Best Learning Strategies for Programmers

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  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
  • In this video I cover the best learning strategies for programmers. They come directly from some of my experiences in learning software development.
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 617

  • @AndySterkowitz
    @AndySterkowitz  Před 5 lety +279

    Are you going to implement any of these strategies I've covered? Would you add any learning strategies to the list?

    • @MrPDTaylor
      @MrPDTaylor Před 5 lety +8

      Brad Traversy released a video on the same topic this morning. Did you two get together on this or are you competing with him?

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  Před 5 lety +18

      @@MrPDTaylor It's funny I saw that when I woke up this morning as well after I had uploaded my video. It just happens to be pure coincidence. Brad's channel is awesome...I'm sure his video is spot-on.

    • @mayaramein
      @mayaramein Před 5 lety +2

      Yes, this is amazing thank you for this tutorial, I am facing this problem right now and I feel that my effort worthless I spent the past two years learning passively but since a short time I started to learn actively and didn't balance but now I will.
      the second strategy you have all right but sometimes I can't do that and want to finish all my work in one day.
      the third one could be a summary is like a blog post, right?
      and I totally agree with you about the fourth and fifth strategy and hope do them

    • @squawkasian
      @squawkasian Před 5 lety +1

      These strategies are great! Thanks for the tips. I think another strategy that works really well to re-enforce your learning is to teach what you learn if the opportunity presents itself. I find if I have trouble teaching a concept to someone I know I should go back and review it.

    • @slavenbunijevac6600
      @slavenbunijevac6600 Před 5 lety

      Thanks a lot. Some these I will definitely try to apply. Definitely the one about keeping track of all the questions I have. No single tutorial can explain absolutely everything it mentions. I am currently going through a tutorial on JavaScript but a couple of times I had to pause and go to a different source because something kept being mentioned but not explained (for example IIFEs, and .filter, .map, .reduce).
      Again, thanks

  • @MadBunnyRabbit
    @MadBunnyRabbit Před 5 lety +1966

    2:01 #1: Active vs Passive Learning Ratio (2h reading; 1h coding)
    4:17 #2: Use "Spacing" (DON'T CRAM)
    5:57 #3: Teaching Concepts (write about what you learned, explain how it works)
    7:09 #4: Keep Track of Questions (you have when learning)
    8:59 #5: Rest and Recover

    • @PACXS
      @PACXS Před 5 lety +39

      Thanks! Exactly what I was looking in the comments for.

    • @dannous
      @dannous Před 5 lety +16

      Thanks. You saved me 12 minutes. Also these seem basic learning concepts not yet for programming.

    • @user-kc7jj7yy3e
      @user-kc7jj7yy3e Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks

    • @zid3
      @zid3 Před 5 lety +3

      @@dannous isn't that what the title suggests though?

    • @SteelerY360Nation
      @SteelerY360Nation Před 4 lety

      MadBunnyRabbit - Thanks 🙏

  • @gregagregy
    @gregagregy Před 5 lety +577

    5 Learning Strategies:
    1st Sweetspot between Active and Passive learning 2h/1h ratio at the start, later 1h/1h
    2st Apply Spacing - spread learning in more daily short stages
    3rd Teaching/Reexplaining Concepts - teach, write blog, FB group post etc.
    4th Keep Track of all the things you have questions about - Textpad or google doc
    5th Rest and Recover - you need sleep that brain can recover and memorize, lack of sleep = lower IQ

    • @abhishekshah11
      @abhishekshah11 Před 5 lety +17

      This saved me from watching the video lol

    • @sammavitae114
      @sammavitae114 Před 5 lety +3

      Abhishek shah You missed the part about being active.

    • @blitzorn8417
      @blitzorn8417 Před 5 lety +2

      2nd*

    • @danielshotit
      @danielshotit Před 5 lety

      Thank you! CZcamsrs are making there videos longer then necessary to just to get there videos pass 10 mins

    • @sethtaylor7519
      @sethtaylor7519 Před 5 lety +1

      @@danielshotit their* just to* passed* lol JK, but seriously.

