448
2 жыл бұрын
It would be more helping if you could cut off the 20 minute time to part 1,part 2 and give timestamps and then examples and stuff . I think that's the reason why a great KZitemr like you is underrated cuz people won't watch these 20 minutes without knowing what they're gonna get the first 4 minutes of this video was just beating around the bush. I will watch a video that is 10 minutes long which has different parts which also makes some sense to the contents rather than just saying them all . love your videos 😍 this is not hate . Just my option Awesome content as usual 💖👍
@grepgrok8735
Жыл бұрын
What I always love about these types of videos, is that people in the comments (myself included) always like to immediately apply the topics. Jumping off the spaced repetition and active recall video, I think an ideal way to think about this all is as so: 1. Spaced repetition is a wire frame to hang your studying on. It isn't so much a study method, but a scheduler to help identify when to study what (Ali Abdaal has an excellent video on his retrospective revision method for doing this outside of programs like Anki which use formulas to space out information). 2. During a study session, you want to use some form of active recall to optimize cognitive load. 3. We can further optimize our choice of active recall and tolerance to cognitive load. 3.-a. ALWAYS try to link to other ideas (the more connection, ideas, and "distance" between ideas, the better) 3.a. To optimize active recall, choose the highest-order learning technique you can with Bloom's taxonomy (create -> evaluate -> analyze -> apply -> understand -> remember); if a level is overly confusing, go back down to a lower level-this is learning, not a competition. 3.b. To increase tolerance to cognitive load, incrementally overload your brain's capacity. Read just a little more than you normally would and link back to previous information, wait a little longer to take the next note and link back to previous information. I would add a few things to the method, notably the usefulness of wrote memorization. Often, the process of identifying connections, especially broader connections can take longer than your working memory can hold onto new information (and may actually force information out of working memory as you try to also remember the connection). Having a wrote memorization of (especially previous) topics can help decrease the threat of losing what you were trying to remember, needing to go back, and rinsing and repeating until misery. Take, for example, math. When you are learning integrals, you will probably do a lot of practice problems and it can be extremely beneficial to know and use your trig identities to help in these. Unfortunately, these identities usually aren't properly proven for a solid grasp until far, far later in your math education because of the inherent complexity associated with them. This is the perfect time to have your trig identities in wrote memorization to help you create the connections within calculus. Also, there are very frequently times where you just have to memorize something because you have to memorize it and there just isn't much you can do for higher-order learning until later (e.g. the meanings of safety symbols in a lab will always be introduced before you actually see them in the context of an actual lab). You can try to come up with some higher order questions like "What symbols would be used in a lab with lasers?" but that can be very difficult if you don't know yet what a laser is, let alone a lab using them.
@adan4477
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Justin, I keep slipping back to my sick habit of decades of writing notes as I listen lectures. you made me realize it's literally crappy photocopying what lecturer says, yielding nothing. I now tend to actually learn something during lectures, and write lil bit notes in the end of a lecture. Thanks
@dosgos
2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic memory encoding video. So much information here!
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@LeeTherapy
2 жыл бұрын
I am studying intermediate to upper level French. Rather than writing lists of sentences that demonstrate the many uses of FAIRE (to make), I am going to read all of them in a dictionary entry and then think hard about the inner connections of usage. Since I already understand grammar, at least as a non-linguistics person, I will study the entry to create useful mind maps before going for detail. Thanks.
@pedromrls6
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for all the work that you are putting to make this videos, I'm looking forward to evaluate more things about learning.
@bryanv.3630
2 жыл бұрын
This video is so interesting to me, since I realized that when I took AP Biology, my teacher taught us to think this way. The class was a constant act of interconnecting concepts and defending stances taken on them. Eventually, we had to create our own outcomes in experiments. Memorization was definitely helpful, but it never cut it when it came to non-active recall questions. I'll have to pursue the rest of my undergraduate experience with this mentality from now on. Definitely a revelation for me.
