How To Remember Everything You Learn

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2018
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Komentáře • 5K

  • @kurzgesagt
    @kurzgesagt Před 6 lety +13419

    Great Video!

  • @leonardgabrielcaburaliv9739
    @leonardgabrielcaburaliv9739 Před 3 lety +3386

    "It is impossible for a man to learn what he thinks he already knows."
    -Epictetus

  • @JC-bk3lz
    @JC-bk3lz Před 3 lety +3128

    I came here for a learning tip, came out with a new approach to life.

  • @jstshageo
    @jstshageo Před 2 lety +75

    "...our bias towards novelty is strong, and forces us towards the trivial, rather than the essential."
    Felt that.🖤❤️

  • @gownerjones1450
    @gownerjones1450 Před 2 lety +93

    Interesting to hear that there is a name for my learning technique. My mother taught me that you know you understand something when you can explain it to someone else. Now I know that's called the Feynman technique. I've always done this. When I was in school, studying for something and even now that I'm in university, I still call up my mom and explain whatever advanced mathematics concept I'm learning to her, so I can be sure I understand it myself.

    • @antoniofuller2331
      @antoniofuller2331 Před 2 lety +3

      Is that so. . .

    • @gownerjones1450
      @gownerjones1450 Před 2 lety

      @@antoniofuller2331 Yes?

    • @Sam-bc9ll
      @Sam-bc9ll Před 2 lety +9

      I just got done explaining this video to my mom lol. I've recently come to grapple with the reality that I've committed very little (if anything) to long-term memory. I really am a "mindless consumer of data". I used to explain it away as having phenomenal short-term memory at the expense of my long-term memory, but it's time I started learning what I'm paying exorbitantly for.

    • @dinofrog926
      @dinofrog926 Před 2 lety +1

      maybe it should be called the Saylor Twift’s mom technique

    • @gownerjones1450
      @gownerjones1450 Před 2 lety

      @@dinofrog926 Yeah it really should.

  • @antialeks5013
    @antialeks5013 Před 3 lety +2435

    "I have a big brain"
    "Does that mean you're smarter?"
    "No, I'm stupid faster."

  • @Debar28
    @Debar28 Před 5 lety +1943

    "I tricked myself into thinking I was competent" story of my life

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 Před 5 lety +58

      If you push that far enough, you could have a promising career in politics.

    • @cricticalthinking4098
      @cricticalthinking4098 Před 4 lety +24

      Story of 99.9% of our lives I think

    • @PaulDesJardinsEntertainment
      @PaulDesJardinsEntertainment Před 4 lety +21

      You were competent enough to comment!

    • @porkchop6760
      @porkchop6760 Před 4 lety +3

      same 😢

    • @wu1ming9shi
      @wu1ming9shi Před 4 lety +6

      @@slappy8941 or any other job where you have to be socially competent (just keep talking like you know all about it XD)

  • @blessedthisday
    @blessedthisday Před rokem +12

    I can’t believe this video is 4 years old & I’m just now seeing it. This resonates so highly with me & is by far the best video hands down that I’ve ever come across! My understanding has been transcended! Thank you 🙏

  • @marioskomnos4661
    @marioskomnos4661 Před 2 lety +62

    Excellent video. It affected me in a positive way, to realize even more how much damage social media are causing to our brains. An addiction for brain destruction.

  • @stuart124
    @stuart124 Před 3 lety +628

    "Tell me and I'll forget,
    Show me and I'll remember,
    Involve me and I'll learn."
    A useful quote for all, especially anyone who has to plan lessons or training.

    • @coachian.m
      @coachian.m Před 2 lety +7

      I like that

    • @coachian.m
      @coachian.m Před 2 lety +9

      "Tell me and I'll forget,
      Show me and I'll remember,
      Involve me and I'll learn."

    • @ixchelssong
      @ixchelssong Před 2 lety +2

      Yes. Case in point: Once long ago a was in a graduate-level seminar class. We were each given complex topics to research and present to the rest of the class. After each presentation we would discuss and ask questions, which the presenter (at least in theory) could answer. Fast forward to exam time... We answered questions about all the topics discussed, and there was also a list of questions, from which we chose one to present an argument about. That one answer was 30% of the exam grade. Luckily, one of the choices involved my class presentation topic! I confidently wrote my argument, because that was the topic I knew inside and out, though it had been weeks since I presented it. I had a hard time with recalling enough about the other presentations to answer any of the other questions. Thanks to this video, I now know how remedy that kind of situation! :D

    • @SylkieDev
      @SylkieDev Před 2 lety

      @@coachian.m
      "Tell me and I'll forget,
      Show me and I'll remember,
      Involve me and I'll learn.

    • @Wetlikewata1
      @Wetlikewata1 Před 2 lety +1

      Wish all teachers implemented this into their classrooms

  • @Edyremoh
    @Edyremoh Před 4 lety +751

    This is an insecurity that has plagued me for years. You're brave for sharing your downfalls. Thank you.

    • @xurrmusic
      @xurrmusic Před 4 lety +5

      Enormous. Anxiety added. I’m trying this from tomorrow. How’s your training going on?

    • @Edyremoh
      @Edyremoh Před 4 lety +7

      @@xurrmusic I haven't practiced jackshit actually.

    • @xurrmusic
      @xurrmusic Před 4 lety +3

      Moh K oh man ! Haha I hope this works out. Imma come back here after a month. Let’s see if things change. Quite inspirational actually.

    • @Edyremoh
      @Edyremoh Před 4 lety +20

      @@xurrmusic I kinda forgot what tips the video gave, so I'll have to check it out again.
      In my own experience, the best advice I can give is to be open and honest about your lack of comprehension, and take initiative to refresh your memory when needed. And also, all my important thoughts live in a notepad. The most simple shit. I'll stop people and pull out my notebook, even if they say it's not necessary. It is necessary cause I will fucking forget everything.

    • @xurrmusic
      @xurrmusic Před 4 lety +2

      Moh K 😂hell yeah.

  • @davidn2749
    @davidn2749 Před 2 lety +3

    What's scary is finding this video for the "first time" and seeing it's already liked......

  • @AbdulRehman-ui3nj
    @AbdulRehman-ui3nj Před 2 lety +12

    Recall: There are two types of memory , short term and long term , understanding lies in long term , and to reach to that part it has to go through short term and a phase working memory in which the information is quickly vanishes , if information survives in this part it'll make it to long term memory and to do it there are several techniques first technique is to whenever you do some learning do it in parts, don't try to overwhelm yourself by reading 2 pages if you can't recall them , the main thing to do is to recall it by closing the book and telling to your brain what you have read about and if you can't recall it just read it again with focus and you will see that now you can recall it , repeat this process over and over again with the content you consume daily , due to large stream of informations , it is impossible for our brain to focus that results in no grasp over any single information, so the best thing to do is to switch your phone off (unless you are consuming content on it xd ) and get rid of all t e distractions when you are consuming content, Now after this , here comes the second technique called feymann technique , in which you try to write down the explanation of what you have learned , and if you can not write an explanation of it, go back to the source and again try to repeat the process of recalling, and after you are successful in writing that explanation , simplify it down and get rid of difficult terms. Now you have to make analogies of this simpler version of your explanation , which means you have to implement in such a way that whenever you see or recall that analogy , the whole topic comes in to your mind, that's the goal of it. Now after this you will have pretty solid knowledge and to solidify it more you HAVE to make a schedule of a month, in which you re read the same damn book after three days and when the month is about to end, CRUSH it for 3 THREE consecutive days and now you know that you have become a better version of yourself. Thanks for reading this so far, i hope that i have summarized the video in a good manner as my practice of feymann technique xd, Cheers

    • @ratbullkan
      @ratbullkan Před 10 měsíci +1

      What I've also learned is when you learn a new concept, play it through in your mind with examples, at least two different ones, no matter how superfluous it seems, just to build some associations.