  • @RachelLoveMartinez
    @RachelLoveMartinez Před rokem +26

    I'm in college learning coding and it definitely crams so much knowledge into our brains in one week. College doesn't give you enough time to learn as each assignment is due each week on top of other subjects/classes due. Even if you don't understand the first week yet, you're forced to move onto the next week, and so on. It's overwhelming.

    • @marcusmvpgoat1236
      @marcusmvpgoat1236 Před rokem +3

      Yh that’s why I’m self learning I will graduate soon full stack in just 6 months

    • @RachelLoveMartinez
      @RachelLoveMartinez Před rokem +1

      @@marcusmvpgoat1236 That's amazing! Do you have any recommendations on the best learning curve? I'm learning C++ and it's already so hard. But I'm getting it slowly.

    • @T4KKFI
      @T4KKFI Před 10 měsíci +2

      Get pumped and excited like an anime fire force characters because that pressure will make you or break you those first two weeks

  • @EntertheBlackDragon
    @EntertheBlackDragon Před 5 lety +24

    I too am a self taught programmer. Been in the game for maybe 12 years now. I watch videos just to get other opinions on what other programmers like myself have to say. Sometimes i have to remind myself not to stress so much and that all answers are always in front of you. Even the most complex. What I've learned is that when you find that you need a real solution to a problem, the answer can be found in simple programs that you can develop within 10 minutes to which you can apply to your complex problem. The best tools I've come to use is a very good pen and a pad. That's where all of my logic gets worked put. Also in drawing out a visio diagram, i can draw out what is supposed to happen and how it supposed to happen and all that would be missing is the code.

  • @codyuhi8010
    @codyuhi8010 Před 5 lety +305

    I feel like sometimes I get really excited about a certain subject and just binge-study about it and then the next week rolls by and I've forgotten everything I learned. I'm going to implement spacing and see how it goes. Thanks for the insight!

    • @robertzeurunkl8401
      @robertzeurunkl8401 Před 5 lety +23

      When you learn something new, find a way to incorporate it into your own personal project right away (you DO have a personal working project, right?), and come back often and tweak it. Change how it works a bit. Reorder something. Implement it again, a bit differently. Make it a part of a working project that you are always working on. This keeps it in front of you, and your often revisiting it keeps it in mind.

    • @codyuhi8010
      @codyuhi8010 Před 5 lety +8

      @@robertzeurunkl8401 yes! Sometimes it feels like I'm learning just for learning's sake. Sometimes I feel like my personal study doesn't match up with my projects required for school. But I'm sure that if I look at my projects through new eyes that I will find a way to incorporate the things I'm learning on my personal time. I really appreciate the suggestion! I'll try to be better at applying the things I learn across my projects.

    • @cypherphage4294
      @cypherphage4294 Před 5 lety +2

      Try Anki

    • @rondagatts8960
      @rondagatts8960 Před 5 lety +2

      @@robertzeurunkl8401 You're right I need to start working
      on a project and implement the new information I learn.

    • @bushgodreturns5562
      @bushgodreturns5562 Před 5 lety +2

      Tbh man, if u forgot it, u weren't that passionate about it. U still r searching for it

  • @bayoadetunji1135
    @bayoadetunji1135 Před 3 lety +5

    I really like strategy #1: The sweet spot for learning- passive vs. active learning. Sometimes it's easy to hide behind watching several video tutorials and not practicing what you've learned.

  • @subhuman7695
    @subhuman7695 Před 5 lety +12

    There is always something new to learn with Andy every time I come here . I am a beginner and this is helpful. Thankyou 😊

  • @rasplundjr
    @rasplundjr Před 4 lety +5

    Some of the best advice I've heard anyone give on youtube (and many other platforms) about learning period not just programming.
    Going through EMT training my instructor always made us Learn a skill, Do a Skill Teach a skill because it made you look at it from several different angles.
    When I first began as a technical trainer teaching folks how to use the companies IT systems I came across an article that I need to track down that mentioned the average human mind needs information repeated 5 times before it triggers to store as long term memory.
    Back to my old EMT trainer the best lesson I took away from him was that any idiot can learn how to do something, to master a skill you learn WHY you do it. I love the fact that you mentioned you need to track your "whys".