@jeng-tingyeh437
2 жыл бұрын
Has anyone here tried the icanstudy course? I cant find any independent reviews online Hi Justin, I'm also a doctor studying for specialty exams. whilst I agree with the concept these videos cover, they tend to be long winded and do not actually teach /how/ to achieve things. I understand you cant put everything on youtube as free content, but I want to know if the course will teach the how. Thanks!
@alexislarge
2 жыл бұрын
Bring on the follow-up videos! I'd happily pay to a patreon for this content if it would help it come sooner. I'm a huge anki lover so am very excited at the idea that using these higher order techniques immediately could be much more effective. Looking forward to watching more of your videos!
@gilbertcrosby7789
3 ай бұрын
I feel like if you had a strait forward actionable plan for things too do e.g. playlist of videos in order or just a numbered list 1 train cognitive load 2 practice higher order learning so on and so on that could be extremely useful. thank you so much for this content!
@weirdytrends
Жыл бұрын
I think my whole academic years are now change in few days thanks dactor❤
@mnq299
2 жыл бұрын
my friend asked me whether you had a video on encoding yesterday 😭 psychic
@shubhambhagat2392
2 жыл бұрын
Coming to your channel is probably the best thing happened in my life
@wasabipeaprotienpowderkeg628
8 ай бұрын
This has been a helpful video that explains intuitively why I never had to study much in school and why I am struggling a bit with learning now. I realized kind of early on that I was someone who could not learn and take notes at the same time. And I would always take the most notes early on in the semester, just because if I knew nothing about the topic, I didn’t have something for the new information to glom onto in my head, so I had to write it down in that case so I didn’t forget it. However now on work meeting, I am sometimes responsible for take notes that have to be detailed enough that if we need to go back to them later to figure out what we said, so I found that I have not been able to process as well.
@kassimfaisal6787
2 жыл бұрын
You're the best learning coach I've come across.You are really an expert
@dend1
10 ай бұрын
8:50 screen shot that, saved you 8 mins
@PaulKTakahashi
2 жыл бұрын
Hi Justin! Great videos 👍 Watching this one, I realised you are actually describing how an high-functioning autist like me perceives and makes sense of the world the whole time, 24/7, even when sleeping I feel sometimes 🤣 I was recently diagnosed with ASD and therefore I have been researching a lot more about neuroscience, cognition and learning and your video makes total sense to me. I relate to it 100%, with the difference that the process you are describing applies not only to studying but to everything that involves cognition in general. In other words, I cannot function otherwise if I want to understand and relate to people and the world around me every day. Thank you so much! This video of yours is an true epiphany for me 🙏♥️🙏
@shirororowowowo
2 жыл бұрын
Oh my god , @15:52 That’s the problem I faced after starting notion . I realised I’ve got complete notes but I can never remember what I wrote because I offload everything there … Thankyou so much for opening my eyes
@jacky7878
Жыл бұрын
1. Focus on higher order of learning -> clear organisational structure in your brain. You know how the information fits into your framework. You can simplify it to a 5 year old. Seconds upon exposure is the time for you to encode it into your long term memory. Applying, Analysing and Evaluating - How can I use this? How does this work? Is this important? Notes should help you think, not help you avoid thinking 2. If you do higher order thinking first, the lower order thinking (memorization, understanding) will automatically follow 3. Train cognitive load tolerance overtime - reading/watching smth without taking any notes. Figure out how you'd structure your notes first before you write it down
@vipham2158
Жыл бұрын
Why don't you write a book about all that stuff 😅😅 . Its more affordable than the course and spread to many people
@tamaraschubert3823
2 жыл бұрын
You are really increasing my mind load with this off and on background music 😂
@AJ213Probably
2 жыл бұрын
I think its funny that this in a way somewhat encourages the use of something like Obsidian. Of course, not directly and I am oversimplifying here, but what is great about that particular note taking application is it focuses on connections between concepts rather than just writing linearly a bunch. For me, I am not able to write anything in Obsidian unless I understand the concepts enough to be able to connect them. The one thing I am not sure about is what I put in these notes. Typically I try to put in the hard to memorize stuff like equations because I don't think they matter. Would this be against what you are saying because I am reducing the load it requires to process these ideas? What would I write about instead? The main benefit I see about writing down hard to remember stuff is if I ever want to remember that thing I can just refer to my notes and its the first thing I see. Where before linear notes it would be in the middle of a bunch of notes I don't ever read.
