13 Years of No BS Study Advice in 58 Minutes
摘要
TLDRThe video is a comprehensive guide by an experienced learning coach sharing 13 years of insights on effective learning techniques. It emphasizes the distinction between studying and learning, highlighting that while studying involves activities like note-taking, learning requires understanding and retaining knowledge. The video argues against looking for quick study hacks, copying successful students, and relying solely on rote memorization. Instead, it advises personalized learning approaches and utilizing various study techniques as tools to facilitate deep processing of information. It also stresses the importance of testing oneself early and frequently, understanding cognitive load, and recognizing the illusion of learning. The importance of creating analogies, logging learning progress, and utilizing active recall effectively is also covered. The video aims to provide viewers with practical methods to enhance learning efficiency and efficacy, and to cultivate a deep, long-lasting comprehension of study materials.
心得
- 🔍 Studying and learning are different: studying is an activity, learning is retention and understanding.
- 🧠 Deep processing is crucial for effective learning and varies by individual.
- ⚠️ Avoid easy study hacks and focus on personalized learning strategies.
- 🔄 View study techniques as flexible tools, not one-size-fits-all solutions.
- 👥 Don’t copy successful students; adapt strategies to your own needs.
- 📝 Use testing to identify gaps early and improve understanding.
- 📚 High cognitive load activities are necessary for effective learning.
- 🔍 Be aware of passive learning habits and focus on active learning techniques.
- 🗺️ Scoping and priming before deep dives into studying can significantly boost efficiency.
- 💭 Create and critique analogies to deepen understanding of concepts.
- 📖 Keeping a learning log can reveal progress and areas needing improvement.
- 🔄 Proper use of spaced repetition and active recall enhances memory retention.
时间轴
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The speaker introduces himself as a learning coach with 13 years of experience, running a program called 'I Can Study'. The key point shared is that studying does not necessarily equate to learning. Studying involves activities like note-taking and testing, but learning is the effective outcome where you can recall, understand, and apply information. They emphasize the inefficiency of traditional study methods like rereading and highlighting, urging a focus on methods that yield true learning.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
The second focus is on debunking study hacks as ineffective shortcuts. Many students rely on them, drawn by the promise of quick success, but these are often linked to poor study habits ingrained over years. The narrative includes a story of a student who felt inadequate due to the failure of these hacks, highlighting the importance of a personalized approach to learning strategies.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
The third point advises against merely mimicking successful students, as individual learning processes are unique. The speaker highlights 'deep processing,' the ability to extract meaningful learning and connect information, which varies genetically and can be developed over time. This processing affirms that simply adopting another student’s techniques may not lead to success, encouraging the development of one’s own effective learning methods.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
Students are urged to adopt a systems-thinking approach instead of focusing on perfect techniques. The importance of having a diverse set of learning tools is discussed, emphasizing that no single method suits all learning needs. The speaker shares an anecdote to illustrate how different techniques serve various purposes and have limitations, and abandoning techniques without understanding their role can hinder learning.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
The speaker addresses the illusion of learning, where students engage in seemingly productive tasks that don't contribute to actual understanding, such as excessive note-taking. This section emphasizes the need to recognize and rectify these habits, suggesting interventions that promote genuine learning and critiquing the false sense of progress from redundant academic activities.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
Regular, varied testing is highlighted as crucial. Instead of last-minute testing, integrating consistent review sessions uncovers gaps in knowledge much earlier. Effective testing covers different knowledge levels, reinforcing understanding by testing not just memorization but the ability to apply interconnected concepts. Misalignments like 'silly mistakes' point to underlying gaps rather than being trivial.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
Principles of testing at multiple knowledge levels are explained, stressing both declarative (theoretical) and procedural (practical) knowledge, exemplified through subjects like math and physics. Bridging gaps requires holistic learning and varied testing methods, focusing on understanding concepts and executing them accurately, avoiding over-reliance on procedural memory without conceptual understanding.
- 00:35:00 - 00:40:00
The discussion persists about evaluating gaps and assumptions in learning, cautioning against attributing errors to 'silly mistakes.' It underscores the importance of addressing legitimate knowledge gaps thoroughly and not underestimating them as trivial errors, emphasizing that assumptions of these being minor mistakes can obscure deeper issues to be resolved.
- 00:40:00 - 00:45:00
The speaker covers active recall and spaced repetition as essential study strategies. Active recall strengthens memory by challenging recall ability, not merely recognizing information. Spacing aids memory retention over time. The speaker stresses focusing on active recall methods, adjusting cue-based recalls to maintain challenge rather than recognition, thus enriching learning effectiveness.
- 00:45:00 - 00:50:00
Discussing rote memorization, it is noted that while sometimes necessary, it should be the last resort due to its inefficiency and tendency to foster superficial learning. Alternatives like using memory palaces and linking methods are suggested to enhance retention where rote learning is unavoidable, underscoring the importance of limiting rote learning to minimize academic burden.
- 00:50:00 - 00:58:34
Finally, the importance of learning logs and analogies in enhancing learning persistence and depth is highlighted. A learning log helps track, evaluate, and refine study habits systematically. Analogies promote deeper understanding by comparing unfamiliar ideas with known concepts, fostering nuanced comprehension. These methods support building a sustainable, personalized learning approach.
思维导图
视频问答
What is the difference between studying and learning?
Studying involves activities like note-taking and reading, whereas learning is the understanding and retention of knowledge.
Do study hacks work?
No, real study hacks do not exist; effective learning requires consistent and personalized strategies.
Should I copy what successful students do?
No, because learning is personalized, and what works for one student may not work for another due to deep processing abilities.
What is deep processing?
Deep processing is the ability to connect information and extract meaningful insights, which can be trained but varies among individuals.
How should techniques be viewed in studying?
Techniques should be viewed as tools in a toolbox, each having a specific purpose and limitations.
What is the illusion of learning?
The illusion of learning occurs when activities feel productive but do not actually result in true learning.
How can testing help in studies?
Testing oneself early and at different knowledge levels helps identify gaps and improves understanding.
What is the role of cognitive load in learning?
Cognitive load refers to mental effort, and effective learning involves high cognitive load activities.
Why is rote memorization not recommended?
Rote memorization is time-inefficient and creates surface-level understanding, making it less useful for complex applications.
What is a learning log and why is it helpful?
A learning log tracks experiments and progress, helping manage learning changes and enhancing motivation.
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Webinar: 2 años con Chat GPT
- 00:00:00I've been a learning coach for the past
- 00:00:0113 years I run a learning program called
- 00:00:04I can study where I've worked with tens
- 00:00:06of thousands of Learners around the
- 00:00:08world to help them Reach their dream
- 00:00:10results and I'm going to compress 13
- 00:00:13years of studying and learning advice
- 00:00:16into this one video number one studying
- 00:00:19does not equal learning you can spend a
- 00:00:23lot of time studying and get very little
- 00:00:27learning out of it studying is just the
- 00:00:30thing that you do it's the way you write
- 00:00:32your notes it's the way you read your
- 00:00:33book the way you test yourself they're
- 00:00:35the physical activities we study so that
- 00:00:39it can produce learning learning is the
- 00:00:41outcome it's the thing that happens in
- 00:00:44our brain that connects the dots
- 00:00:46together that turns information into
- 00:00:49Knowledge Learning has only occurred if
- 00:00:52the information is something that you
- 00:00:53can remember and you understand it
- 00:00:56deeply and then you can apply it in the
- 00:00:58way that you need to apply it so if you
- 00:01:00spent four 5 6 7 8 9 10 hours studying