    • @AbdulRehman-ui3nj
      @AbdulRehman-ui3nj Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@ratbullkan thanks for replying
      I'm happy to see the comment I made an year ago

    • @7hello
      @7hello Před 5 měsíci +1

      One thing to note is if you learn something using these techniques or any other, but you don’t use that information by it self or in relation to other things you will, sooner or later, forget it

  • @otium5626
    @otium5626 Před 3 lety +319

    Some advice for learning
    1. Recall within the first 30 seconds of learning something
    2. Feymann technique, use what you have learned so you can express it to a 5 year old
    3. Use mental repetition, your brain is a muscle, use your time wisely to wire your neurones to be able to effectively remember max capacity.
    Some extra tips
    - Don’t try to focus on many things, just one
    - Don’t try remember everything, understand the use of Quality information over quantity
    - Develop intellectual humility. Understand and detach from your perspectives to learn others to gain a better understanding.
    -> fight/argument to find peace

    • @01010.
      @01010. Před rokem +3

      Thank you so much @OTIUM

  • @AlbanianFix
    @AlbanianFix Před 2 lety +884

    "If you can't explain it to a six year old, you don't understand it yourself"
    - Albert Einstein

  • @VarshaManoj
    @VarshaManoj Před 2 lety +85

    This was really useful. I have been constantly suffering from information retention. The methods explained in the video can be a bit difficult for me as I get distracted very easily.. but I'll definitely try it out. Thank you!

    • @augusto9012
      @augusto9012 Před rokem +2

      I don't get it. How do you suffer from information retention? Isn't it a good thing?

    • @yeid44
      @yeid44 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@augusto9012you can have bad or good information retention

  • @lebleulebleu1274
    @lebleulebleu1274 Před 2 lety +18

    Dude this is one of those rare masterpiece o youtube. The high quality editing to transmit the words and ideas your are tryingto make people understand.. just great man. Thank you so much for all that work.
    On top of that the 3 techniques given in it are actually reall really useful. I've used the look away and recall quickly what you just read, along with teaching it to somebody asap with great success, definitly increased my retension and mastery about subjects I was learning at a time.

  • @miniaturemango7190
    @miniaturemango7190 Před 3 lety +778

    Little cheat sheet for myself in a simple manner:
    Focus on 1 thing
    Look away and think about it
    Write out a way of teaching it to someone else in a simple manner
    Redo, relearn, practice thought

    • @jpjp9111
      @jpjp9111 Před 3 lety +9

      This is my pre video preview to prepare so that I can remember it better. Ok, now to watch the video.

    • @pamlemm903
      @pamlemm903 Před 3 lety +19

      Why does everyone here fail to comprehend the difference between knowing something and understanding it? Have you never been taught the words: knowledge and understanding? Do they seem as synonyms to you? They literally differentiate between what you do normally and what you call a cheat. Its not a cheat. Its literally what we call understanding something. To know something but not be able to comprehend from whence it comes, is not to understand something. That is to know something. Literally 'know something' was the given, should we really be surprised that it is thus the conclusion? No. If you know something you know something. Just because you know something doesn't mean you understand it. Knowledge is data. Understanding is grasping the dynamics (elements and their relations) that give rise to all computable data. Are kids in school really this intellectually impoverished?

    • @wellnesspathforme6236
      @wellnesspathforme6236 Před 3 lety +3

      @@pamlemm903 Until you understand something, you can not know it. Rather, you either believe it (a sucker), or are considering/evaluating it (one trained in the intellectual self-defense arts).
      This entire Money Power Monopolists Empire system sits on a foundation of appeal to authority logical fallacy where the debt-based money serfs believe they know what they are told without actually understanding it.

    • @pamlemm903
      @pamlemm903 Před 3 lety +3

      @@wellnesspathforme6236 what are you taking about? You're not really speaking in the scientific sense. What about a data point? If I say: a measurement of 84 degrees Kelvin.
      You can't know what the measurement was?
      Obviously you can. So I can't agree with your assertion that you can't know something unless you understand it.
      But do you understand 84 degrees Kelvin? No. Understanding 84° is not possible because you don't even have established premises to articulate a sense of context. You can know it. It is 84° Kelvin. Just as you and I can and do know it since I introduced its existence and identity.
      But where it comes from is a matter of understanding. Understanding being the comprehension of elements and their relationships between them in any given context.

    • @wellnesspathforme6236
      @wellnesspathforme6236 Před 3 lety +2

      @@pamlemm903 The scientific method is curiosity plus a subset algorithm of the trivium method of intellectual self-defense.
      If you told that to an alien in a thought experiment, would you expect the alien to know what you were talking about in your language? It would seem they have some logically assembling of relevant data to do (language, temperature definitions), right?
      Is the point more clear now?
      You do bring up a good point -- there are different levels of understanding. For example, you can understand something in a very real way, or you can understand something in an abstract way with no real world experience -- and those are two very different levels of understanding.
      ...
      The Trivium Method of Intellectual Self-Defense -- schoolsucksproject.com/tag/gene-odening/
      Logical Fallacy Free Applied Logic -- www.triviumeducation.com/logic/
      Note: there is a WAR on the plain meaning of "appeal to authority" logical fallacy because the Empire wants you to implicitly believe (ie, worship) their "authorities'" UNSUBSTANTIATED CLAIMS.
      Any authority, whether fake or real, who claims something is true because s/he said it was true is utilizing an "appeal to authority" logical fallacy. PERIOD.
      Real knowledge is the result of logically assembled relevant grammar that is free of both contradictions and logical fallacy dependence.
      The two biggest logical fallacies that are used to program the unwitting minds of the masses are 1. appeal to authority, and 2. appeal to popularity (popular opinion being formed primarily via appeal to authority, so they are related).
      Caveat emptor!
      Gatto Vignettes Courtesy of School Sucks Podcast -- schoolsucksproject.com/john-taylor-gatto/
      Underground History Lesson With John Taylor Gatto - AMAZING! 5 Hour Interview! -- czcams.com/video/uj8f7ycnUtU/video.html

  • @jacky7878
    @jacky7878 Před 3 lety +2423

    7:05
    1. Recall - after you read it - look away from material and try recall it
    2. Feynman Technique - explain it to a 5 year old
    3. Spaced Repetition - repeat for more myelination
    - Prioritize the essential - “Our job is to find a few intelligent things to do,
    not keep up with every damn thing in the world.”