@arkiksoukaina4540
2 жыл бұрын
this whole thing makes sens just perfectly in my brain, that in everytime you're giving an example I find myself saying yes I can highly relate. you actually helped me to know where exactly I need to put more effort in. thank you for existing
@walkerghostkeeper
Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Your instructions for the fundamentals were very easy to understand. It may be difficult to start using these methods, but it clicked when I heard you speak about trying to relate the ideas to eachother, and the larger picture. I find that this is how I've accidentally retained most of my studies in the past, but you've opened my eyes to the actual method. I don't feel like I'm wasting time playing a guessing game any more. 😄
@oichiana2002
2 жыл бұрын
thanks for explaining everything, it really changes my mindset! and maybe for other videos, you can put the background music a bit softer. it gets a bit distracting from your lesson. i am very excited for you upcoming videos! 5:50 explaining the ladder
@mauradias2862
2 жыл бұрын
Hi, I'm just a regular mom of twin boys on the Autism Spectrum, in order to help them I cam up with these steps that also help to easy into what might seem a hard subject. Step 1) Search for a Video / Documentary / Fact based Movie / Lecture/ Visit a Museum .. Do something that introduces the new concept to you in a Audio / visual form., make sure this form answers most of the WHEN/WHERE/HOW /WHY ect.. questions. Step 2) Rapid Read/ Speed read the chapter you are about to study..look a diagrams..headings..bold words..anything that stands out. If the chapter has a Questions /Test yourself section at its end..read those questions..It will give you an insight of things that are important. Step 3) Go back to the start of the chapter and READ.. now when you read..you must also observe what some would consider a ' Negative Space" in the sentence.. most people would read and only pay attention to a sentence like this < the process by which green PLANTS and some other organisms use SUNLIGHT to synthesize NUTRIENTS from CARBON DIOXIDE and WATER. Photosynthesis in plants generally involves the green pigment CHLOROPHYLL and generates OXYGEN as a by-product>..now most dont ask themselves " Why green pigment?", "what other organisms?"..this is what I call negative space, you dont have to delve deep into them ..but do read further..there might be connections with things you already know. Step 4) If you can rapid / regular read the next chapter before you go to class..you will already be a step ahead, you will interact better with the lesson and be able to ask questions and clear doubts in class with the teacher and might even spark a discussion in class and have input of what others know that you might not.
@matheusbarros9719
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Justin! You are helping me a lot! I'm getting motivated to study after a long time, that thing of being overloaded with memorization just happenned to me and I got stuck at some point... Even so, I succeeded in get into medical school, but as you said things get more complex there and the bad routcomes just start to appear. I think I can overcome this now, thanks to you. Hugs from from Brasil! God bless you.
@bijoy4288
2 жыл бұрын
Is icanstudy only for Australia and New Zealand
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
No we have a lot of students from many countries.
@santosruiz4602
Жыл бұрын
It’s crazy how I landed on this video. I was feeling burned out from studying day in and day. I feel like I was looking for something that I couldn’t define. I’ve only recently understood that I learn through pattern recognition and spatial thinking. I got almost immediate results after watching this video. It felt like that last vertical Tetris piece falling Into place.
@mokshgrover9517
2 жыл бұрын
I have a question. In many exams, questions usually use Bloom's taxonomy, right? like, evaluate this person's contribution to this idea or compare and contrast this idea with another idea. Even so, I remember only part of what I wrote in such exams. In your opinion, what might be going wrong here?