- 00:01:04but you don't have good retention depth
- 00:01:07of understanding and the ability to
- 00:01:08apply that knowledge after spending that
- 00:01:10time you didn't learn you only studied
- 00:01:14and it's this understanding that I wish
- 00:01:17I had 13 years ago when I was
- 00:01:20desperately trying to enter into medical
- 00:01:22school and I was studying 20 hours a day
- 00:01:24sacrificing sleep sacrificing friends
- 00:01:26sacrificing Hobbies relationships with
- 00:01:28everyone around me um taking a massive
- 00:01:30hit to my mental health because I was so
- 00:01:32sleep deprived just studying so much
- 00:01:36that I wish I realize that different
- 00:01:40methods of studying set on a spectrum of
- 00:01:43Effectiveness some methods produce
- 00:01:46almost no real learning like rereading
- 00:01:49and just like highlighting things this
- 00:01:52produces like no real learning the
- 00:01:53amount of time you need to spend on that
- 00:01:56activity and how in a way lucky you have
- 00:01:58to be for that to just accidentally
- 00:02:00create learning is
- 00:02:02astronomical on the other hand there are
- 00:02:04other techniques that produce much more
- 00:02:06learning and the idea is that we want to
- 00:02:09get rid of the stuff that doesn't work
- 00:02:11and replace it with techniques that
- 00:02:13produce a high amount of learning and
- 00:02:15thinking about studying not as just like
- 00:02:18the thing that you do and then if you
- 00:02:19have problems it's like oh I've got
- 00:02:21problems with my studying very
- 00:02:24abstractly and thinking about it instead
- 00:02:26as okay I'm doing stuff but how much
- 00:02:29learning
- 00:02:30uh each of the methods I'm using
- 00:02:33producing this shifts the focus it makes
- 00:02:35you much more targeted in being able to
- 00:02:37improve the way you learn number two
- 00:02:40stop looking for study hacks real ones
- 00:02:44don't exist if you go on Tik Tok or
- 00:02:47Instagram and you search like # study
- 00:02:49study and studygram study talk you will
- 00:02:52find hundreds of videos of people saying
- 00:02:56use this technique and you're going to
- 00:02:58get 100% on your next test
- 00:03:00like guaranteed and it promises you a
- 00:03:04lot in like a 30second one minute video
- 00:03:08and these videos get like millions of
- 00:03:10views because there are millions of
- 00:03:11people looking for this shortcut to
- 00:03:15learning here's the truth if you've
- 00:03:17really been struggling to get better at
- 00:03:19learning then the solution is not going
- 00:03:22to come from a 30second study hack if it
- 00:03:25was that easy to solve you would have
- 00:03:28already solved it and most of the time
- 00:03:31yes sometimes there are little things
- 00:03:33that can be adjusted and like tiny
- 00:03:36little tweaks that you can make to the
- 00:03:38way that you study to make it more
- 00:03:39effective but most of the time the big
- 00:03:42problems that people have with studying
- 00:03:44that holds them back from success are
- 00:03:47rooted in years and years of habits that
- 00:03:51have just stacked together and you can't
- 00:03:54unlearn and retrain that overnight and
- 00:03:56so when you focus on study hacks not
- 00:03:58only is it just not going to work and
- 00:04:00you're going to waste your time but the
- 00:04:01part that really bugs me is when I sit
- 00:04:03down with a student and they've been
- 00:04:04using so many study hacks for so long
- 00:04:08and they haven't found good results with
- 00:04:10them they start believing that they're
- 00:04:13just not going to be smart enough I
- 00:04:15remember I had this one student who uh
- 00:04:18like a really bright bubbly girl um
- 00:04:21trying to enter into medical school at
- 00:04:22the time she came into my office we had
- 00:04:24a consultation together and I mapped out
- 00:04:26her whole learning process and I looked
- 00:04:28at her and I said okay well based on
- 00:04:30what you're doing it seems like you've
- 00:04:32got these habits that are leading to you
- 00:04:34doing this kind of studying and thinking
- 00:04:36in this way which means that you're
- 00:04:37probably going to struggle with these
- 00:04:38sorts of things and I kind of created a
- 00:04:40road map for her uh in terms of how she
- 00:04:43needs to improve and I was explaining
- 00:04:45this stuff and then I looked up at her
- 00:04:47and then I can see that she's she just
- 00:04:48starts crying and I thought I'd done
- 00:04:50something wrong I was like damn was not
- 00:04:52prepared for this I asked her what's
- 00:04:54going on and she said I just thought I
- 00:04:56was Dumb and so she had been using study
- 00:05:02hacks and tips for so long that she
- 00:05:05believed in herself that since all these
- 00:05:08hacks that are promising her great
- 00:05:10results are not working therefore the
- 00:05:12only logical conclusion left must be
- 00:05:17she's just too dumb and I think that's a
- 00:05:20very sad conclusion to make just because
- 00:05:23you didn't realize the answer doesn't
- 00:05:26lie in a shortcut so then the natural
- 00:05:27question might be what of my meant to
- 00:05:30look at instead so you might look at
- 00:05:33what successful students are already
- 00:05:35doing to try to copy them which leads me
- 00:05:37to number three stop copying successful
- 00:05:43students and I know this sounds very
- 00:05:46counterintuitive if you see someone
- 00:05:47that's successful and you want to be
- 00:05:49successful naturally you think if I just
- 00:05:50do what they're doing I'm going to be
- 00:05:52just as successful here's the thing
- 00:05:55learning is a very personalized thing
- 00:05:59it's a very very personalized process
- 00:06:01and what works for one person isn't
- 00:06:03necessarily going to work for another
- 00:06:04person and this is especially true in
- 00:06:06learning to learn because of something
- 00:06:08called Deep
- 00:06:10processing deep processing is your
- 00:06:13ability like and a lot of this is
- 00:06:15determined genetically and early
- 00:06:17childhood experiences and you can train
- 00:06:19it and this is what I do you know what
- 00:06:21we do at I can study we train it uh but
- 00:06:23it does take time but de processing is
- 00:06:25your brain's ability to connect
- 00:06:28information together and extract
- 00:06:30meaningful learning out of the
- 00:06:32information that you're consuming when
- 00:06:34you look at someone you say man they're
- 00:06:36just like a genius you they just read it
- 00:06:37and just they just get it everything
- 00:06:39clicks for them what their brain is
- 00:06:41doing to make it click for them that is
- 00:06:44the processing and it and again it's
- 00:06:47something that can be trained and the
- 00:06:48reason this is important for copying
- 00:06:51successful students is because most
- 00:06:53successful students are not successful
- 00:06:56because of the techniques they use it's
- 00:06:59not because of how they're
- 00:07:01studying it's because they have a level
- 00:07:03of deep processing that is in a way
- 00:07:06natural like they're they were luckier
- 00:07:08in a way um and they could get away with
- 00:07:11using mediocre techniques and still make
- 00:07:13it work for them a great analogy is
- 00:07:15thinking about how a Car Works you've
- 00:07:18got an engine and if you have a really
- 00:07:21powerful engine and you just floor it
- 00:07:24like you don't have to be a great driver
- 00:07:26you're going to go really fast and sure
- 00:07:28maybe if you're competing against other
- 00:07:30people with like awesome cars then you
- 00:07:32need to have that skill but just in the
- 00:07:34general population most people are not
- 00:07:36driving supercars and so if you just
- 00:07:38just even slightly just push down on the
- 00:07:40PED you're going to go fast so if
- 00:07:43someone else is in a different car
- 00:07:46that's not as fast with a smaller engine
- 00:07:49looking at the person driving and trying
- 00:07:50to copy their technique Shifting the
- 00:07:53same way pushing down on the accelerator
- 00:07:55the same everything like the technique
- 00:07:57everything is exactly the same they're
- 00:07:58not going to go as fast and this is a
- 00:08:00very easy thing is that when you look at
- 00:08:02what successful students are doing and
- 00:08:04I'm not talking about like study
- 00:08:06influencers who honestly a lot of the
- 00:08:08time when they talk about the stuff that
- 00:08:10they're doing they're not doing that
- 00:08:12stuff they're just making up stuff that
- 00:08:14they're saying they're doing to create
- 00:08:16some content for it but it's like when
- 00:08:18you look at what they actually do in
- 00:08:19their daily life they're not doing half
- 00:08:21that stuff if you look at what
- 00:08:23successful students are actually doing
- 00:08:25and you just do exactly the same thing
- 00:08:27and millions of people do the same exact
- 00:08:29thing those millions of people are not
- 00:08:31all getting that top result and a lot of
- 00:08:35that comes down to the Deep proccessing
- 00:08:37ability so what you should be doing
- 00:08:39instead of just copying successful
- 00:08:41students is figuring out how you can be
- 00:08:44successful yourself and like I said it's
- 00:08:46personalized and it doesn't mean that if
- 00:08:48you don't have good deep processing that
- 00:08:50you're never going to be successful my
- 00:08:52deep processing is not actually like
- 00:08:55naturally amazing I remember 13 14 15
- 00:08:59years ago especially when I was going
- 00:09:01through high
- 00:09:02school I would look at these people in
- 00:09:04my class that don't seem to need to
- 00:09:07study like at all and somehow they're