  • @yusufdadkhah7561
    @yusufdadkhah7561 Před 2 lety +2

    my summary of memory techniques:
    1. Recall - after you read it - look away from material and try recall it
    2. Feynman Technique - explain it to a 5 year old
    3. Spaced Repetition - repeat for more myelination
    also do remeber too look away and remeber any information you have just taken in.
    spending little as 30 seconds or less going over the main points will help you vastly understand it better after you watch some educationial videos and convert it into long term memory. the feynman technique is basicially chosing something you want to understand and write out an explanation of it as if it a person did not know the subject. it is also whenever you stuck go back to the material and re learn it then after you should be able to write about it without using the material source, simplify it by removing the technical wording, so that a child could get what your teaching. analogies connect complex idea with something more relatable. the spaced repetion is exactly what i know it is. focusing one thing at a time in learning would make it easier.

  • @Rogelio_007
    @Rogelio_007 Před rokem +11

    Thanks! It's easy to feel alone and isolated with memory challenges. Great to know everyone struggles with the same thing.

  • @faroniron8190
    @faroniron8190 Před 5 lety +1590

    So I have to watch the video again... SWEET

    • @knosis
      @knosis Před 5 lety +43

      Not necessarily. One must use active recall to see how much they could remember after watching the video. That way, they could build a stronger neuronal connection in the brain.

    • @sirjuke9j
      @sirjuke9j Před 5 lety +33

      Knosis You right but one must also use the Feynman Technique to fill in the gaps of knowledge *watches video for a 5th time*

    • @DanyIsDeadChannel313
      @DanyIsDeadChannel313 Před 5 lety +13

      @@sirjuke9j yeah this video is amazing. Watch it as many times. But I can tell you: the book by Barbara Oakley I read it 3 times and have no regret (A mind for number on learning how to learn).

    • @AndrewGrosso
      @AndrewGrosso Před 5 lety +3

      😂😂

    • @bambooindark1
      @bambooindark1 Před 5 lety +6

      @@DanyIsDeadChannel313 +1 for the book: A mind for numbers: How to excel at math and science , by Barbara Oakley

  • @renseragaki4637
    @renseragaki4637 Před 4 lety +147

    The worst thing is that, when you’re in school/university, you have no choice but to follow a lot of tasks all together........maybe you’d like to spend a little more time on a particular subject to understand it fully but if you get showered with new tasks you need to get done, here comes the “cram everything into your brain” system.

    • @rosesforhanjisung4161
      @rosesforhanjisung4161 Před 3 lety +12

      I'm late but if it helps, that's where you can slip in techniques of active learning techniques while taking advantage of efficiency for stuff you don't really have an interest in knowing further. So for example, I use active learning whenever I can like in class when taking notes, I take notes as active as I can like it's a part of learning (repeating or summarizing) and help for later repetition/revision. Also making sure I know the outline/direction/main points and important points of the lesson by underlining them as the teacher usually points out while explaining so I can understand and apply the basics more. Some people can actually understand the lesson straight off and they apply it in class or to everyday life when the thing studied about occurs (they use it in jokes or learn more about it through analysis and further inquiry)
      I do still do cramming lol but active learning reaps benefits for those no-time-to-even-review or so-much-inbetween-the-lines analytical tests and even after the tests so I prefer to do it if I can

    • @gogoplu
      @gogoplu Před 3 lety

      @@rosesforhanjisung4161 thank-you so much your comment was helpful to me 😊

    • @rosesforhanjisung4161
      @rosesforhanjisung4161 Před 3 lety +1

      @@gogoplu aw ofc, you're welcome, really glad it helps 💫☺️

    • @hochminus-iy7ro
      @hochminus-iy7ro Před 3 lety +6

      @Imran A That's a bit too harsh i think. Not everyone is born as an autodidact and able to learn alone (yet efficiently). There are a lot of different people out there with various perceptions, abilities, backgrounds, etc.. Some learn better alone and at their own pace, some might not even start to learn given such a free environment, both might be equal able to understand the same topic. Some might just need to sit in a big lecture hall and their brain will start getting focused, others will get tired. We should have room for different learning types and paces.

    • @AliceAttentionWhore
      @AliceAttentionWhore Před 3 lety

      @Ren This is referred to as "sausage stuffing" in Swedish. I think we need sausage stuffing in school. It's forcing people to learn and remember. It can be quite painful though.
      I think the school should encourage students to search for deeper knowledge and understanding. But most people aren't like that. They just want to memorize the basic facts and get on with it.
      While I don't think the education system that we discuss is perfect... I do think that there are just a shit-ton of boring stuff you need to learn. This needs to be prioritized. Once you've done that, you can choose what you want to master. This thinking should be applied on both a micro level (task-to-task; easy and hars questions) and macro level (the individual educational career and intellectual life; boring stuff in ground school, more fucused in uni) and everything in between (e.g. paper-writing at the end each terms.)
      If you're really into learning, you can recapitulate the things you've learned, on the summer vacation and on free time.

  • @JWolff-md3ij
    @JWolff-md3ij Před 2 lety +18

    I feel your pain sir, I'm an overthinker. To know anything I can throw most of a day away in the effort. While I was listening to this video I mused to myself that you probably come back to your video over and over to reference the information about knowing things 😁 Thank you for the video.

  • @winterrobot9605
    @winterrobot9605 Před 2 lety +7

    I'm just beginning to self-learn math and physics. And after half a lifetime of various issues, this is amazing advice. I spent the past day learning about Feynman! And as an ex-psychology major, I just want to say thank you so much!

    • @taraleigh9951
      @taraleigh9951 Před rokem

      I'm doing the same but can't remember anything 😕

  • @ryanxu548
    @ryanxu548 Před 5 lety +1005

    Recall: 7:10
    Feynman: 7:50
    Spaced repetition: 8:50

    • @fesouza8627
      @fesouza8627 Před 5 lety +3

      Thaaaaaaaanks

    • @victornoagbodji
      @victornoagbodji Před 4 lety

      thanks man!

    • @pectoralis1565
      @pectoralis1565 Před 4 lety +14

      I hope you all watch the whole video though.

    • @MsCreativePurpose
      @MsCreativePurpose Před 4 lety +6

      Thanks so much.. he took 7 minutes to get to the point OMG!!!

    • @yosha2467
      @yosha2467 Před 4 lety +42

      ​@@MsCreativePurpose Why would you blindly follow techniques without providing reasoning for them, which is what the 7 minutes are about.

  • @homemadesocks
    @homemadesocks Před 5 lety +993

    "I cannot remember the books I've read more than the meals I've eaten, even so they have made me". -Ralph Waldo Emmerson

    • @arthurallenbrown1305
      @arthurallenbrown1305 Před 5 lety +7

      Very brilliant

    • @aBigBadWolf
      @aBigBadWolf Před 5 lety +24

      Definitely a popular quote when responding to the inability of remembering the details of past experiences (books here). While I share my sympathy with what it points out, it is hard to confirm by any measure. I'd love to know if someone has unpacked it at a deeper level. Does anyone have some good links for me?

    • @bambooindark1
      @bambooindark1 Před 5 lety +11

      Me too, I always forgot things I'd learned. I have really bad memory and I have no way to prevent this, even I tried very hard to hold it, my memory still "volatile" away.