  • @Rubariton
    @Rubariton Před 4 lety +6

    Awesome channel. I have ADD aswell and its just like I hear myself speaking.
    Just started out 1 week ago in a way I thought was most productive. This video just confirmed all of it.
    For me its like this;
    Start from scratch everytime with programming untill you got the basic settings right. And expand this with the new skills that you learn.
    Test yourself. Try to imagine concepts. Try to understand why you give certain inputs and whey they work like the way they do.
    Instead of remembering the inputs and typin them out.
    Love the vids, it helped me a bunch. Thank you very much good sir!

  • @andrewschull6039
    @andrewschull6039 Před 3 lety

    I absolutely love the idea of keeping the "why" journal. Such a good strategy for keeping focus while simultaneously expanding overall understanding.

  • @HamedAdefuwa
    @HamedAdefuwa Před 4 lety +10

    I love this advice, im just a few weeks in learning for university assignment and im currently 20 hours coding vs 1 hour reading lol. - subbed!

  • @ScorpiosLifeLog
    @ScorpiosLifeLog Před 4 lety +15

    This is a video not only for programmers, but everyone. I'm an ELT department student. We learn other languages as well. I learned some good tactics to improve my Russian learning process thank to you. Good work :)

    • @zettcompact8586
      @zettcompact8586 Před 2 lety +1

      Надеюсь что вам русский язык получиться изучить быстрее и глубже.

  • @SR-vk3fv
    @SR-vk3fv Před 5 lety +6

    Definitely going to put that legal pad tip into practice, thanks Andy!

  • @user-lo9si5dx8t
    @user-lo9si5dx8t Před 4 lety +120

    I am a software developer I have looked at some of the tutorials online, some are adequately good, but the meat isn't there, what I mean by that, is these tutorials don't take you by the hand one step at a time in actually developing something, a final product, so the learner will know exactly what to create, how to link let's say "classes" how to use OOP in a most efficient way and many other little tricks they may pick up along the way.
    I think most of these tutorials are in fact a waste of time, what a learner needs are, good examples, lots of examples different examples, and to be guided from point A to the end of the project.
    This is the only way in my experience that you can learn good programming habits and and pick up good tips.

    • @Pete3326
      @Pete3326 Před 4 lety +5

      Vijar I totally agree with you. Like building a more "beginner" full stack application with html/css/js and postgreSQL with a database utilizing a DAO pattern for theJDBC and servlets in Java with an IDE like Spring Tool Suites or Eclipse. So for example going through that step by step thinking process of creating a method with all the right logic and syntax for the SQL and throw/catch statements and calling it in the servlet to verify a user's login on the frontend.

    • @alwaysflat7996
      @alwaysflat7996 Před 4 lety

      @@Pete3326 Exactly!
      You hit the nail on the head, this is one good example.

    • @violent_bebop9687
      @violent_bebop9687 Před 4 lety +2

      This post and the answers here is good insight.

    • @zeeshoootv4505
      @zeeshoootv4505 Před 4 lety

      Viraj.. I need your help..

    • @jascha9033
      @jascha9033 Před 4 lety +5

      Does anybody have recommendations for a good project-oriented online course?

  • @Bluesy-be9es
    @Bluesy-be9es Před 4 lety +1

    I recently went back to college to study computer science. Your channel is so practical and well-made. Thank you for such a good content!

  • @n.lightnin8298
    @n.lightnin8298 Před 5 lety +9

    TY for being one of the ONLY people on here with ACTUAL information and ACTUALLY GOOD information.... Just TY, FRFR....

  • @angiewheeler4768
    @angiewheeler4768 Před 5 lety +8

    Thank you for the awesome advice. Been learning for some time. I get frustrated that I am not at the level I would like to be. You just encouraged me to keep going. Thank you so much!