- 00:09:11doing so much better than I was and I
- 00:09:13was actively trying to do better than
- 00:09:15them and studying more than them and
- 00:09:17that continued when I was trying to get
- 00:09:18through medical school it continued into
- 00:09:20medical school where there were these
- 00:09:21people that were just like anomalies and
- 00:09:23now a lot of people look at me and think
- 00:09:25of me as an anomaly like when I did my
- 00:09:28master of education I got the the
- 00:09:30highest grade in the entire year and I
- 00:09:32studied like for six weeks like even
- 00:09:35less than that and people would look at
- 00:09:38that and say okay it must be because
- 00:09:40like I'm built different but it's not I
- 00:09:43I really actively try to build myself
- 00:09:46and my deep processing ability to get
- 00:09:49there and if that's you then you really
- 00:09:52do need to like it's if your deep
- 00:09:54personing is not at a certain level it
- 00:09:56is very difficult to be a good learner
- 00:09:59and so training that becomes a very high
- 00:10:02priority and that is not something that
- 00:10:05already successful students a lot of
- 00:10:08them are not doing that number four stop
- 00:10:11thinking techniques start thinking
- 00:10:14systems I'll tell you a
- 00:10:16story there's a student that I uh was
- 00:10:20working with a couple years ago and they
- 00:10:23were really really struggling with their
- 00:10:25studying for a long time and and this is
- 00:10:27not just like working with me for a
- 00:10:28short amount of time like they were
- 00:10:29working with me for uh like an entire
- 00:10:33year so I talked to them and asked them
- 00:10:34what was going on and I kind of mapped
- 00:10:36everything out and what I realized is
- 00:10:38that he had this belief that there is
- 00:10:42this best technique and that the perfect
- 00:10:46technique is the end goal once you
- 00:10:49understand and can use this perfect
- 00:10:51technique you don't need the other
- 00:10:52techniques anymore it's just you can use
- 00:10:54that and your problems are all
- 00:10:56solved that is not realistic
- 00:11:01there is no such thing as the perfect
- 00:11:05technique you have to start thinking
- 00:11:06about techniques like tools you cannot
- 00:11:09build an entire house with a screwdriver
- 00:11:12it doesn't matter how good your
- 00:11:13screwdriver is you just can't do it or
- 00:11:15if you do it like your hands are
- 00:11:17bleeding and it took you like 30
- 00:11:19years the idea is that you have to have
- 00:11:22a tool box of different tools that you
- 00:11:25know how to use and each tool has its
- 00:11:26own purpose and its own limitations and
- 00:11:29exact same thing is true for learning
- 00:11:30skills each technique or method or
- 00:11:33strategy has a specific purpose that
- 00:11:35it's really good for and then it has
- 00:11:36limitations and just because something
- 00:11:38has limitations doesn't mean you should
- 00:11:41do what the student was doing and
- 00:11:43abandon it and say oh I must not be good
- 00:11:46enough I'm not going to learn that use
- 00:11:48it for what it's good for and then
- 00:11:50supplement that with other techniques
- 00:11:53that fill in those gaps there's another
- 00:11:55side to the Spectrum here which is that
- 00:11:57some students also never think about the
- 00:11:59limitations in the first place and so
- 00:12:02they'll have a technique and they'll
- 00:12:03believe this technique is like Flawless
- 00:12:07and so they will then use and abuse it
- 00:12:10to do everything and the best example of
- 00:12:13this is flash cards a lot of people look
- 00:12:15at flash card space uh space repetition
- 00:12:16and active recall and that is like their
- 00:12:19whole method of studying like they just
- 00:12:21have flash cards and if they if it's not
- 00:12:23enough it's not working then they think
- 00:12:26hm what's the problem ah here's the
- 00:12:28answer
- 00:12:29more flash cards and that's a situation
- 00:12:32where you're abusing it flash cards are
- 00:12:34a great technique for a specific purpose
- 00:12:39but if you use it for something it's not
- 00:12:41good for you're not going to get good
- 00:12:43results you're wasting time you're
- 00:12:44burning efficiency now as we have
- 00:12:47established if you want to become a
- 00:12:48better and more productive learner you
- 00:12:50need to upgrade your entire Learning
- 00:12:52System and when I say this a lot of
- 00:12:54students will come up to me and say well
- 00:12:56Justin I don't even have a learning
- 00:12:59system however that is not true most
- 00:13:03students have a learning system it's
- 00:13:06just not refined and so it's like most
- 00:13:09students have a toolbox of sorts to
- 00:13:11begin with it's just that it may not be
- 00:13:14full of like premium top-of-the-line
- 00:13:16tools that they need to excel at the top
- 00:13:18level now a high leverage activity that
- 00:13:21you should do is to have your toolbox
- 00:13:24assessed by an expert this helps you to
- 00:13:26figure out which of your tools is the
- 00:13:28weakest but more importantly where you
- 00:13:31should invest your time in first to get
- 00:13:33the biggest improvements in your results
- 00:13:36now this is something that I do all the
- 00:13:38time and if I could see you in person
- 00:13:40then I could give you a consultation map
- 00:13:42out your learning toolbox tell you where
- 00:13:44you need to work on and just do that for
- 00:13:46you on the spot but I only have so much
- 00:13:48time and it would also be kind of weird
- 00:13:51for me to just rock up to your house
- 00:13:53unannounced just like offer you a
- 00:13:56learning toolbox evaluation but to still
- 00:13:59help you I've actually created a free
- 00:14:02learning toolbox assessment for you it's
- 00:14:05a quiz that evaluates your entire
- 00:14:06learning system and then even gives you
- 00:14:08a score out of 100 more importantly it
- 00:14:10also gives you a personalized report at
- 00:14:12the end which tells you exactly which
- 00:14:14parts of your learning system are
- 00:14:15holding you back and therefore what you
- 00:14:17should work on it's absolutely free and
- 00:14:19I'll leave a link in the description for
- 00:14:21you below now let's move on back to our
- 00:14:24next study lesson number five avoid the
- 00:14:28illusion
- 00:14:29of learning what is the illusion of
- 00:14:31learning the illusion of learning is
- 00:14:33when you do something that makes you
- 00:14:36feel like you learning but you're not
- 00:14:40and this is basically the learning
- 00:14:42equivalent of productive procrastination
- 00:14:45so one of the things we're probably all
- 00:14:46guilty of is you know when there's
- 00:14:48something that you need to do like a big
- 00:14:50task and you procrastinate but you
- 00:14:52procrastinate doing things that feel
- 00:14:54productive like organizing your room or
- 00:14:56like cleaning up your desk or something
- 00:14:58like that or you know just planning like
- 00:15:00creating a schedule and it's not the
- 00:15:03most important thing for you to do
- 00:15:04really what you need to do is just get
- 00:15:06on and do the task but we procrastinate
- 00:15:08with these other things that feel like
- 00:15:09we're making progress and we do that
- 00:15:11because it feels it's easy and it makes
- 00:15:14us feel better about the fact that we're
- 00:15:17making progress and so that's basically
- 00:15:19what the illusion of learning is it's
- 00:15:23when you're doing something and it makes
- 00:15:24you feel good because it's like I guess
- 00:15:28this is helping me was learning but when
- 00:15:30you actually go to measure it it's
- 00:15:33probably not helping and there's two
- 00:15:35really common examples I see in students
- 00:15:37that I work with the first one is in
- 00:15:40just writing and rewriting notes the
- 00:15:43amount of times that I've spoken to
- 00:15:45someone mapped out their learning and
- 00:15:47then they have a 1H hour lecture
- 00:15:49followed by two three hours of writing
- 00:15:52notes but then at the end of those 2
- 00:15:55three
- 00:15:56hours they haven't learned anything I
- 00:15:58say well if you were s a test right now
- 00:16:00how well do you think You' do they say
- 00:16:01well terribly because like I haven't
- 00:16:04learned it yet I've just written my
- 00:16:05notes why did you spend 3 hours writing
- 00:16:11notes and doing stuff if it's not
- 00:16:13helping you with learning and a lot of
- 00:16:15the time the answer is that it's just
- 00:16:16what they're used to doing it's
- 00:16:18comfortable it's an existing habit and
- 00:16:20they don't know what else to do they
- 00:16:21don't know how to really create
- 00:16:24effective learning so they hide in the
- 00:16:28comfort of the the illusion just saying
- 00:16:31I'm sure if I just do this it will help
- 00:16:34with my learning somehow even though you
- 00:16:37know when you really look at it that
- 00:16:40it's not helping with your memory and
- 00:16:41your retention and your depth of
- 00:16:43understanding your ability to apply it
- 00:16:44and so if you're trapped in the illusion
- 00:16:45of learning the answer is not just like
- 00:16:48feel terrible and and panic and stay in
- 00:16:50the illusion of learning it's to accept
- 00:16:53that you're doing something that's
- 00:16:54frankly kind of useless and learn about
- 00:16:57the Alternatives the there are other
- 00:17:00things that you can do and not knowing
- 00:17:03what to do is not a good excuse and I
- 00:17:06don't mean to call you out and I don't
- 00:17:09mean to upset you with saying that but I
- 00:17:13think if you really want to give
- 00:17:14yourself the best chance of success