    • @animeconnoisseur2904
      @animeconnoisseur2904 Před 5 lety

      Well said.

    • @kirkkork
      @kirkkork Před 5 lety +1

      This is an amazing quote!

  • @Tysto
    @Tysto Před rokem +2

    I have always naturally absorbed information & then imagined explaining it to someone else. It ALWAYS results in better understand & usually produces new insights. If I’m creating something, the act of explaining it, & explaining why i think something simpler won’t work, often allows me to discover how to MAKE it work.

  • @Raccon_Detective.
    @Raccon_Detective. Před 2 lety +456

    03:06 Charlie Munger
    03:56 How the memory works
    04:45 Working memory
    06:05 Multitasking
    07:30 Practicing recall
    07:51 The feynman technique
    08:51 Spaced repetition
    12:34 The shallows by Nicholas Carr

    • @BruklinBridge
      @BruklinBridge Před 2 lety +11

      Thanks, because at 2:34, he's still pitching a video I have already clicked on. I was about to bail.

    • @jackinthecube
      @jackinthecube Před 2 lety +3

      The real MVP. Thank you

    • @mrbmp09
      @mrbmp09 Před 2 lety +2

      13:21 and less than 1 min of useful info.
      I'm glad I FF thru it.

    • @TheAdomas11
      @TheAdomas11 Před rokem

      Thought this was a joke, but this is literally what he told you not to do

    • @01010.
      @01010. Před rokem

      Tq bro

  • @placebo5466
    @placebo5466 Před 5 lety +1311

    These are some tips, they work for me. Maybe not for everyone. I've been reading a book a month so far this year (well I've made it to 6 books so far).
    1. Mark up your books, take notes in the margins or underline/highlight things that stick out to you.
    2. Stop reading and contemplate parts that you feel are important to you. Or are pivotal moments in the story.
    3. Try to relate those pivotal moments to current events or state of affairs going on. Compare them to your own personal experience.
    4. Takes notes on any profound thoughts you had while reading a chapter. Usually when chapters end, they only take up 1/4 or 1/2 of the page. Write a quick summary of that chapter on the blank part of that page.
    5. Once you are done reading, immediately take out a notebook or open up Word, and write your opinions on what you read, while it's still fresh. Doesn't have to be anything fancy or written like a college report. Just WRITE!
    The last step has helped me immensely. I've made a folder and have written a short report (around 1000 words per book) and have gone back occasionally to add notes here and there from just thinking about the story weeks later. Or when talking to friends who have read the book as well, and made connections and critiques I hadn't thought of. This is a good skill to develop. It's help with listening, critical thinking and helps your writing. Win, win, win.
    Hope This Helps!
    Edit: Thank you for the wonderful responses. Yes, these are tips for beginners. I've noticed this method eventually bleeds over to mentally taking notes. Eventually you won't have to do EVERY step, but it builds the "muscle memory" in your brain to help with retaining information later on.

    • @EGLovebird
      @EGLovebird Před 5 lety +19

      thanks for sharing intelligent experience

    • @piggystories2272
      @piggystories2272 Před 5 lety +7

      That's awesome thanks for the insight. Let me try some of the things you are doing.

    • @The_Dutch_Jaguar
      @The_Dutch_Jaguar Před 5 lety +27

      @Jt Hendrix Yes, intelligent people that want to be erudite read books.
      If you want to bag my groceries or work at Mcdonalds for the rest of your life and hang out with weed-smoking dopeheads -- Go ahead.
      Some people actually pursue meaning in life and want to be the best they can be.

    • @angelicaterry3367
      @angelicaterry3367 Před 5 lety +10

      This definitely helps. A lot I do already but it's great to have them echoed back. Reinforces my practice. And I really hope to write, so your last paragraph gave me hopeful joy.

    • @KurtSennerich
      @KurtSennerich Před 5 lety +8

      Why don't you read only what you currently need instead of artificially creating demand for the knowledge presented? I mean, you don't read a book about stoicism when you want to know how to use a welding machine.

  • @SpartanR61
    @SpartanR61 Před rokem +1

    The value of understanding your opponent's views cannot be overstated.

  • @mr.chipotle9716
    @mr.chipotle9716 Před 2 lety +3

    So I'm an artist, I do art, draw, and other things
    The one major concept that hits hard to me was the 'Spaced Repetition' and specifically "Spaced" because I tried to practice a lot and study the human anatomy that I draw every night, and because I was repeating things over and over again, I've gotten better BUT
    It led to me being burnt out because I didn't add spaces to those practices and didn't take a break from it
    If you wanna learn something quickly and in an efficient way, don't just repeat it over and over again, tale a break from the topic for a day or two and it will be better

  • @hapchepsihologiq
    @hapchepsihologiq Před 5 lety +738

    Your mind is NOT a computer, your mind is a muscle, so don't trust your memory!
    If you want something to get into your long-term memory instead of the short one, see if you can explain to yourself or someone the information you just acquired. If you cannot do, it simply means that you do not know it, so go again and re-watch or read it until you can explain it and it makes sense. We said the mind is a muscle so the more you learn, the more you learn.
    Quit multitasking and remove distractions so you can focus on quality over quantity.
    What i also do is, i use post-it notes, i write the very important things that i bump into through my day and i still stick them on my wall in my bedroom or somewhere around my desk so i can see them and read them often. They motivate me, they show to me that i am serious and i keep going to reach my goals. If you read this coment - Be Lengedary !

    • @knico7074
      @knico7074 Před 5 lety +11

      Your mind is not a computer, your mind is a muscle, so don't trust your computer!!!

    • @rydersonthestorm7175
      @rydersonthestorm7175 Před 5 lety +15

      Incorrect. The mind is a computer that corrupts all files everytime you recall them into your working memory. The prefrontal cortex very much functions like a google search bar but our neural connections are like muscles in that the more we use them, the deeper the pathways are deepened so to speak. I suppose the brain works with both analogies.

    • @jayant9151
      @jayant9151 Před 5 lety +1

      Ok what are some subjects I should study?

    • @MatthiasKrijgsman
      @MatthiasKrijgsman Před 4 lety

      Срасибо :)

    • @desmondw4052
      @desmondw4052 Před 4 lety

      awesome,thank you for trans it into words

  • @uriaanduplessis4124
    @uriaanduplessis4124 Před 4 lety +644

    This is really relevant to me. I’ve been over-learning to feed my craving for knowledge, but I’m not really as smart as I think I am. Thanks for the great video!

    • @user-cj8kl8qb9j
      @user-cj8kl8qb9j Před 3 lety +15

      SAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAaame

    • @probablyryan8151
      @probablyryan8151 Před 3 lety +40

      If your not as smart as you think you are dont you enter a loop in which you are exponentially stupid?

    • @uriaanduplessis4124
      @uriaanduplessis4124 Před 3 lety +17

      @@probablyryan8151 you figured it out

    • @praveenanookala4457
      @praveenanookala4457 Před 3 lety +5

      @@probablyryan8151 whoa

    • @alwaysbored47
      @alwaysbored47 Před 3 lety +9

      I'm still in the process of denying it and I plan to do so forever.