    • @Andrea-lf3jq
      @Andrea-lf3jq Před 3 lety

      Same here girlie, but keep going. We'll get there in the end :)

  • @Cityweaver
    @Cityweaver Před 4 lety +4

    Talking about ratios of study:practice really hits home for me. I'm enrolled in a course, which requires homework tasks turned in, but that how that time is used is obviously different than my time studying. I spent the first month stressing myself out, studying tasks on the same day as doing the homework, because I wanted to turn in tasks at a reliable "every other day" pace. No, no, no.... Or... I can spend 2-3 mornings studying, sleeping on it, letting it gel in my head, then complete a homework assignment. I'd rather get 2 assignments done a week and actually learn the concepts than get 4 done a week, but not actually remember anything.

  • @mmbower1
    @mmbower1 Před 5 lety +6

    Very helpful. Thanks Andy!

  • @snowdroog1
    @snowdroog1 Před 5 lety

    Andy- thanks, this was a great refresher/new tips for me. Just what I needed at this point in my quest. I got the idea while watching this to write a small Question / Lookup tracking program to help me stay consistent with your 4th tip, and to have a good reference later for what I've learned.

  • @bonganishongwe9836
    @bonganishongwe9836 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you for the video Andy! Very helpful

  • @GameplayzOfficial
    @GameplayzOfficial Před 4 lety +13

    I just learned about the Pomodoro technique, I think it's applicable in this scenario.

  • @alexrmartin1421
    @alexrmartin1421 Před 5 lety +16

    Hi Andy. Thank you for sharing these tips. I'm currently learning HTML, CSS and JavaScript to help me level up with Google Analytics and Google Tag Manager. Your tips are really helpful and have helped me move closer to my goals. It's easy to get caught up in the 'conceptual' phase. Being accountable for time and what is being learnt on a particular day works wonders. Keep up the great work 🌟🏆

  • @jrod238
    @jrod238 Před 5 lety

    So true. Active learning and project based learning. I love it.

  • @oloyedepaul1363
    @oloyedepaul1363 Před 5 lety

    Hey Andy, thanks for the advice, I used the active and passive learning strategy today, I really loved it. Cheers

  • @jhprip
    @jhprip Před 2 lety

    Thanks a lot for those advices, really useful and something that I will be applying to my life as a programmer because sometimes I feel that I am not keeping anything of what I just learned, that I do not rest enough, that I do not have enought time and that I do not have the concepts clear enough. Thanks a lot Andy.

  • @jdnoguera130
    @jdnoguera130 Před 4 lety +6

    This is stellar self study advice. Loving this.

  • @gonyoutub
    @gonyoutub Před 4 lety +3

    Nice job. I'm a software consultant and instructor, and these strategies are sppt on. I can suggest the following others: 1) Relearn, rewatch topics. It greatly increases comprehension. 2) Do formal exercises, and useful pet projects. 3) Don't get stuck. Ask for help from friends, or on websites for what you can't understand
    4) Use dead time, for example, while commuting or in line, to listen to relevant podcasts.

    • @cait.
      @cait. Před 3 lety

      Do you have any podcast recommendations?

  • @ipeteagles
    @ipeteagles Před 5 lety +10

    Love these tips, bro! Thank you for making this video. It's very encouraging! You really nailed the nails of priorities with learning. I'm a HTML/CSS novice & I work IT helpdesk for the VA. I'm going to repeatedly review the steps you laid out. My favorite point is #4, keep track of questions/whys. I find myself many times at work copying & pasting work notes for "busy work" tasks. I've discovered how effective keyboard hotkeys (ctrl+backspace, home, shift, end: so meta) are & taking notes that I can use ctrl+f & keywords to work arguably as effectively as my colleagues at a fraction of the effort. #4 really validates how I'm feeling about note taking, because it seems to be a strategy that is already serving me in the long-term.

  • @RackaApps
    @RackaApps Před 4 lety +1

    7:10 this is so true. I have stopped going into a rabbit chase on Google for questions while studying. My strategy now is that i had a pinned tab on my browser for Google Keep and i write all my questions there and go through them later. I have found that it's much easier looking for answers later than right when you were studying because you'll sort of remember what you were learning before and get a much better understanding. And an advantage for this is I'll also have the questions on the app in my phone and can easily search for them when I'm not on my laptop

  • @natpaler883
    @natpaler883 Před 4 lety

    I'm 40 and taking first steps into software development to change my career path. Your video are so helpful!!