- 00:17:16sometimes you do have to look at things
- 00:17:18as like this is the cold hard truth now
- 00:17:21one of the things that you can do to
- 00:17:23break out of the illusion of learning
- 00:17:24and do something that's a little bit
- 00:17:25more effective is number six
- 00:17:29yourself earlier and more often I
- 00:17:32remember for most of my life especially
- 00:17:34High School I would study and study for
- 00:17:37an exam and then by the time I'm
- 00:17:38entering into the exam I really don't
- 00:17:41know how well I'm going to do like
- 00:17:43usually I would know that I'm going to
- 00:17:45pass and I'm probably not going to do
- 00:17:47like too badly but I have to wait for
- 00:17:49the result to find out and that sounds
- 00:17:51completely natural but
- 00:17:55actually there isn't a good reason not
- 00:17:58to know how well you're going to do in
- 00:18:00an exam before you walk in and if you
- 00:18:03don't that probably means you're not
- 00:18:05testing yourself early enough and often
- 00:18:07enough how I used to study and this is
- 00:18:08how a lot of people study is that you
- 00:18:10just spend time like studying and
- 00:18:12reading and writing notes and then like
- 00:18:14a week or two before the exam I'm doing
- 00:18:17practice tests or or sometimes it's like
- 00:18:18the night before the exam I'm just doing
- 00:18:20like practice papers and I'm finding
- 00:18:22these gaps and I'm getting used to
- 00:18:24applying my knowledge and I'm going into
- 00:18:26the exam and here's the thing is that
- 00:18:28let's say you test yourself and then you
- 00:18:31you find all these
- 00:18:33gaps you don't really have time to fill
- 00:18:38any of them anymore and in fact I've
- 00:18:40even worked with students that
- 00:18:42deliberately avoid testing themselves
- 00:18:45with harder questions because they know
- 00:18:47they won't be able to answer it it's
- 00:18:49like you're still going to have to
- 00:18:51answer it in the exam anyway the point
- 00:18:53is you have to find these gaps by
- 00:18:56testing yourself as early as possible
- 00:18:58possible and one of the changes that I
- 00:19:00made that really helped with my exam
- 00:19:03results and my exam confidence is just
- 00:19:06testing myself at the end of every week
- 00:19:08at the end of every month so on the
- 00:19:11Saturday I would test myself on
- 00:19:12everything I learned from Monday to
- 00:19:13Friday and then on at the on the
- 00:19:16Saturday of every month I would test
- 00:19:18myself on everything I learned during
- 00:19:20that month which meant that number one I
- 00:19:22was Finding gaps early but the number of
- 00:19:24gaps I was Finding was not that large
- 00:19:26cuz I was only having like a few days
- 00:19:28worth of learning to to review so it
- 00:19:30didn't take that long to fill those gaps
- 00:19:33and then by the end of the month I had
- 00:19:36already filled a lot of those gaps and
- 00:19:37so by the time I would enter into an
- 00:19:39exam I would generally know where I'm at
- 00:19:43like if I didn't have enough time to
- 00:19:44study or I knew that I didn't really
- 00:19:46quite understand a certain thing I knew
- 00:19:47I'm probably going to lose a couple
- 00:19:48marks on that so I could guess how my
- 00:19:52exam result was going to be fairly
- 00:19:54accurately but if you're going into an
- 00:19:55exam either not knowing or feeling
- 00:19:57confident and the result is ve like very
- 00:19:59different from what you expected then
- 00:20:02you're either not testing yourself early
- 00:20:03enough and often enough or you're
- 00:20:06testing yourself in the wrong way and so
- 00:20:08what is the right way to test yourself
- 00:20:09number seven test at each level of
- 00:20:13knowledge I talk about this concept of
- 00:20:15um levels of knowledge very often in a
- 00:20:17lot of my other videos like blooms
- 00:20:19revised taxonomy I'm not going to go
- 00:20:21into it in a lot of depth right now but
- 00:20:23basically knowledge can be divided into
- 00:20:24different levels at the low levels it's
- 00:20:26just memorization regurg ation just
- 00:20:29being able to explain something it's
- 00:20:31very very isolated at the higher levels
- 00:20:33you can use Concepts together you can
- 00:20:35see how they connect and influence each
- 00:20:37each other so it means that when you get
- 00:20:39a tricky question you can look at that
- 00:20:42question and you can dissect it you can
- 00:20:43pull apart which concepts are relevant
- 00:20:46how you need to connect them together to
- 00:20:47arrive at an answer and so one of the
- 00:20:49mistakes that I used to make is I was
- 00:20:52predominantly testing myself at a low
- 00:20:55level and a lot of my studying was at a
- 00:20:58low level in anyway um even though I
- 00:21:00knew I was going to be tested at a
- 00:21:02higher level so I knew that there were
- 00:21:04going to be questions that asked me to
- 00:21:06discuss a web of Concepts together where
- 00:21:08I need to use knowledge in a very
- 00:21:11interconnected way in a more complex
- 00:21:14more nuanced kind of application but I
- 00:21:17would only test myself like with
- 00:21:20flashcards uh you know answering
- 00:21:21individual like single questions and I
- 00:21:24never tested like whether I can actually
- 00:21:25do that higher level of thinking and lo
- 00:21:28and behold I S an exam which questions
- 00:21:31do I struggle with the most the
- 00:21:33complicated ones so just think to
- 00:21:35yourself how am I going to be tested on
- 00:21:37this how do I need to use my knowledge
- 00:21:40and make sure that you are testing
- 00:21:41yourself in that same way so you can
- 00:21:44find the gaps that are relevant to you
- 00:21:45number eight test yourself in different
- 00:21:49ways so let's say you're learning to
- 00:21:51play tennis then there's a theory of
- 00:21:55understanding how to play understanding
- 00:21:56the rules knowing technically how you're
- 00:21:58me to do a serve and and do your
- 00:22:00forehand and backhand but then there's
- 00:22:03the ability to actually do it and it's
- 00:22:06understanding the tiny tiny little
- 00:22:08nuances where you know I guess
- 00:22:11theoretically you could learn that
- 00:22:14through a textbook but realistically it
- 00:22:17it just be overwhelming it's like how
- 00:22:18You' position your foot exactly you know
- 00:22:20how you arch your back when you do a
- 00:22:22serve where you're looking these tiny
- 00:22:24tiny little things that allow you to
- 00:22:26execute on what you what you know
- 00:22:29and so the first one which is the theory
- 00:22:32is the what that's called declarative
- 00:22:34knowledge and the second one which is
- 00:22:37being able to do it the how that's
- 00:22:40called procedural knowledge and in a lot
- 00:22:42of subjects you need both great example
- 00:22:46is maths or physics where there is a
- 00:22:49declarative knowledge set of the
- 00:22:51concepts and understanding what things
- 00:22:54are and being able to Define things and
- 00:22:56being able to look at a question and say
- 00:22:57okay I can understand what relevant
- 00:23:00Concepts there are and how I can chain
- 00:23:02them together that's the declarative
- 00:23:04knowledge but then you have to actually
- 00:23:06be able to solve the problem like use
- 00:23:08the formula and do the right equations
- 00:23:10and know how to use the equations
- 00:23:12correctly and that's the procedural part
- 00:23:15same thing in software engineering or
- 00:23:16coding where you can understand how to
- 00:23:18use the code uh technically what the
- 00:23:22language is and how to use you know
- 00:23:24different parts of it and then there's
- 00:23:26the ability to actually write good bug
- 00:23:29free code the problem arises when you
- 00:23:32only focus on one of them a great
- 00:23:35example again is math where mass is
- 00:23:37often really heavily focus on the
- 00:23:39procedural knowledge so people spend
- 00:23:40most of their time just like solving
- 00:23:42problems and just doing equations so
- 00:23:46when they get a question that requires
- 00:23:48them to think about it a bit more
- 00:23:49conceptually maybe it's a little bit
- 00:23:51more abstract they don't really know how
- 00:23:52to approach it because they have never
- 00:23:54thought about the concepts behind it and
- 00:23:57so that will be a failure of not really
- 00:23:58learning and then testing yourself in
- 00:24:00the declarative type of knowledge and
- 00:24:03you don't always need both types like
- 00:24:06sub some subjects like biology for
- 00:24:08example are often very just like
- 00:24:09declarative concept focused but you do
- 00:24:12need to test yourself again in the way
- 00:24:15that you know you're going to be tested
- 00:24:16to see whether you have gaps in your
- 00:24:18declarative or procedural knowledge part
- 00:24:20and so once you test yourself often and
- 00:24:23in different levels and with a balance
- 00:24:25of declarative and procedural like
- 00:24:26actually doing stuff as well well then
- 00:24:29you'll find gaps now the question is
- 00:24:32what do you do with the mistakes you
- 00:24:34make number
- 00:24:35nine assume you'll make every mistake
- 00:24:39again I think one of the most common and
- 00:24:42detrimental myths about learning is
- 00:24:45something I call silly mistake syndrome
- 00:24:48is the belief that the reason you got it
- 00:24:50wrong is a silly mistake but here's the
- 00:24:53thing it's probably not the truth is
- 00:24:58most people do not lose enough marks
- 00:25:03from silly mistakes for it to really
- 00:25:06matter I remember distinctly back when I
- 00:25:09was in my final year of high school