  • @nicholasallarick2633
    @nicholasallarick2633 Před 2 lety +8

    Great quality content!!
    It’s so relatable to what I’m experiencing in my years of studies. We’re so frequently forced to indulge vast amount of information without letting it sink in and have it stored to long term memory. What you gave is one of the best honest practical explanation and tips I’ve ever encountered!!

  • @yaberries
    @yaberries Před 2 lety

    I appreciate how well paced you were in speaking, it kept me engaged the entire time.

  • @adanoshi3645
    @adanoshi3645 Před 3 lety +89

    Don't mind me:
    ✓ 3 days gap in learning something (for a whole month)
    ✓ Read, Recall, Repeat
    ✓ Write it out like how you're teaching someone

  • @benbriggsmusic
    @benbriggsmusic Před 6 lety +740

    This video really speaks to a problem I’ve been having; feeling like good ideas and information are “slipping away” despite countless meetings, discussions and brainstorming sessions. I remember HAVING good ideas to advance my life but they never “stick” and I’m left puzzled as to why nothing has changed.
    This got me thinking about using force of will to try and commit the best ideas to long-term memory instead of assuming my brain can act in my own best interest automatically. Thank you!

    • @warpdrivefueledbyinsomnia8165
      @warpdrivefueledbyinsomnia8165 Před 6 lety +11

      That's a very good method (at least for me). I've hung on to notes for almost all of my college courses and other online courses. When I go back and re-read them in my own words, I'm surprised by how much I can recall on the subject. I use those same notes to fill in holes that I can't remember. This is what I use to refresh information when I get ready for something like a job interview.

    • @arlet101
      @arlet101 Před 5 lety +6

      i feel exactly the same. sometimes when i mediated on simple ideas they turn to awesome ideas that make me feel really good and hopeful for my future only to then when i sit to "work" my mind is emptier than my coffee machine lol

    • @beastmasterbg
      @beastmasterbg Před 5 lety +2

      One way to fix that is to start writing when an idea comes up or tought

    • @cyberneticbutterfly8506
      @cyberneticbutterfly8506 Před 5 lety +8

      You might like the tree-leaf method. Simply speaking if you got a list of the countries in Europe you woudln't remember them. If you got a map of Europe and an article for each country grouped into those close to eachother then you would forget most of the detailed content in the article describing each country (leaf knowledge) but you would more likely remember the names of the countries. (branch knowledge) or the spesific groups of countries. Basically it's harder to forget the words that name large sets of subknowledge. Even harder to forget the words that name sets of sets of subknowledge.

    • @MaximC
      @MaximC Před 5 lety +3

      Ben Briggs,
      Could you give some examples of those ideas that "are slipping away"?
      Depending on what idea you mean, it maybe the case that those ideas "are slipping away" because they are "built" on originally wrong premises/fundamentals... Example: trying to fix economic problems by using tools built on fundamentally wrong "economic" dogma (today's catch 22).
      P.S.
      Wish more details on what I wrote here, let me know, I'll provide links to few CZcams videos/presentations/documentaries that explain it more thoroughly.

  • @biblestudent6635
    @biblestudent6635 Před 2 lety

    You actually had my concept in the beginning of the Video.
    !Warning the Brain may not be able to keep up in making neuro structures!
    1 Get the main point from a punctuation up to three words. Meaning you get the point up to three main words within a comma, or period and use that.
    2 Write these words down one time then erase or delete them. You will rewrite them again later on.
    3 Then use those three words on your hands count each word for seven times that's each word in hand
    Ex. We often place our valuable things in the care of others.
    So: “place-things-others”
    4 At the seventh time after doing this, rewrite these words.
    “place-things-others”
    Then make them into a sentence.
    This usually works if you articulate between two or more 3 phrase words.
    Ex.
    “We often place our valuable things in the care of others.”
    “We may deposit our money in a bank.”
    “place-things-others”
    “Deposit-money-bank”
    5 The more things you add eventually the more easier it gets
    6 Then you want to make it into a sentence
    We place our things in others' care.
    Like how we deposit money into our banks.
    You can also make these into letters the first letter of the word changed into a phrase.
    PTO place things others
    DMB Deposit money bank
    Remember to articulate between the two, and I don't mean rhyme I mean say between the two or three words.
    just three things a day three phrases
    At the end of 365 day or a year you will find you know more than 1,000 things.

  • @PierreAlainAdouane
    @PierreAlainAdouane Před 2 lety +16

    Seriously, one of the very best videos I have ever seen, and to which I can totally relate...
    A huge thank you !

  • @daniel_netzel
    @daniel_netzel Před 6 lety +846

    This, and your video on The Attention Economy should be required viewing for everyone who spends a lot of time on the internet. I think I struggle with wanting to be great at everything, knowledgeable on every subject, but there's just not enough time in the day to be amazing at everything. Man, I'll have to revisit this video many more times, thanks for this Will.

    • @oddnejmus
      @oddnejmus Před 5 lety +50

      There is much wisdom in the proverb: ‘he who grasps at too much loses everything’.

    • @beastmasterbg
      @beastmasterbg Před 5 lety +26

      Don't worry mate i feel the same way. Theres just not enough time to learn everything. I have that feeling all the time when i start reading a book of biology or physics or psychology.

    • @SolaceCaelus
      @SolaceCaelus Před 5 lety +16

      I know the feeling all to well, it's almost overwhelming. So much choice so little time :'(

    • @origamiworld2014
      @origamiworld2014 Před 5 lety +5

      Same! Don't know what to do so much to study but no time, I want to become like toppers good at everything and more intelligent than them.

    • @alchinov4695
      @alchinov4695 Před 5 lety +20

      Film Radar I feel relieved knowing that I'm not the only one who wants to know everything, and fails to do so because of our nature and way of doing things, and that is trying to learn as much as possible in the shortest period of time possible.
      I think we should really be patient and follow this guy's advice, that we can never know everything and that we need to learn with quality, patiently over time we will gain the knowledge we strive for.

  • @jdanielortega
    @jdanielortega Před 4 lety +161

    This feels like a tutorial on life.

    • @allaboutsboyzz4737
      @allaboutsboyzz4737 Před 3 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/b9FunEkhTNo/video.html

    • @scvpest
      @scvpest Před 3 lety +6

      Kinda wish I saw this tutorial when I first spawned

  • @membryo9247
    @membryo9247 Před 2 lety +2

    This really explained what's happening to me recently. I love how you researched and framed all of this!

  • @grantjones8690
    @grantjones8690 Před 2 lety

    As you read this, you are holding the access to vast knowledge in your hand. At 81 years, I appreciate this. A shame that the young squander it’s potential.

  • @VARIOUShorses
    @VARIOUShorses Před 6 lety +279

    I’ve got strong feelings about this topic, but I don’t think I can express them. I know what I think about it, but I don’t think I can explain it.
    So, uh, nice video.

    • @TheSugarRay
      @TheSugarRay Před 6 lety +6

      VARIOUS hey, I was just talking about you.

    • @VARIOUShorses
      @VARIOUShorses Před 6 lety +6

      :) Good to see you here TheSugarRay!