  • @HEWfunkingKNEWit
    @HEWfunkingKNEWit Před 4 lety

    You make good points here. I have just started learning and there is a fair amount of passive learning. So at the ends or during the lessons I will experiment a little with what I just learned. Even just reworking 1 line of code from a tutorial has helped me learn alot.

  • @qui3tstorm793
    @qui3tstorm793 Před 5 lety +6

    Wish I could sub and like multiple times. This is comprehensive mature advice which addresses approach and most importantly mindset.

  • @trantran7525
    @trantran7525 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for sharing these Andy.

  • @FrenchyFlyTv
    @FrenchyFlyTv Před 4 lety

    This video made me take a step back and reevaluate how i learning and undertanding concepts of a programming language.

  • @ninjaturtleadeel
    @ninjaturtleadeel Před 5 lety +11

    You’re the best Andy!

  • @pritampal1
    @pritampal1 Před 5 lety +11

    Andy when are you coming live on CZcams,have so many questions for you

  • @mncedisishongwe8095
    @mncedisishongwe8095 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for the video I’m new at programming and struggling in computer engineering with computer science modules sho this will help

  • @MJ-ur9tc
    @MJ-ur9tc Před 4 lety

    Hello, Andy. This is a very useful and helpful video. Whatever you have told has been backed by science. I’ll try to apply all of these. Thank you so much man. Keep up the good work.

  • @kmoartyyc
    @kmoartyyc Před 2 lety

    I think what is going to help me most from this is #1 and #4. I also appreciate #2 and #5 since that's how I've been learning. It helps so much to have balance. Thanks for the video!

  • @cUser691
    @cUser691 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks, Andy Excellent video. I'd add 1) Block out chunks of quiet time like a solid, uninterrupted 1-3 hours for example 2) Remove distractions. Sit facing a white wall, if necessary, turn off tv, only listen to music with no lyrics so you don't try to sing along or if you're a musician, you're thinking of the melodies and rhythms . 3) Avoid starches and carbs around lunch time otherwise it's nap time soon after 4) Compartmentalize, if you can. If you work at an incubator or library or house, when you leave it or leave that room, leave it completely and do something totally unrelated.

  • @CSSoda
    @CSSoda Před 4 lety

    Hey Andy, Thank you for taking your time out to make this video. I'm a grad student and currently preparing for a certification exam. I'm gonna apply these principles.. and will let you know. This video is really a confidence booster. Thank you..

  • @karenatkach8414
    @karenatkach8414 Před 4 lety

    LOVED THE VIDEO!!!
    I think this can applied to learning anything.
    Thank you

  • @paulperry1489
    @paulperry1489 Před 4 lety

    Amazing video! You are a fantastic teacher. Thank you for the clarity.

  • @nisharay579
    @nisharay579 Před 3 lety +2

    Subscribed! You’re amazing thank you for this. Started my journey a month ago

  • @aldolopez1596
    @aldolopez1596 Před rokem

    I just began my coding. My second week to be exact. I’ve been unknowingly implementing all of these strategies lol thank you for confirmation that I’m on the right track! Also, I’ve found out reverse engineering basic pages and things like that help me to learn coding concepts better. It really make you think about what to use and how to write your code!

  • @haciendadad
    @haciendadad Před 4 lety +1

    Great video! I really agree that there is a need for some kind of a coach to help people get their first/next job. What you are teaching in this particular video, is especially spot on. People learn differently and people push themselves past the point of diminishing returns and don't realize it. I think what people really need, is check in points with their coach for accountability and to make sure they are on the right track, spending their time correctly. Just like a Physical Trainer, a Technical Coach is something that is needed and valuable. When handling a client, I would think the toughest ones would be ones that have no formal college education because they don't have an established routine and years of practice of being disciplined to meet deadlines. It is one thing if someone has a Political Science degree and now they want to change to learn computer science, they know the routine and what it takes so they just put their head down and grind it out like they did in college. Those that never went to college, for whatever reasons (financial, learning disabilities like Dyslexia like I have, and maybe life stress) need to develop a routine and accountability. Those, IMO, would be the most satisfying to help, because they really needed you the most and it may really be a life changer for them. I say all this because I have a 20 year old son who is exactly in this situation and I want to help him and people like him. I love helping people in general and may have found something I may do in the future, so I'll be following your channel closely.