- 00:25:11sitting in the library doing these
- 00:25:13practice test questions and what I would
- 00:25:16do is I would write the answer and then
- 00:25:18I would check the answer sheet straight
- 00:25:20away and then which by the way that's
- 00:25:23not a good technique uh and I'd check
- 00:25:25the answer sheet straight away and then
- 00:25:26I'd read the answer and
- 00:25:29sometimes I'd get it wrong but it's not
- 00:25:31because I was completely wrong it's
- 00:25:32because there's just like this one point
- 00:25:34that I missed but I know the point I
- 00:25:37understand it I already studied it I
- 00:25:39just forgot to add that point in that
- 00:25:42particular answer and so I'd look at
- 00:25:43that and I'd say yeah that's just a
- 00:25:45silly mistake and so I do these practice
- 00:25:48questions and you know my test result
- 00:25:50when I did it would be like
- 00:25:5395% and then I'd sit the actual exam and
- 00:25:55I'd get like 85% and I'd look at the
- 00:25:58answer sheet and be like man I just
- 00:26:00missed those little points and I used to
- 00:26:03think that that was because of me making
- 00:26:06silly mistakes until I
- 00:26:08realized there are still
- 00:26:11people who are not making silly mistakes
- 00:26:15why am I the one that is suffering from
- 00:26:17the silly mistakes am I just a silly
- 00:26:20person and that's when I decided to just
- 00:26:25assume it's not a silly mistake just
- 00:26:28assume that every time I make a mistake
- 00:26:31there's a legitimate reason for me to
- 00:26:34have made that mistake there's a real
- 00:26:35Gap in my knowledge and when I shifted
- 00:26:37that perspective what it helped me
- 00:26:38realize is that when I'm writing
- 00:26:41something and I missed a point and I
- 00:26:42look at the answer sheet and I'm like oh
- 00:26:43yeah that makes sense I already knew
- 00:26:45that it doesn't
- 00:26:47matter it doesn't matter that I knew and
- 00:26:51I can understand the answer sheet if I
- 00:26:55wasn't able to generate that answer it
- 00:26:58it means that there's a gap and I
- 00:26:59started seeing these tiny misalignments
- 00:27:03with how I had studied the topic this
- 00:27:05point that I'd missed it's not a silly
- 00:27:08mistake to have missed it now that I
- 00:27:09really dive deeper I genuinely didn't
- 00:27:12really understand why it was so
- 00:27:14important to add into the answer in the
- 00:27:17first place and after studying a little
- 00:27:18bit more I realized okay actually not
- 00:27:21having that point doesn't make sense if
- 00:27:24I really understood the answer to this
- 00:27:27then I would included it because leaving
- 00:27:29it out is actually incomplete and
- 00:27:32speaking as a coach uh there are very
- 00:27:36very few times when someone is making a
- 00:27:40silly mistake while having genuinely
- 00:27:44good levels of knowledge the people who
- 00:27:47make silly mistakes
- 00:27:49consistently these are almost always the
- 00:27:52same people who have gaps in their
- 00:27:54knowledge number 10 do spaced repetition
- 00:27:58an active recall properly if you spent
- 00:28:02any amount of time watching studying and
- 00:28:04learning videos you will have heard of
- 00:28:06space repetition and active recall um if
- 00:28:09you haven't then I'll really quickly
- 00:28:11summarize it space repetition is when
- 00:28:12you take something that you've learned
- 00:28:14and then you repeat it you usually test
- 00:28:16yourself uh in some kind of spacing
- 00:28:18interval so it could be you learn
- 00:28:20something on one day and then a week
- 00:28:22later you test yourself and you test
- 00:28:23yourself again two weeks later and you
- 00:28:24test yourself you know a month later or
- 00:28:26something like that and it's effective
- 00:28:28because of something called the spacing
- 00:28:29effect which is basically that your
- 00:28:31memory is enhanced when you repeat
- 00:28:34things after a certain weight period
- 00:28:36active recall is when you recall
- 00:28:39something from your memory actually it's
- 00:28:41any time you're retrieving Knowledge
- 00:28:43from your memory is technically active
- 00:28:44recall so a great example is if someone
- 00:28:47asks you a question and you answer that
- 00:28:48question from memory you're doing active
- 00:28:50recall and space repetition and active
- 00:28:52recoil often paired together because a
- 00:28:54lot of techniques use them together you
- 00:28:57do a space repetition session using
- 00:29:00active recall so for example if you
- 00:29:02learn something on Monday and you test
- 00:29:04yourself with some practice questions
- 00:29:05and flash cards on Saturday then that's
- 00:29:08a spaced active recall session that
- 00:29:12you're doing and what most people focus
- 00:29:14on is just making sure that spacing is
- 00:29:18really good and uh you know hitting
- 00:29:21their active recall sessions on anything
- 00:29:24that's due when the app tells them hey
- 00:29:26you need to revise this again but the
- 00:29:28truth about learning is that the spacing
- 00:29:30part is first of all easy to do and much
- 00:29:35less important than the active recall
- 00:29:36part and how you do your active recall
- 00:29:39makes a very big difference to how
- 00:29:42effective the technique is going to be
- 00:29:45at producing learning so there's
- 00:29:46actually two different types of active
- 00:29:48recall arguably some people say that
- 00:29:50there's three the first one is cued
- 00:29:53recall cued recall is when there is a q
- 00:29:57like like uh fill in the blanks or a
- 00:30:00question prompt uh that that gets you to
- 00:30:03trigger that memory free recall is when
- 00:30:07you don't have that cue so something
- 00:30:10like just writing an essay more openly
- 00:30:13about a certain topic that might be
- 00:30:15something like free recall if it's a
- 00:30:16very open-ended question that will be
- 00:30:18like free recall and then there's
- 00:30:19actually a third type some people say
- 00:30:21which is
- 00:30:22recognition uh or recognition based
- 00:30:25recall which is you see something and
- 00:30:28you assess whether you can recognize it
- 00:30:31on if whether it feels like it's a it's
- 00:30:33a new thing and the main benefit of
- 00:30:35active recall comes from the free recall
- 00:30:38not the cued recall and definitely not
- 00:30:42from recognition but most people don't
- 00:30:44realize that these three things are
- 00:30:46different let's say you have a flash
- 00:30:48card that asks you a specific question
- 00:30:51and then you answer that question and
- 00:30:53the answer to that question is like one
- 00:30:55or two words that's cute
- 00:30:58what that means is that when you answer
- 00:31:01that question what you're training your
- 00:31:02ability to do is recalling that fact
- 00:31:05from that cue which means anytime you're
- 00:31:09asked about that information without
- 00:31:12that cue it becomes harder and sometimes
- 00:31:14you can actually tell this happens when
- 00:31:17you have a flash card that you've done
- 00:31:20so many times that without even
- 00:31:23finishing reading the question you
- 00:31:26already know the answer like the recall
- 00:31:28you have is within 2 or 3 seconds just
- 00:31:31you read the first few words and you
- 00:31:32already remember that the rest of the
- 00:31:34question goes like this and therefore
- 00:31:36this is the answer to it if you're at
- 00:31:38that point you're no longer actually
- 00:31:42testing on your ability to recall that
- 00:31:45knowledge all you're doing is you're
- 00:31:47testing your ability to match these
- 00:31:49words to these words so one thing that
- 00:31:52you can do and this is a tip that I give
- 00:31:53to everyone who's using flash cards is
- 00:31:55to swap out your cues change your
- 00:31:58questions regularly especially the ones
- 00:32:00that you're consistently getting right
- 00:32:01start changing the actual question
- 00:32:04you're asking you can still testing the
- 00:32:06same Concepts or the same facts but just
- 00:32:08change the way you're queuing yourself
- 00:32:10but the worst one is people that do just
- 00:32:13recognition where they'll have a flash
- 00:32:15card they'll try to remember it and then
- 00:32:17they can't but instead of just admitting
- 00:32:20that you failed to remember it and often
- 00:32:24this happens with people that have a ton
- 00:32:26of flash cards because they know that as
- 00:32:27soon as as they mark it wrong they're
- 00:32:28going to have to do that again in like
- 00:32:30the next few hours what they do is they
- 00:32:33just click the answer they look at the
- 00:32:35answer and then they think oh yeah
- 00:32:36that's right it's like yeah we know it's
- 00:32:40right it's the answer so there's no
- 00:32:43point doing that like you you that's the
- 00:32:44ultimate illusion like you're tricking
- 00:32:46yourself into thinking that you know it
- 00:32:47you literally just proved that you
- 00:32:50didn't know it so if you go and fall
- 00:32:53into this trap where because you
- 00:32:55recognized it you think that means that
- 00:32:57you can actually recall it that's a
- 00:33:00that's a huge red flag and here's the
- 00:33:01golden tip worry more about how you're
- 00:33:05doing your active recall then you're
- 00:33:07spacing when you do really good active
- 00:33:10recall you've got more of room for error
- 00:33:13with your spacing when your active
- 00:33:15recall method is really bad very very
- 00:33:18cued or even recognition based then your
- 00:33:22memory of that is so fragile you need to
- 00:33:25repeat that like every 1 or two days
- 00:33:28otherwise you're losing that memory we
- 00:33:29call it knowledge Decay your knowledge