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
You're talking about the order right now. You're doing it the other way round. Try to spot it :)
@ftezzey
2 жыл бұрын
that taxonomy changed completely my way of thinking how to study
@irenea.cachero882
2 жыл бұрын
My problem is that I start to ask why for everything and search the answer and when I realized, it is been two hours and I didn’t do almost anything about the topic of what I am studying . How can I narrow the searching?
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
This is definitely about the skill involved in managing multiple resources and framing your thinking. It starts getting more complicated here. It isn't enough only to ask why for everything. You need to be able to prioritise which questions and answers will help to develop your overall knowledge scaffold/schema the most effectively. Explaining this to the level where you'd really understand what I mean would probably be another couple of hours of video so you'll need to wait for my next set of videos to try and see what I mean and what you can do to avoid it. (Or joining the course if you would rather not wait, but totally up to you :) )
@zizi6538
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much i'm trying to get into medical school so much content 😅
@greatpeterparker4290
2 жыл бұрын
Justin,can you do a video about controlling impulses like eating junk food and watching tv. I think that this the most important problem for 90% of the students.
@Lorenzo-pw7dp
Жыл бұрын
This is so interesting! I've always been this student that would listen to the explanation and never take notes, mostly by boredom, so I would just focus on the explanation to try to make sense of it. What some teachers back then saw as a "laziness" of mine (to which a certain degree it was) actually gave me an advantage later on my high school!
@maimahdi7373
2 жыл бұрын
Yes I write leaner notes to take a load off my mind😭😭😭😭😭 I'm really glad that now I know something about this concept After joining Med school I feel like my brain is on a leave. I lost my ability to be creative, I started hating putting effort on thinking
@jamesmorrissette741
2 жыл бұрын
I love you channel, I have found most of your videos really helpful, but often having to rewatch them a few times because of little key bits that are missed. Summaries are helpful, but they are meant to be short not sped up, because they are hard to follow. You could supplement this by writing out a summary and just slap it in the video. Like how you walked us through increasing cognitive load. besides little things like this, the material is fantastic !
@celox6796
Жыл бұрын
I’ve always been good at encoding, after years of higher ed I just hit a class I’m struggling with and pulled out the flashcards, I will try to be conscious about my encoding so I can try to keep the flashcards to a minimum
@stelo1558
2 жыл бұрын
amazing. the more vids of urs i watch, the more i'm starting to see how learning is much more complex and layered than the lower levels of learning that you mentioned. it's sad that this isn't taught in most schools as instructors are mostly only able to (or because of time constraints) throw information at you, assuming everyone already knows how to learn effectively. the only way i see one (esp those from a background of being a 1st gen college student) being taught even a fraction of what u mention here is if they recognize that what they're doing isn't working, and (assuming their school didn't already offer this) either afford a tutor or program that specializes in learning, or if they were lucky enough to hav found someone willing to teach them HLL hearing abt these methods now r mind blowing to say the least as there were instances in the past where i was able to "actively" study but felt that i was doing it all wrong because it didn't fit in with "popular" studying methods. in retrospect, however, i realize that i only took the success of those methods at face value and looked at them as the end all be all of studying when they were merely smaller pieces in a learning process
@lucca.c1788
2 жыл бұрын
This is one of those hidden diamonds on KZitem. Thank you man I really need it for A level chemistry.
@jacktrainer4387
2 жыл бұрын
Really enjoy the new take on an old idea (taxonomy) and elaborate encoding.
@tawandamatutu7732
2 жыл бұрын
You're onto something man...kudos.