  • @WookerRussia
    @WookerRussia Před 5 lety +6

    Might be helpful for a beginner. Great videos, very inspiring!

  • @codesader5720
    @codesader5720 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for this info. Timely and practical.

  • @muhyadinmohamed6244
    @muhyadinmohamed6244 Před rokem +1

    I work 40hrs and study 24hrs a week, I didn't know why it wasn't working. thank you for the explanation!

  • @edu-mq5yy
    @edu-mq5yy Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you Andy.

  • @sapperjaeger
    @sapperjaeger Před 9 měsíci

    Yet another excellent and valuable vid -- much #respect!!!

  • @SajithJohnSam
    @SajithJohnSam Před 4 lety

    I believe your points are great pieces of advice for newbie programmers. Very often students are forced to learn two languages
    at a time. In those cases, a comparison between two (similar) language features stimulates the brain to (more) easily recollect those constructs in both languages, (I found).

  • @aniw1793
    @aniw1793 Před 3 lety

    Great stuff! Thank you for making these videos!!

  • @claudiavarrone8146
    @claudiavarrone8146 Před 4 lety

    I've noticed that with ANYTHING, when I teach about it I become that much more knowledgeable on it and it reinforces the concepts I already know about what I'm teaching even deeper into my mind.
    I've been taking online courses, and have been writing down key information along with scouring the comments below each course page to learn about what is being taught even further. Writing it all down is basically making me write a guide on how to learn the code I'm learning. It's very time consuming, but I tell you what, I still remember the concepts and everything I've learned since I started the course. It is well worth the extra time investment to nail that shit in there instead of having to come back often to re-remember stuff.
    I also play around with the code as I'm learning it and trying out all the different things I can do with it. Combining things I learned from earlier in the courses to the newer things I just learned. Just becoming familiar and comfortable with it.
    On top of all that, I've done what he mentioned in the video, keeping track of questions. When I feel my mind is overloaded in information, or questions, I write small reminders (5 words or less) or just keywords as "anchors" where when i read it I know what I was talking about. That way I can sort through all the information and write down the info and concepts on it and miss nothing. If I had questions while taking the course that wasn't answered by the course or the comments below on the course page I'd go on Google and research it until I fully understood it, then I would write down what I learned as if I were teaching it to someone. If I had questions but was done for the night I'd write them down for the next day.
    This has really helped me, give it a shot.

  • @mirollacap
    @mirollacap Před 4 lety

    since last month , I am overwhelmed with too much stuff to learn and tutorials that I bought from udemy...After , I watch your video , you give me a spirit to be more productive in learning to code. I love your tips . I want to implement it right now... Thanks, Andy

  • @paulntalo1425
    @paulntalo1425 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for being honest and truthfully in your videos. Your so realistic bro.

  • @learnwithtariq5
    @learnwithtariq5 Před 4 lety

    Hope so I will work on these strategies and learn more. Thank you @Andy Sterkowiz

  • @roxannew.9349
    @roxannew.9349 Před 5 lety +10

    Omg. Thank you very much. Quite inspiring and constructive suggestions. Exactly what I need now. Keep on good work buddy.

  • @sebastianfrasher2597
    @sebastianfrasher2597 Před 4 lety

    Yeah I have found number 3 to be VERY useful. I always start explaining what I learn to my parents even though I know they don't understand it, but they know that it strengthens my neural pathways.

  • @bls512
    @bls512 Před 4 lety

    blogging/journaling idea is really solid. thank YOU.

  • @winstong7438
    @winstong7438 Před 4 lety

    This is such a banger video thanks man

  • @Sayuiv
    @Sayuiv Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for another great video!
    So far I'm taking breaks when I really feel to have a stop.
    Regarding active and passive, usually when I follow a video tutorial I always code along, add comments to remember key concept and then upload on github.
    I was thinking to start a YT channel to show the learning process of someone starting from a low level, doing exercises etc...but I will take in consideration also maybe to do a blog, great idea!