- 00:33:31Decay is very fast when you have an
- 00:33:33active recoil that induces more learning
- 00:33:36then your knowledge Decay is slower and
- 00:33:38your memory is stronger which means you
- 00:33:39don't actually have to space it so
- 00:33:42frequently you can get away with not
- 00:33:43looking at it for like one or two or
- 00:33:45three weeks so start doing more free
- 00:33:48recall yes it does take more time and
- 00:33:51effort and it's not as brain dead easy
- 00:33:54as just spamming 100 flash cards
- 00:33:58but also when it comes to learning you
- 00:34:00don't really want brain dead number 11
- 00:34:03root memorize but only as a last resort
- 00:34:07what is root memorization root
- 00:34:10memorization is learning through
- 00:34:13repetition it is boring it is monotonous
- 00:34:16it is very tedious if all you're doing
- 00:34:19with learning is rot
- 00:34:20memorization your life of learning is
- 00:34:22going to be painful and excruciating and
- 00:34:26probably not very effective effective
- 00:34:28and I for the longest time most of my
- 00:34:30learning was just wrote memorization in
- 00:34:32fact I didn't even really know that
- 00:34:36there were other ways of learning for me
- 00:34:39it was just sometimes I can understand
- 00:34:41it and it will just click and I don't
- 00:34:43need to rote memorize it because I just
- 00:34:45I just get it but then sometimes I can't
- 00:34:48get it and then I have to rot memorize
- 00:34:49it and so that's not really a technique
- 00:34:52you know that's not a that's not a
- 00:34:53learning system and the reason rot
- 00:34:55memorization needs to be a last resort
- 00:34:57is not because it's not
- 00:35:00effective R memorization is a tool like
- 00:35:04any other and you do need to R memorize
- 00:35:07things sometimes sometimes there really
- 00:35:09are things that are so irrelevant where
- 00:35:11the only reason that you would need to
- 00:35:12know this is because you're tested on it
- 00:35:14and that's not a great you know
- 00:35:17situation to be in but sometimes you
- 00:35:19have to wrote memorize but the problem
- 00:35:22is that it creates a very surface level
- 00:35:25very isolated kind of knowledge which
- 00:35:27means that you can only use that
- 00:35:28knowledge in that way like just
- 00:35:30regurgitation of words so if you need to
- 00:35:32use that knowledge for anything more
- 00:35:34complicated like a higher level of
- 00:35:35knowledge then Ro memorization is not
- 00:35:38going to be a good tool to use and I can
- 00:35:40promise you you cannot root memorize
- 00:35:43your way to success but there is
- 00:35:45actually another problem with root
- 00:35:47memorization which is that it is by
- 00:35:51definition very time inefficient a lot
- 00:35:55of rote memorization is
- 00:35:59repetitive and just spamming flash cards
- 00:36:02is a great reason for it by the way
- 00:36:04again like I'm I'm not on a personal
- 00:36:06like I'm not getting I'm not getting
- 00:36:07paid by like a big mind map to uh hate
- 00:36:11on flash cards every chance that I get
- 00:36:13it just so happens that it's a great
- 00:36:16example for a lot of mistakes that
- 00:36:17people make when you use flash cards a
- 00:36:21lot of people will create flash cards
- 00:36:25and feel great making flash cards and
- 00:36:30not realize that for every flash card
- 00:36:32they make you have to pay that back
- 00:36:35three four fivefold in the future it's
- 00:36:39debt you're creating learning debt and
- 00:36:42this is another illusion of learning
- 00:36:45where you feel good making 100 flash
- 00:36:47cards but it didn't really contribute to
- 00:36:50your learning until you do it so if it
- 00:36:52takes you a minute to create a flash
- 00:36:55card for example you're going to need 5
- 00:36:57minutes in the future to answer that so
- 00:37:01I used to spend like like over an hour
- 00:37:04every day making flash cards then I need
- 00:37:075 hours later in the future to go
- 00:37:11through and answer them and do them to
- 00:37:14the point where I'm receiving the
- 00:37:16benefit of it like it's in my memory but
- 00:37:19I'm doing that like every day so if I'm
- 00:37:21doing that five days a week for example
- 00:37:23then that's five hours of flash cards
- 00:37:25I'm now giving myself 20 25 hours of
- 00:37:29work to do the next week and this is why
- 00:37:32it's very easy to get into this cycle
- 00:37:34where you're spending hours and hours
- 00:37:36and hours every single day just doing
- 00:37:38flash cards and some of my students are
- 00:37:39doing like they're doing like five six
- 00:37:42hours of flash cards a day and if that
- 00:37:44sounds extreme to you you're right that
- 00:37:47is Extreme and if that's
- 00:37:49you that's a problem that's not scalable
- 00:37:53that's not
- 00:37:54sustainable and it's understanding that
- 00:37:57if every flash card you make is creating
- 00:38:00debt for yourself and so you want to
- 00:38:01minimize that if you can get away with
- 00:38:04not having to use repetition you're
- 00:38:06saving time and even if it takes a
- 00:38:08little bit longer right now to learn it
- 00:38:12and learn it probably the first time you
- 00:38:14should do that rather than just giving
- 00:38:16that work and multiplying it and letting
- 00:38:20your future self deal with it and if you
- 00:38:22feel overwhelmed right now with your
- 00:38:25work volume it's probably probably
- 00:38:27because your past self did that to you
- 00:38:30one of the St I worked with last year
- 00:38:32his name is Tony he's a chemical
- 00:38:34materials student from Taiwan and in
- 00:38:37Asia there's this huge culture of Road
- 00:38:40memorization it's like a whole thing and
- 00:38:42he was you know pretty skeptical about
- 00:38:45doing less rope memorization because he
- 00:38:46felt like there was no other way that he
- 00:38:47could learn it we cut down his rope
- 00:38:49memorization so if 100% is everything he
- 00:38:51had to learn he was learning like 90% of
- 00:38:54it through just rope memorization and so
- 00:38:56we managed to to cut that down just to
- 00:38:5870% and that's only a 20% reduction in
- 00:39:02the amount that you need to rot memorize
- 00:39:04Tony went from studying like 60 hours
- 00:39:08per week to 30 hours per week we were
- 00:39:10able to have the amount of time that he
- 00:39:13was studying by reducing the amount he
- 00:39:15was rot memorizing just by 20% and
- 00:39:17that's because of the volume scaling
- 00:39:20issue with with rope memorization is
- 00:39:22that a small reduction in how much you
- 00:39:25need to rope memorize has a big impact
- 00:39:27and the amount of time that you burden
- 00:39:29yourself with but let's say we do need
- 00:39:32to use R memorization it's a last resort
- 00:39:35but we're at the resort right now then
- 00:39:38how should you do it number 12 use flash
- 00:39:41cards memory palaces and Link methods
- 00:39:44for Road memorization I'm not going to
- 00:39:46explain each of these different
- 00:39:47techniques you can look them up there's
- 00:39:49lots of great videos and tutorials about
- 00:39:51how to use these methods but they work
- 00:39:54they are very very effective for for
- 00:39:57their purpose just make sure to use them
- 00:40:00for their purpose don't abuse them and
- 00:40:02remember it's the last result number 13
- 00:40:06study with
- 00:40:07friends sometimes I remember in my third
- 00:40:10year of medical school I was really
- 00:40:12obsessed with figuring out how I could
- 00:40:14study with friends I think part of it
- 00:40:16might have just been I was like socially
- 00:40:18deprived from spending so much time
- 00:40:21either studying or learning to study and
- 00:40:25I I wanted to kind of spice things up in
- 00:40:28my life you can get a sense for what my
- 00:40:30life was like based on the fact that
- 00:40:31that was spicy for me um and so I
- 00:40:34actually ended up doing a lot of
- 00:40:36experimenting but also learning about
- 00:40:38good ways of studying with friends and
- 00:40:40what I found is that studying with
- 00:40:42friends can be really effective but
- 00:40:45probably not in the way that most people
- 00:40:48do them so there are two main benefits
- 00:40:51that I found for studying with friends
- 00:40:52the first one is for accountability and
- 00:40:55focus especially if you get e IL
- 00:40:57distracted having friends to keep you
- 00:41:00focused and keep you accountable can be
- 00:41:02useful unfortunately sometimes they're
- 00:41:04the cause of the distraction so in order
- 00:41:06for this to work you actually have to
- 00:41:08have everyone in that group needs to
- 00:41:11have the shared purpose and
- 00:41:13understanding of why you're studying
- 00:41:14together like there has to be like an
- 00:41:15agenda like okay we all think the same
- 00:41:18way we are here to hold each other
- 00:41:20accountable to be real with each other
- 00:41:23to keep each other focused and I would
- 00:41:26highly recommend implementing some kind
- 00:41:28of system or like structure use timers
- 00:41:32uh use like have the you like a schedule
- 00:41:35laid out tell people that your
- 00:41:37responsibility for the session is to
- 00:41:39keep time or to make sure no one gets
- 00:41:41distracted like assign roles to people
- 00:41:44make it like a job take it
- 00:41:46seriously I mean if you're just studying
- 00:41:48with friends just to like have fun and
- 00:41:50spice up your life then you can do
- 00:41:52whatever uh but if it's to really
- 00:41:54actually make it effective and like
- 00:41:56promote optimal learning then create
- 00:41:58structure the second benefit of studying
- 00:42:02with friends and this is something I