    • @TheSugarRay
      @TheSugarRay Před 6 lety +7

      VARIOUS Is this like running into someone at the market? Good stuff.

    • @VARIOUShorses
      @VARIOUShorses Před 6 lety +7

      Haha, I don't know, probably, but it's really cool to see a familiar face (er, profile pic?) in the crowd :)

    • @Jerard715
      @Jerard715 Před 5 lety +1

      Thats actually funny

  • @ruthielalastor2209
    @ruthielalastor2209 Před 6 lety +351

    You're telling me the 30-second ads between the videos i watch finally have a good purpose for my learning? This is the best news, man.

  • @adewolejoshua5398
    @adewolejoshua5398 Před 2 lety +1

    I’m a Nigerian by nationality, and every time I read, I always want to understand the content at one go without repetition or rereading. However, I found out that it doesn’t work for me. For me to be able to retain whatever contents I had read in the past, I need to enagage in repetition, as it aids in retaining what had been read and gives a huge understanding of it. And, for one to be able to achieve this, more time needs to be spent on reading and more meditations need to be done on what has been read for the sake of remembrance. THIS IS, INDEED, HELPFUL. Thanks for the hints, sir.

  • @bruno3
    @bruno3 Před 2 lety +4

    We usually feel bad about not being able to retain information or adequately explain a subject that we understand, and that only gets worse when we see other people being so articulate about so many subjects, especially on youtube. Those who are experts on a particular subject know their stuff because they keep dealing with that information on a daily basis. Even in their own field, they'll forget a bunch of things over time if they don't have any use for them. Then you have those people who seem to know everything there is to know about pretty much any subject, but that's not what it seems to be. They study the subject prior to the presentation. They'll retain a few things afterwards, but a lot of it will be lost as well. You won't retain information that you don't need. You either revisit the subject periodically, or eventually you'll lose it. And that's normal.

  • @shaunanderson1951
    @shaunanderson1951 Před 3 lety +270

    Feynman’s technique is: studying the thing you want to learn, then summarizing it as if you wanted to teach it to someone. Where you get stuck trying to explain it, you go back to learning about the subject to fill in the gaps in your knowledge! After you write down your explanation, eliminate things that are hard to understand until the final product could be explained to a child. This works because by explaining a complex topic simply, you know that you understand it and if you haven’t already committed the subject to long-term memory (by recalling the information later) you can repeat the process to solidify the memory, perhaps with spaced repetition.

    • @fpsproductions6073
      @fpsproductions6073 Před 2 lety

      Now the challenge is coming back to this tomorrow or next week to study what was already learned and maybe learn some more to study later.

    • @jodyguilbeaux8225
      @jodyguilbeaux8225 Před 2 lety

      now, that is the best news yet and you did not have to make a video. thanks shaun.

    • @wepthawk
      @wepthawk Před 2 lety

      It’s a good feeling filling in those gaps as it just happened reading your comment 😂🧩🤯

  • @haneena4560
    @haneena4560 Před 4 lety +25

    The problem is that I want to learn EVERYTHING. I think you are right, we need to focus on one thing to make the best of it.

  • @lLl-fl7rv
    @lLl-fl7rv Před 2 lety +10

    The best video I’ve watched in weeks. Thank you so much for showing us these techniques, I’ll now stop looking everywhere but focusing on one thing at a time and learn it forever

  • @autumnblack6373
    @autumnblack6373 Před 2 lety +5

    I think I might have learned this stuff years ago somewhere else. The best part about knowing how the memory works, and detaching from biases can help actually learning. Learning the same thing helps strengthen your knowledge of it

  • @iamlovingawareness2284
    @iamlovingawareness2284 Před 2 lety +146

    I’ve struggled with autism my entire life, but Come to realize that it has helped me greatly with schematizing. I’m so hyper focused on 1 thing. When I learn something I feel like I can remember and generate it fully in conversation. It just takes getting over my trouble with social situations to be able to share it.

    • @purpessenceentertainment9759
      @purpessenceentertainment9759 Před 2 lety +17

      I became hyper focused on social skills and human behavior. I made my weakness a strength.

    • @anub1s954
      @anub1s954 Před rokem +6

      Autism has it's good sides too. But the social anxiety disorder associated with autism is bringing people down.

    • @i-love-cats75
      @i-love-cats75 Před rokem

      @@anub1s954 yeah cuz their below human

    • @senpaixd1346
      @senpaixd1346 Před rokem +2

      @@i-love-cats75 true

    • @tradelink8790
      @tradelink8790 Před rokem

      @@i-love-cats75 bro what, if anything they are the next line in the modern human. Look at all the research at how autistic brains process intellectual material in different ways then "normal" brains

  • @riomh
    @riomh Před 5 lety +463

    *Watches the video*
    Sometime later...
    "What was that video about again?"

    • @martinnguyen4554
      @martinnguyen4554 Před 5 lety +15

      Rio Manson-Hay “Have I watched this video before?”

    • @kjroca04
      @kjroca04 Před 4 lety +2

      Story of my life 😌

  • @devonbroadhead7512
    @devonbroadhead7512 Před rokem +1

    I greatly appreciate the work that has went into this video. Thank you Mr. Schoder

  • @Kevin_Street
    @Kevin_Street Před 2 lety +10

    Thank you for this wonderful video! There's so much real wisdom packed into thirteen minutes here. I _feel_ like I understood it all, but it's obviously going to take a rewatch or two and some recall to really get the most from what you said.

  • @blackdagger7332
    @blackdagger7332 Před 5 lety +1075

    Feynman technique simplified:
    1. Take something you didn't understand
    2. Explain what you know
    3. Relearn if you don't know something.
    4. Simplify it.
    *I'm awesome* oh wait that's an illusion..

  • @PaytonSwan
    @PaytonSwan Před 6 lety +163

    Thanks Will. I now know everything I need to know about how I don't really know what I think I know.

    • @Verrisin
      @Verrisin Před 5 lety +1

      - is what I believe but I cannot really tell you why...

    • @ThomasHenley
      @ThomasHenley Před 5 lety

      This comment is golden :D

    • @sinopulence
      @sinopulence Před 5 lety

      @payton But how do you know you know this? Rewatch the video, recall it, rewatch it recall it.

  • @SydneyCarton2085
    @SydneyCarton2085 Před 2 lety +2

    I feel that some people may know something but do not know how to articulate it or convey it properly. There is also the anxiety that the pressure of "performing" when confronted with it in a social setting. Many times people leave a situation totally recalling valid points and thoughts afterwards. I don't think it it always applies but its something that this video left out. Thank you for sharing, I enjoyed watching this video.

  • @topdog5252
    @topdog5252 Před 2 lety +4

    I personally like to criticise the ideas I read by stopping to think all the time reading. Just stopping to think about this stuff is great and trying to criticise it can be a good way to actually grapple with the ideas, as well as decide if I agree with them or not. Also critical thinking is underrated.

  • @TheLPRnetwork
    @TheLPRnetwork Před 5 lety +97

    Theory:
    People don't notice they are forgetting (things so easily) THUS people don't value the act of reviewing and re-watching
    because they forget that they can forgetting.