  • @strictnonconformist7369

    I’ve been doing this longer than you’ve been alive, and I have at least one friend that’s not a spring chicken working towards becoming a developer (she’s tired of all that goes with working at Home Depot).
    I’m referring her to your videos because you’ve learned how to learn and make progress in a systematic manner, and you’ve posted the videos here. I’ve not been new to development in general for decades now, but my career revolves around constantly learning more, and a system is required for learning: if you stop learning, you stop earning and you dinosaur yourself.
    Particular technologies come and go but learning how to think and learn is timeless and transferrable.

  • @MoonFoxASMR
    @MoonFoxASMR Před 5 lety +1

    These are great; thank you so much!

  • @andyshort4876
    @andyshort4876 Před 4 lety

    Very helpful! Love your channel so much!!

  • @chicagodiva100
    @chicagodiva100 Před 5 lety +4

    I like all your principles, # 5 is what I need to work on because I go on and on until I can figure something out. lol

  • @bahatialfani4783
    @bahatialfani4783 Před 4 lety

    I love these strategies, I've been kinda doing the same with self teaching web development. I work for lyft and uber and during the some windows i have where i don't get rides, I would read a web developer book and during traffic hour i would take a 3 hour break where i go to the library and watch videos on web development but I would start by recapping what I learn the day before by doing some exercise and than jump right in too the new course.

  • @seanpaulson9098
    @seanpaulson9098 Před 4 lety

    This might be the most underrated part of learning. SO important.

  • @ajade7974
    @ajade7974 Před 5 lety +2

    Please make a video of the first programmimg language that you've learned and how did you apply it.

  • @rob8259
    @rob8259 Před 4 lety

    New programmer here learning Java for college. Very good video was not only good for programming, but for studying in general.

  • @josephlivengood4508
    @josephlivengood4508 Před 4 lety

    Hi Andy, the teaching method is what I use. I am currently taking a course on nodeJS and my notes are very clear and the code is typed out so that if anybody see them they can follow alone and build the app from scratch. I do this for the following reasons, #1 I know I won't be able to remember it all #2 as you said, acting like I'm teaching it myself really helps to remember #3 never know if later I am to build the same app, the videos may no longer be available so my notes will be very valiable. #4 I may just create a blog or a how to page with my step by step notes.
    thanks for sharing this with us, I am also a self taught until I decided to take courses on udemy.

  • @stef6963
    @stef6963 Před 3 lety

    This isn’t just for programming, he explained self learning very well here for any subject

  • @chetanyakanwal3087
    @chetanyakanwal3087 Před 4 lety

    Thanks Andy for such a insightful video on the subject.
    The 5 points that andy makes are spot on. Did a course on node, working on angular course.
    Naturally picked up 4, except explaining / writing what I have learned. Will give it a try for sure.
    The 5th is most important at least in my opinion, because lack of good rest/ fitness level will greatly reduce your mental and emotional capacity, the thing you need most in this trade or any. Don't engage in unhealthy working patterns.
    One more thing, the thing thats working for me to learn new concepts is,
    To give 2 passes to a tutorial, as concepts are difficult to grasp. In the first pass, it may seem like a waste of time as you are understanding very little. But, believe me, somehow the first pass enables understanding in the second pass. Accompany 2nd pass with hands on coding, you can do 1st pass without actual practice of coding.

  • @FizXify
    @FizXify Před 5 lety

    Thank you so much, very helpful tips!

  • @shivamjalotra7919
    @shivamjalotra7919 Před 5 lety +13

    Downloaded this video, one of the best I have seen in a while.Thankyou

  • @ocrcro
    @ocrcro Před 4 lety

    thanks for your advice, noted

  • @bbv481
    @bbv481 Před 3 lety

    I have seen many videos of yours, but I subscribed after watching this very video.

  • @ArronSealmoyGuitar
    @ArronSealmoyGuitar Před 5 lety +3

    Best inspirational speaker on CZcams!