- 00:42:03almost never see in students like
- 00:42:06outside of in my program that I'm
- 00:42:07directly teaching this to is use your
- 00:42:10friends to find gaps for each other so
- 00:42:13one of the things that I used to do very
- 00:42:14often is just like quizzing each other
- 00:42:16and that's great but it's not usually
- 00:42:20sustainable it's not enough you can make
- 00:42:22that into a whole part of your learning
- 00:42:24system and this is an awesome technique
- 00:42:27like seriously so
- 00:42:31underrated make practice tests for your
- 00:42:35friends as part of the way you do your
- 00:42:38space repetition active recour sessions
- 00:42:40I was telling you like test yourself at
- 00:42:42different levels uh different ways
- 00:42:45making a practice exam for someone else
- 00:42:49is a great way of revising as long as
- 00:42:51you're trying to make it from memory and
- 00:42:53that means that after you've made your
- 00:42:55exam you then need to check with your
- 00:42:58notes to make sure that the exam makes
- 00:43:01sense and then you can create your own
- 00:43:04perfect model answer sheet for the
- 00:43:06questions that you made which is great
- 00:43:09learning but then by exchanging them
- 00:43:11with your friends you now get the
- 00:43:13questions and perspectives that they
- 00:43:14made and if you're trying to make truly
- 00:43:16challenging questions then this is like
- 00:43:20like a like a infinite practice paper
- 00:43:22glitch and the best part is that there's
- 00:43:24no real answer sheet with which sounds
- 00:43:27like a disadvantage but it is a massive
- 00:43:30Advantage because when you know that
- 00:43:32there is no answer sheet you have to
- 00:43:35check that your answers make sense you
- 00:43:37have to be much more critical reviewing
- 00:43:40the notes reviewing your material to
- 00:43:42make sure that there's nothing missing
- 00:43:44and a lot of the time the answers that
- 00:43:46you write for your friend's exam will be
- 00:43:50different to the answer sheet that they
- 00:43:52made for their own exam and those points
- 00:43:55of difference actually become really
- 00:43:57good areas for discussion those usually
- 00:43:59indicate pretty deep and nuanced gaps in
- 00:44:01knowledge and if you get a group of like
- 00:44:03three or four friends to do this then in
- 00:44:05the time it takes to make one exam and
- 00:44:09then make an answer sheet which you're
- 00:44:11spending that time studying anyway you
- 00:44:13now also get three extra exams it is
- 00:44:17very time efficient it is very effective
- 00:44:18for Learning and it is
- 00:44:20even fun and yes I I promise I do other
- 00:44:23things in my life other than study for
- 00:44:25fun next piece of advice
- 00:44:27study ahead to get ahead I'm going to
- 00:44:30blow your mind with this one let's say
- 00:44:32you're falling behind or you're
- 00:44:33strugling to keep up first of all we got
- 00:44:35to accept the truth the reason you're
- 00:44:37falling behind is because whatever you
- 00:44:39are doing right now isn't enough for the
- 00:44:43pace it needs to be and to stop falling
- 00:44:46behind the easiest way is to get
- 00:44:50ahead and you don't actually need to
- 00:44:54catch up to get ahead and this is the
- 00:44:58mindblowing thing for a lot of
- 00:45:00students imagine you're in a sinking
- 00:45:02ship you don't need to get all the water
- 00:45:06out of the ship first before you plug
- 00:45:09the hole in fact that's illogical you
- 00:45:13plug the hole first it's the same thing
- 00:45:14with learning if you're falling behind
- 00:45:16now there's this backlog of stuff that
- 00:45:19you need to study and catch up on you
- 00:45:22can keep chipping away at that debt of
- 00:45:25learning but just make sure your not
- 00:45:27accumulating more debt and the reason
- 00:45:30that you're like kind of a little
- 00:45:31screwed if you don't do this is because
- 00:45:34remember if you're falling behind or
- 00:45:37struggling to keep up it means what
- 00:45:41you're doing now is not enough so you
- 00:45:45will definitely keep falling behind and
- 00:45:48if you've already got a debt and a
- 00:45:50backlog of stuff to chip away at that's
- 00:45:52going to get larger not smaller with
- 00:45:55time and so as soon as you realize
- 00:45:57you're falling behind you should at that
- 00:45:59point plug the leak and one of the best
- 00:46:01and fastest ways to do that if you're
- 00:46:04short on time which you probably are CU
- 00:46:06you're falling behind is to scope every
- 00:46:10subject to 10x your learning efficiency
- 00:46:14I personally believe that no learning
- 00:46:17system can be called efficient if it
- 00:46:20doesn't involve scoping a subject before
- 00:46:23you learn it so what do I mean by
- 00:46:25scoping a subject it means going through
- 00:46:27what you're about to learn and getting a
- 00:46:30big picture overview of what it's
- 00:46:33talking about what are the main ideas
- 00:46:35what are the main groups of ideas and
- 00:46:37how does it generally connect together
- 00:46:40it's not about memorizing everything you
- 00:46:43need to memorize and all the new pieces
- 00:46:44of terminology and mastering it before
- 00:46:48you learn it in class or in lectures
- 00:46:50it's just about getting enough of an
- 00:46:52idea about it that it feels a bit more
- 00:46:55familiar and in learning science this is
- 00:46:57called priming and priming is a studying
- 00:47:00technique that has a very high
- 00:47:03correlation with learning when you prime
- 00:47:05knowledge it basically gives your brain
- 00:47:08context and relevance for what it's
- 00:47:10about to learn you're telling it why
- 00:47:12it's important and where it maybe fits
- 00:47:16before you're telling it what it is a
- 00:47:18great analogy is thinking about a
- 00:47:20library imagine you are the sole
- 00:47:22librarian of this huge library and
- 00:47:26people are turning books that they've
- 00:47:28read and you have to put these books
- 00:47:31away in the appropriate place but you
- 00:47:34don't actually know how the library is
- 00:47:36organized you don't know where the
- 00:47:38shelves are for which authors for which
- 00:47:41genres all you're getting is a pile of
- 00:47:43books coming at you every few minutes
- 00:47:46and you desperately need to put those
- 00:47:48books in the right place imagine how
- 00:47:50hard that would be compared to if 15
- 00:47:55minutes before your shift shift started
- 00:47:57you went into the library and you
- 00:47:59generally got a sense of where the
- 00:48:01categories and what the shelving
- 00:48:03organization structure looks like now
- 00:48:05when someone gives you the book and you
- 00:48:07look at it you can think ah yeah This
- 00:48:08one belongs somewhere over there and you
- 00:48:09may not know exactly where on the Shelf
- 00:48:12it fits but you know where the Shelf is
- 00:48:14the same thing for your brain when
- 00:48:16you're learning something new your
- 00:48:17brain's trying to figure out what it is
- 00:48:19and understand it and it's also trying
- 00:48:20to decide why is this relevant enough
- 00:48:23for me to spend energy on remember Ing
- 00:48:27and keeping this knowledge your brain
- 00:48:29isn't helping you pass an exam your
- 00:48:31brain is just trying to keep you alive
- 00:48:33and it is a very energy consuming organ
- 00:48:36which means that if you're giving it
- 00:48:38random irrelevant information that
- 00:48:40doesn't fit anywhere your brain is going
- 00:48:42to aggressively remove it because from
- 00:48:44your brain's perspective it's a matter
- 00:48:45of life and death and while there are
- 00:48:47many ways to prime your brain just
- 00:48:49scoping the subject and getting a layer
- 00:48:51of the land is a really high impact
- 00:48:55strategy that you you can use that is
- 00:48:57going to have a noticeable difference on
- 00:49:00your memory and retention as well as how
- 00:49:02deeply and easily you can understand New
- 00:49:04Concepts next up use cognitive load to
- 00:49:08delete passive learning cognitive load
- 00:49:12is the fancy term for mental effort
- 00:49:15effective learning always involves
- 00:49:19mental effort passive learning is the
- 00:49:23type of learning that doesn't involve
- 00:49:26High mental effort and in fact it's not
- 00:49:29really even learning so rewriting notes
- 00:49:33is fairly passive if you're just writing
- 00:49:35it again word for word rereading things
- 00:49:38is also fairly passive and different
- 00:49:41techniques on that spectrum of how much
- 00:49:44studying turns into learning have
- 00:49:46different levels of mental effort
- 00:49:48associated with them and generally the
- 00:49:49more effective ones have more mental
- 00:49:51effort so for example creating summary
- 00:49:54pages is more effective and then turning
- 00:49:56those summary pages into something
- 00:49:57that's nonlinear and relational takes a
- 00:49:59little bit more eff effort and then
- 00:50:01teaching it to a 10-year-old and
- 00:50:03simplifying those relationships and
- 00:50:05groups that takes even more effort and
- 00:50:06this is simply just because the learning
- 00:50:09is what happens in your brain so your
- 00:50:12brain has to do thinking and processing
- 00:50:15to turn information into relevant
- 00:50:18knowledge it takes effort and the way we
- 00:50:22feel that that mental exertion that's
- 00:50:25what we call cognitive load and now not
- 00:50:27everything that has high cognitive load
- 00:50:30makes it effective like for example if
- 00:50:32all you wanted to do was max out your
- 00:50:34cognitive load you can stand on like a
- 00:50:37stand on one foot while you're juggling
- 00:50:39and someone's slapping you in the face