    • @DanyIsDeadChannel313
      @DanyIsDeadChannel313 Před 5 lety

      So double think?

    • @jorg3023
      @jorg3023 Před 5 lety +1

      Hypothesis

    • @tylersmith6520
      @tylersmith6520 Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah I practice zen buddhism and I have watched alot of vids countless times and i always find somthing i missed. I think it's silly to think that someone can expect to understand and appreciate anything they read or listen to unless they go over it multiple times.

  • @musicviking
    @musicviking Před 3 lety +15

    1. Recall: spend 1min recalling the key points after each section
    2. Feyman: write an explanation for a 5 year old (use analogies)
    3. Spaced repetition (muscle/neuro pathways)

  • @derreckaffor5584
    @derreckaffor5584 Před 2 lety

    Literally love you! thank you for this video.

  • @zuck64
    @zuck64 Před rokem

    I needed this video. This is a problem I've been struggling a lot with recently and I can relate to a lot of things he says. I appreciate the quality of the content and look forward to applying the methods taught in this video. Thanks a lot.

  • @BeSmarterFaster
    @BeSmarterFaster Před 2 lety +987

    Good video. I have often taught that "Repetition is the MOTHER of Learning". Your points about Recall, Feynman, and Spaced Repetition, all speak to that. I also appreciated your closing comments; especially "Life isn't a Book Report".

    • @andoresu34
      @andoresu34 Před 2 lety +8

      ANKI

    • @vishwajeetparadva8720
      @vishwajeetparadva8720 Před 2 lety +8

      Can't believe that you my sir, are here too! Well, we all need to gain knowledge & explore new things, there's nothing wrong with it.

    • @BeSmarterFaster
      @BeSmarterFaster Před 2 lety +8

      @@vishwajeetparadva8720 Hello V.P. Yes. I do what i can to remain an eternal student. It helps to always relate to the issues my viewers are dealing with. Thanks for posting your comment.

    • @amieruddinrizqighazali2496
      @amieruddinrizqighazali2496 Před 2 lety

      nice, thanks a lot mr. Matt

    • @iqra5387
      @iqra5387 Před 2 lety +3

      omg i watched that "how to absorb textbooks like sponge" it's rlly good

  • @macbookpro4032
    @macbookpro4032 Před 3 lety +270

    I literally have to relearn everything that i've learned when learning something new because i end up forgetting and its frustrating because it feels like ive made no progress...

    • @naomiealexandre9026
      @naomiealexandre9026 Před 3 lety +45

      Well, like the video said, part of learning is re-learning until its imbeded into your long term memory. You'remaking progress even when it doesn't feel like it.

    • @oxymoron4060
      @oxymoron4060 Před 3 lety +8

      thats fkng my story dude!

    • @Dean.AlAmriki
      @Dean.AlAmriki Před 3 lety +1

      It’s just spaced repetition 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @chrispark5337
      @chrispark5337 Před 3 lety +7

      you need to apply it. Memorizing is never enough

    • @jpjp9111
      @jpjp9111 Před 3 lety +7

      I have a PhD in chemistry.
      I can't explain how to break a simple aldehyde or perform simple substitution or elimination reactions and those things are super basic. I can do them practically and see it in my had but fuck if I can explain it to people.
      I'm 30 and I've forgot more terminology than most people learn. How do you think that makes me feel? I can do things very well but I suck at explaining.

  • @srajesh2748
    @srajesh2748 Před 2 lety

    Much needed ,thank you brother..

  • @johnmariano47
    @johnmariano47 Před 2 lety +11

    Barbara Oakley's presentation is a gem. I highly recommend every adult and kid see it. The Feynman method is what I used all the time in high school and college and did not even know the technique has a name. If you can summarize a lesson through memory by either your own words ie own vocabulary you already have or the exact wording/texts in the book which is then far better, you truly know the subject and will ace the test if you do this especially before a test. However, to keep it in the long term memory, you have to redo or recall by reciting the points again as if someone is asking you or teaching it to somebidy else. In any case, the only time you truly know something is if you can teach it to somebody that even a child can understand. Schemas are the same as the associations of different information in our minds. We all have acquired ways of doing this when tasked to memorize something in school etc. The most basic method of learning that is effective is OAR- Observe, Associate, and Recall. It never failed me. Once I practiced OAR, learning became easy.

  • @joegagliardi1938
    @joegagliardi1938 Před 4 lety +52

    As someone who loves to read, to learn as much as possible, I sympathize with this video a lot. It's so frustrating when I forget things that I thought I knew very well! Great video!

  • @ZeroSumJ1
    @ZeroSumJ1 Před 3 lety +42

    What’s funny is that I watched this video hoping it would help me retain things better.
    Then I discovered I had already liked and favorited this video years ago... I know nothing.

  • @albertomohammad
    @albertomohammad Před 2 lety

    Thank you for this!🙏🏻

  • @aaabdelhamiddd
    @aaabdelhamiddd Před rokem

    I come back to this videos every now and then. Thank you great video

  • @llTheJVlusicInMell
    @llTheJVlusicInMell Před 4 lety +836

    "Our brain is made to take 1 task at a time"
    *Hold my ADHD.*

    • @tenminutetokyo2643
      @tenminutetokyo2643 Před 4 lety +22

      Davide Uguccioni Tell that to computer programmers.

    • @prathmeshchandwale1506
      @prathmeshchandwale1506 Před 4 lety +1

      lollll made me laugh so hard

    • @kamiimak7873
      @kamiimak7873 Před 4 lety +7

      @@tenminutetokyo2643 wat. Tell it to people who are the most knowledgeable and proficient at the epitome (computer duh) of literally switching between single tasks sequentially to make illusion of multitasking. (Yes, I'm aware of multiple cores of processor, they still perform single tasks at a time)

    • @andreashort310
      @andreashort310 Před 4 lety +12

      @@tenminutetokyo2643 I have ADHD and I'm learning programming just now. Kill me.

    • @gavinamlong8391
      @gavinamlong8391 Před 3 lety +3

      Adhd is fake

  • @pchris
    @pchris Před 5 lety +150

    8:20 I don't think you even need to write it down. I've found just speaking out loud to yourself or having an argument with yourself in your head (like you do in the shower) works quite well too.
    (some of the smartest people in history would talk to themselves, so while some people see it as crazy, it's not really. Just do it when you're alone or just do it in your head)

    • @aguasanta
      @aguasanta Před 4 lety +22

      @Pavel Loginov Doctor: "Do you hear voices in your head?"
      Inner voice whispers: "tell him you don't"
      Patient: "No, I don't"

    • @harrymears1623
      @harrymears1623 Před 4 lety

      @Pavel Loginov What about babies? What about deaf people?​ What if you were locked in a cage and fed though a tube from birth? Then you would not have an internal monologue.

    • @VinceroAlpha
      @VinceroAlpha Před 4 lety +2

      Talking to yourself because you are your own consulant, nice!

    • @alexandersantana24
      @alexandersantana24 Před 4 lety +3

      This is.totally true, I do this orally and I didnt realize until now.

    • @harrymears1623
      @harrymears1623 Před 4 lety +1

      @@alexandersantana24 same!