  • @saydilmorsalin4020
    @saydilmorsalin4020 Před 3 lety

    thanks youtube for the recommendation of this great video. Best 5 tips I ever seen and many many thanks to Andy

  • @lamemaniacsss777
    @lamemaniacsss777 Před 4 lety

    So true. I am sometimes so motivated to learn something that i would be fixated on it for months and when i am stuck on something and i don't get answers i get distracted and go on a google parade and waste time and slowly i start loosing interest and there goes my whole month of motivation. Thank you for these strategies, i think keeping track of questions would best suit me.

  • @Mint-nt6ly
    @Mint-nt6ly Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you so much for your content! I regret I haven't found your channel earlier

  • @modaryaghi
    @modaryaghi Před 4 lety

    Straightforward. I admire it.
    Thanks a lot.

  • @lordofshadow7041
    @lordofshadow7041 Před 3 lety

    That is very helpful for developers as well they need to understand what you are saying.
    Thank you for the tips🙂

  • @mralbert1030
    @mralbert1030 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank very much Andy

  • @widevision6121
    @widevision6121 Před 4 lety

    I am trying to learn code my self, your advice is really helpful. thanks

  • @gwenobenza8820
    @gwenobenza8820 Před 4 lety

    I was honestly gonna complete the lesson in a week, LOL. Now I'm spacing it out. Glad I come across this video.

  • @ernestmyrmyr9932
    @ernestmyrmyr9932 Před 4 lety

    this video has solved all my learning problems !))
    Thank u so much !!

  • @hramonp
    @hramonp Před 4 lety

    Great tips, I've been wasting a lot of time and giving my brain too much to process, thanks to you I'm being more and more productive 👨🏻‍💻

  • @barunkumarpal9641
    @barunkumarpal9641 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks a lot, Sir. Love you from India.

  • @EquinoXReZ
    @EquinoXReZ Před 3 lety

    Awesome definitely gonna implement a couple of these. I’m gonna make a google doc dedicated to blogging/ explaining concepts that I learned. I’ll also make another google doc dedicated to questions that pop up as I’m learning.

  • @JP-zp6ob
    @JP-zp6ob Před 3 lety

    thanks man, good video. lots of good insight

  • @keshavdk3080
    @keshavdk3080 Před 4 lety

    Thank you very much for this video and also mentoring the people who strive to be excel in software development everyday.

  • @bharadwajtke
    @bharadwajtke Před 5 lety +1

    Great work... Thanks for sharing

  • @dendydarin3085
    @dendydarin3085 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks Andy!

  • @rishushrivastav4591
    @rishushrivastav4591 Před 5 lety

    nicely elaborated well done! thank you

  • @LeocadioMagat
    @LeocadioMagat Před rokem

    Enough Rest, Spacing, Balance between active learning and passive learning, Formulating the idea, Keep track on what is going on by asking questions

  • @JuanGarcia-zy8yw
    @JuanGarcia-zy8yw Před 4 lety

    What have worked for me amazingly is reading + writing summaries of chapters of every book I read.similarly, evaluating coding examples and coding up small programs off the top of my head that relate to the concept that was just explained; while reading and writing. I also love reading about the same subject from different authors. I've been doing this for a few years now. My memory and concept-dissecting skills are through the roof. To the point that I can remember pages and chapters etc even months without re-touching the subject. Also, I have adapted to certain reading / coding pattern ratios that I've noticed are efficient. So basically I've been learning how to learn. And when I need to review something I go to my notes. Also , this allows me to constantly read code from a lot of people . I don't skip paragraphs or code until I fully understand it. My code is always evolving. I have focused on only Java , paradigms , and algorithms the past almost 3 years. I usually recommend people to be more conceptually inclined rather than just syntax inclined. And avoid those learn x thing I just x hours Bs you find on youtube. Thank you for your tips

  • @zanasilivani3004
    @zanasilivani3004 Před 2 lety

    Those are some great points, I think when it comes to programming, beginners more focus more on watching tot than practicing what they have learned. This vid explain really well the importance of active learning. great vid