- 00:50:41with a fish while you read a textbook
- 00:50:43your cognitive load is going to be
- 00:50:44through the roof but it's not going to
- 00:50:46make a difference to your learning and
- 00:50:48so not all high cognitive load is
- 00:50:51effective learning but all effective
- 00:50:53learning involves higher cognitive load
- 00:50:55but whenever your cognitive load is low
- 00:50:58you can know for sure that you're not
- 00:51:02engaging in effective learning and so
- 00:51:04you want to be able to train yourself to
- 00:51:06be aware when you're studying what's the
- 00:51:10level of mental exertion cognitive load
- 00:51:12that I'm feeling and if it's high okay
- 00:51:14that's fine right if it's low there's a
- 00:51:18high high high likelihood that you're
- 00:51:20doing passive learning and those need to
- 00:51:22be massive red flags that you look at
- 00:51:25and optimize or just completely remove
- 00:51:28that out of your learning system and in
- 00:51:29fact you can even do a quick test have a
- 00:51:32study session for like one or two days
- 00:51:34and then identify the techniques and the
- 00:51:37methods that you use where you feel that
- 00:51:39your brain is entering into that passive
- 00:51:41State it's feeling boring it's feeling
- 00:51:43tedious it's feeling monotonous you're
- 00:51:45kind of falling asleep and getting
- 00:51:47drowsy uh those are areas where your
- 00:51:50brain is basically falling
- 00:51:52asleep just try studying a topic without
- 00:51:55doing any of that stuff just literally
- 00:51:58remove it from your system and you know
- 00:52:00what you will probably find that there
- 00:52:02is no real difference to how much you
- 00:52:06learn and you've saved that much time
- 00:52:09and some of you will do this and be like
- 00:52:11well man that's like 90% of all my
- 00:52:13studying feels like that you know surely
- 00:52:16my learning has gone down NOP it just
- 00:52:19means that 90% of the time you spent on
- 00:52:22studying was kind of a waste of time and
- 00:52:25I'm saying that from phys
- 00:52:27where that used to be me so much of my
- 00:52:30learning was passive and it took me a
- 00:52:33very long time longer than hopefully it
- 00:52:35will take you with my videos uh to fix
- 00:52:38that and make it more active next up
- 00:52:40these two are pretty juicy create
- 00:52:44analogies an analogy if you don't know
- 00:52:47is just when you're comparing two
- 00:52:48different things to highlight how these
- 00:52:51things are similar to each other like
- 00:52:52for example if I say life is like a
- 00:52:55journey then that's an analogy because
- 00:52:57I'm highlighting the similarities
- 00:52:59between life and a journey and creating
- 00:53:02analogies is actually a great example of
- 00:53:04a technique that requires higher
- 00:53:06cognitive load because to create a good
- 00:53:08analogy you have to look at two
- 00:53:10different concepts and compare them and
- 00:53:12look at how they're similar and that
- 00:53:14takes effort and and that comparison
- 00:53:16that process your brain undergoes to
- 00:53:18figure that out that produces high
- 00:53:21quality learning and actively forming
- 00:53:23analogies from what you're learning is a
- 00:53:25criminally underrated technique so make
- 00:53:28analogies and if you're already making
- 00:53:30analogies then you can make them even
- 00:53:32better by
- 00:53:34critiquing those analogies so let's say
- 00:53:37I take an analogy like life is a journey
- 00:53:41critiquing that means really examining
- 00:53:44the analogy that I've created to see how
- 00:53:47accurate and comprehensive it is so I
- 00:53:50might say okay but life is also kind of
- 00:53:53not like a journey because life is more
- 00:53:56unpredictable you don't know where
- 00:53:58you're headed whereas with most Journeys
- 00:54:00you kind of know where the end point is
- 00:54:02and you can kind of map out what the
- 00:54:04path is going to be so you might say
- 00:54:06Okay okay so actually in that case life
- 00:54:08is more like a spontaneous journey and
- 00:54:11you might say okay well but also life
- 00:54:14has more unpredictable elements and
- 00:54:16sometimes you find yourself somewhere
- 00:54:18that you never intended to be whereas
- 00:54:19with a journey you can usually figure
- 00:54:22out where you want to go and then and
- 00:54:23then go there without too much
- 00:54:25complication might say okay in that case
- 00:54:27life is like a spontaneous journey
- 00:54:30through a foggy treacherous forest
- 00:54:34mountain okay you see what's going on is
- 00:54:35that the analogy is growing in order to
- 00:54:39be more comprehensive and accurate of
- 00:54:42whatever we're learning about in this
- 00:54:43case it happened to be life and when you
- 00:54:45apply your brain in that way to critique
- 00:54:48an analogy and enhance it it forces you
- 00:54:51to examine the information and the topic
- 00:54:54much more deeply and much more
- 00:54:55critically and that also induces a
- 00:54:58higher level of cognitive load which
- 00:55:00also translates through to a higher
- 00:55:02level of learning and again you can
- 00:55:03actually just test this you can take two
- 00:55:06sets of Concepts or two topics that You'
- 00:55:08have just studied make a really simple
- 00:55:10analogy for one of them and don't
- 00:55:12critique it and then make another
- 00:55:14analogy for the other topic but then
- 00:55:16critique it and then spend a bit of time
- 00:55:18really making that analogy more polished
- 00:55:20give yourself a week and then see which
- 00:55:23topic you feel more confident on 99 out
- 00:55:25of 100 times the analogy you spent time
- 00:55:28on critiquing your memory and your depth
- 00:55:30of understanding and the Nuance to how
- 00:55:32you understand each of those individual
- 00:55:35Parts is going to be deeper and finally
- 00:55:38keep a learning
- 00:55:40log if you are serious about learning to
- 00:55:44learn then you are going to be going
- 00:55:47through a journey uh through a it's not
- 00:55:51quite a treacherous Mountain Forest but
- 00:55:54it is a long process to really create a
- 00:55:58personalized learning system and there
- 00:56:00are a lot of things about your habits
- 00:56:02and your processes and your techniques
- 00:56:04you're going to have to change and it is
- 00:56:06impossible to change too many things at
- 00:56:09once in fact it's actually biologically
- 00:56:11impossible your brain has this uh maybe
- 00:56:14protective mechanism that's wired into
- 00:56:17it that stops IT from changing too many
- 00:56:20things in a short period of time which
- 00:56:22means that you can only really focus on
- 00:56:24changing one or two things at a time and
- 00:56:27for learning where there are like
- 00:56:29hundreds of factors that influence your
- 00:56:31ability to learn it's going to take you
- 00:56:33a while and at a certain point and
- 00:56:36everyone who is serious about improving
- 00:56:40their learning is going to face this
- 00:56:41you're going to become overwhelmed with
- 00:56:43the amount of things that you're trying
- 00:56:44to change and the experiments you're
- 00:56:45running and the mistakes that you're
- 00:56:47making the trial and error keep a
- 00:56:49learning log I so wish I kept a learning
- 00:56:52log 13 years ago when I first started my
- 00:56:55journey like that those three years of
- 00:56:57improvement I probably could have done
- 00:56:58that in like 9 months if I kept a
- 00:57:00learning log that tracks what am I
- 00:57:03testing what do I think is going to make
- 00:57:04a difference what technique am I trying
- 00:57:06today how did that go what am I going to
- 00:57:08do tomorrow if I just kept iterating
- 00:57:11that with more Focus instead of just
- 00:57:12doing this thing and then this thing and
- 00:57:14then this thing and this thing and then
- 00:57:15coming back to the first thing then it
- 00:57:17would have been so much faster and so
- 00:57:19much easier for me to improve but I
- 00:57:21didn't because I was lazy basically and
- 00:57:24I couldn't be bothered keeping a
- 00:57:25learning I just didn't think it was
- 00:57:27going to be necessary until it was too
- 00:57:28late in fact it's so important that all
- 00:57:30of the students that I train now through
- 00:57:31I can study like a learning log and
- 00:57:34reflective record is like one of the
- 00:57:36actual techniques that I teach now it
- 00:57:38just makes a huge difference and it
- 00:57:40helps enormously with motivation to see
- 00:57:44the progress that you're making that you
- 00:57:46can't necessarily see on the surface and
- 00:57:49so being able to look through your
- 00:57:49learning log and realize like man the
- 00:57:51stuff I used to think about and worry
- 00:57:53about and how I thought about learning
- 00:57:55like a month ago is completely different
- 00:57:57to how I understand it now that's really
- 00:58:00motivating so please make your life
- 00:58:02easier keep a learning log so that's my
- 00:58:04advice and honestly I can do like a
- 00:58:07hundred more of these because 13 years
- 00:58:09is a long time to just be learning about
- 00:58:12learning and I've picked up a lot of
- 00:58:15these lessons along the way if you
- 00:58:16enjoyed this format please let me know
- 00:58:18if you want me to do more of this again
- 00:58:19let me know and if you want to learn a
- 00:58:21little bit more about some of the
- 00:58:22techniques you can start applying to
- 00:58:25work on the things that I've talked
- 00:58:26about then check out this video here to
- 00:58:30help you on the next step of your
- 00:58:32Learning Journey
- Learning
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