@TheAgentOfDeath
Жыл бұрын
Great video and this easily relates to learning tech. People would always say learning through projects because then you know what information is important and what isnt. When I learn a new technology I always try to look at its application first. So when I do take the course I only focus on those important areas to remember. Realistically one would only need to remember 10% to have a working knowledge of a particular technology. Early in my life I had the mistake of trying to remember everything which was a bad strategy. For example, in a course there's probably over 500 commands they teach you. But in order to use it in a project you only needed like 15 commands. How would you know the 15 or so commands? Like this video said is trying to understand the bigger picture by seeing its used cases.
@qeden
2 жыл бұрын
they should've added "learning" as a subject in school.
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
Ironic right
@prestopasta259
2 жыл бұрын
And add 'teaching' seminars to professors who took up teaching as a retirement plan. 🙃
@anonymouslearner2454
2 жыл бұрын
For the first time, I felt maybe I am not that dumb, or could still improve. Thank you so much for this 😭
@fatimakhaleeq6600
2 жыл бұрын
Literally going to apply this method in my studying for my physics exam and let's see how it goes I'm kind of excited since I feel like ive done this before maybe a few times without actually knowing it was a thing and it worked so now that I'll intentionally do it for the first time in a long time I'm excited to see how it affects my efficiency
@dangomwandira7631
Жыл бұрын
Sounds like IRAC simplified!! 👍 you are great at this
@morefiction3264
2 жыл бұрын
I'm beginning to see why a technique like Zettelkasten has effect. Doing it properly requires you to take any new ideas you have, as soon as possible, analyze them and relate them to other ideas you have storing them in relation to your other ideas.
@jondahl8904
2 жыл бұрын
By the way I can hear your de-noiser on your voice. I dont know if its automatic or not. You don't need to use it as much as you do, your voice will sound more natural and better with a little bit of the natural room reverb that is already in your room. Thats just my option but do whatever sounds good to you. But I love the concepts I hearing about and just found this video and will be watching more of your stuff.
@shakebraza196
2 жыл бұрын
Encoding; connecting all high-yield concepts/variables together and evaluating how they affect each other. Encoding is a process that is evident to flatten the learning curve(lessen the time to retain inform).
@yoshimochii
9 ай бұрын
Awesome video! Every single video you make is golden, tysm for making videos like this! I just have a question. How am I going to fit the newly learned information to the "big picture" if I don't even know what the the "big picture" is? I get the "finding relevance by relating it to other stuff" thing but I still can't figure out or rather, I struggle at establishing what the "big picture" is in relation to the topic/thing I'm studying.
@la-ov5zw
2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been looking for this kind of information and a video like yours for AGES thank you so much for showing up and sharing your knowledge with us, this is gold !! Keep going, can’t wait for future videos
@존쌤의언어습득법
2 жыл бұрын
I love your channel! Thanks for all of the great advice and effort you put into your videos!
@evindrews
2 жыл бұрын
dude legendary content. I've always felt like there should be a better thought process / considerations of learning, but I've never stumbled on it.
@yusukehanabishi9757
2 жыл бұрын
You are the best KZitemr!! God bless!!!
@ql559
2 жыл бұрын
thanks for making these videos ,really excited for the upcoming example video
@JustinSung
2 жыл бұрын
Glad you like them!
@kipora
2 жыл бұрын
Your content is absolutely mind blowing, didn't expect to find this profound and non obvious learning material (I didn't know there was so many things I don't know about learning)
@fromisnine3292
2 жыл бұрын
Very excited for your videos, Justin. I am talking my boards next year, and i would follow your advice.
@lastravaganza2385
2 жыл бұрын
Nice birthday gift for me, Thanks!
@simonamlynekova1611
2 жыл бұрын
I hope you get more recognized, your videos make a lot of sense, your points are logical. I am in med school, and active recall and repetition wasnt working for me ( i find it really annoying the constant repetition ), gonna try your tips and tricks :) thank you :)
@mritunjoygupta8663
10 ай бұрын
I understood this video but can anyone explain how to apply these while studying history
@enricodeklerk3136
11 ай бұрын
Good lesson if you really paid attention Relationship between things and the bigger Picture shows clear understanding
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