  • @SkilledMinder_Futures
    @SkilledMinder_Futures Před 2 lety +2

    That is actually what I do as a Med Student. Thank you for sharing this info to the community.

  • @chiderabonapart3143
    @chiderabonapart3143 Před 2 lety

    Love you man. In a normal way. Awesome 13 minutes . Great!

  • @matejharaslin7288
    @matejharaslin7288 Před 4 lety +84

    This is one of the most valuable videos on youtube.

  • @rickyticky3350
    @rickyticky3350 Před 3 lety +44

    I have a disability where if someone teaches me the first time I will forget everything the next day. That's when everyone judges or ppl get mad at me because I than forget. I need constant repitition to understand a thing

  • @alexviol1587
    @alexviol1587 Před 2 lety +1

    The greatest paradox is how this guy just told you that you shouldn't see a piece of information and immediately go to the next one but as soon as he finishes explaining to you why that is he tells you about today's sponsor which in turn makes you forget what you just learned, but when you see it like that you just used the information that you gathered so you are going to remember it for a very long period of time, after all not many people pay attention to the sponsor so it will give them time to just think of that, use the information transferring it to the working memory and so moving it to the long term memory by thinking about how stupid but also how smart this move from the creator of the video is and so understanding better the topic.

  • @ghazididi1423
    @ghazididi1423 Před 2 lety

    This is just excellent, even life changing. Thank you

  • @morningstarintheabyss2309
    @morningstarintheabyss2309 Před 3 lety +265

    TO SUM IT UP, *JUST REMEMBER THIS* : *The Four Stages of Learning*
    *1) Unconscious Incompetence.*
    *2) Conscious Incompetence.*
    *3) Conscious Competence.*
    *4) Unconscious Competence.*

  • @225OHP
    @225OHP Před 4 lety +1286

    So basically In school, we are taught to just cram information and forget, damn
    :(

    • @kimwarburton8490
      @kimwarburton8490 Před 4 lety +102

      Its all about grades n money above the teachers

    • @minnicute2497
      @minnicute2497 Před 4 lety +3

      @@kimwarburton8490 good point 🤗😉😉🤗💞❣️🤗😉😉😉

    • @JD-zw5os
      @JD-zw5os Před 4 lety +67

      It’s about grades, and stats and status of the school. But people know this so should be responsible enough to do the work for their children to fill in these gaps. Schools aren’t perfect.

    • @RuneKatashima
      @RuneKatashima Před 4 lety +32

      You only cram if you're bad. They do repetitive learning.

    • @thumbaroundreversefingerme4786
      @thumbaroundreversefingerme4786 Před 4 lety +45

      We are trapped inside of the moldy standards of schools in particular and of society in general. But that doesn't mean we can't learn to become what we want, how we want to approach the core matter of the problems. Even though I completely agree with you about the shallow methods schools are applying, what you are saying above is external locus of control, you put schools in the controlling position, think that it's the roots of everything happening in your life, affects how our minds even, which means you are reliant on it. Your argument is that schools make us learn less effectively, that's the truth to some cases, but if it's not effective learning the way schools make us do and you are reliant on schools, doesn't that mean you are putting yourself in a dangerous position? Believe that you are the roots of things occuring in your life, being in charge, you will acknowledge the fact that you are the master of your life and you can turn the table no matter where you are right now in life.

  • @rubencayoja3392
    @rubencayoja3392 Před 2 lety

    Thanks so much! I’m hoping this is a lifesaver for me!

  • @davestang5454
    @davestang5454 Před 11 měsíci

    The Charlie Monger quote near the end is golden. Better to really understand a small amount of content than try to "know everything" that flies across your path.

  • @jlupus8804
    @jlupus8804 Před 4 lety +81

    Nicholas Carr is legit. His article “Is Google Making Us Stupid” was one of the best things I read in high school- and anywhere else.

  • @dinospumoni663
    @dinospumoni663 Před 5 lety +128

    Been reading Mortimer Adler for years now. _How to Read a Book_ is a must read if you're a serious reader or learner.

  • @Lieutenant_IDli_Sambar

    Life changing brother, thank you

  • @humayunsctrl
    @humayunsctrl Před rokem +1

    One of the most useful videos I've watched in a long time! Thank you

  • @dilpreetgabi7743
    @dilpreetgabi7743 Před 3 lety +25

    "If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles." Sun Tzu

  • @tylerstill647
    @tylerstill647 Před 2 lety +9

    There is a rule when doing public speaking to get the audience to retain more of the speech and it goes like this.
    "Tell them what your going to tell them. Then tell them. Then tell them what you just told them."

  • @ImRichardShepherd
    @ImRichardShepherd Před 2 lety

    wonderful video, Will! Thank you for making it!

  • @PropsOutProductions
    @PropsOutProductions Před 2 lety +1

    The editing on this is amazing, props for production quality.

  • @o0Avalon0o
    @o0Avalon0o Před 3 lety +6

    Man, I can't believe you're calling me out like this but I love it. I met someone who still remembered things like quick division & all I could think was, "how in the world does she still remember that?"

  • @ferrosjewellers4558
    @ferrosjewellers4558 Před 2 lety +17

    Amazing, this is why the BIBLE says I must meditate on God's word day and night.!!
    I will be spending more time thinking of one verse at a time.. To have the humility before God and await for revelation from God. To diligently seek and wait upon God is pleasing to Him, to obey His commands.
    Thanks

  • @fixfireleo
    @fixfireleo Před 2 lety +2

    A lot of this also comes down to basic intelligence. People falsely believe intelligence is what you know. Intelligence is your ability to quickly understand new concepts and information. The only "studying" I did in college was to take notes in class and read over them one time for about 10 minutes before exams. I was also ACTIVE in class and asked questions. Other students didnt like this as my questions did not always relate directly to what was going to be on the exam but I feel asking questions helped build a better understanding and it worked for me.

  • @launatrotman5049
    @launatrotman5049 Před rokem

    Thank you for this video, man this is exactly what I've been looking for for MONTHS

  • @GyanAddict
    @GyanAddict Před 4 lety +16

    I opened this video, saw that I've already liked it, that proves I've watched this video before, but couldn't recall anything.

  • @timeaesnyx
    @timeaesnyx Před 6 lety +187

    This is a rephrasing of the old saying, "Tell me and I forget, show me and I remember, involve me and I understand"?

    • @Wingedmagician
      @Wingedmagician Před 6 lety +23

      a hellenic pagan
      No, it would be: Tell me and I forget, show me and I forget, involve me with recall practices and I’ll remember then eventually understand.

    • @giomjava
      @giomjava Před 5 lety +1

      No, it isn't.

    • @richeneljeanpierre2205
      @richeneljeanpierre2205 Před 5 lety +1

      I'm the same. Show me I remember. Tell me then I forget

    • @titalimitless9884
      @titalimitless9884 Před 5 lety +1

      Benjamin Franklin
      a hellenic pagan

  • @danielberes4694
    @danielberes4694 Před 2 lety

    Thank you, for blessing me with this knowledge. Really needed it.

  • @throughthewoods416
    @throughthewoods416 Před 4 lety +7

    This could be one of the most important videos one could watch in our time.