How to use Anki like a PRO (by a Learning Expert)

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 317

  • @JustinSung
    @JustinSung  Před 2 měsíci +2

    Join my Learning Drops weekly newsletter here: bit.ly/4e4sLpk
    Every week, I distil what really works for improving results, memory, depth of understanding, and knowledge application from over a decade of coaching into bite-sized emails.

  • @TimboSlice08
    @TimboSlice08 Před 10 měsíci +162

    As someone who has heavily relied on Anki, I felt very called out on knowing the card by recognizing it vs knowing the info

  • @jbucata
    @jbucata Před 10 měsíci +96

    I have a concise way to describe your Problem #3... Some years ago I was juggling thousands of Japanese vocab cards in Anki. But I couldn't use a word in a conversation, even though if I saw the same word on an Anki flashcard, I would have known it. I finally came up with this summary: Practicing flashcards make you really good... at doing flashcards.

    • @willguggn2
      @willguggn2 Před 8 měsíci +36

      I don't use vocabulary cards to memorize the translation but rather the concept. It's good for building your passive vocabulary, including idioms and phrases, up to a point. Immersing yourself in the target language should always be the main mode of learning a language, if your goal is fluency.
      It is very normal to have a greater passive vocabulary than active vocabulary. You'll always be able to understand more than you can express without any given cues in any language.

    • @rajeshbista2690
      @rajeshbista2690 Před 7 měsíci +8

      If you used flash cards and then couple it with visualization, it works exponentially.

    • @filipjanus9678
      @filipjanus9678 Před 6 měsíci +15

      1st step of learning is memorizing, you have to put in practice the words, not only learning them in a passive way
      Passive way-create flashcard-be able to answer it
      Active way- once you have the correct answer you need to get crative with the concept 😮

    • @sergiopulido1584
      @sergiopulido1584 Před 2 měsíci

      @@filipjanus9678that’s not the first step that’s the first level and it’s unnecessary when you can go to level 3 of blooms revised taxonomy which does that implicitly

    • @ProteaAurea
      @ProteaAurea Před měsícem +1

      @@jbucata Not if you use flashcards properly. 1. Make your own, don't use premade decks. 2. Make sure you do flashcards both ways. For example, Japanese -> English and then the same words English -> Japanese (not on the same day). 3. Make flashcards with short simple sentences that use the words (from your other flashcards) in context. 4. Apply your knowledge from flashcards regularly on reading, writing, speaking, and listening.

  • @MrKanhel
    @MrKanhel Před 2 měsíci +160

    This video was honestly just not so good, it's 20 minutes of yapping but zero showing of what you actually have to do to actually implement your advise. The first part where you explain the potential problems of flashcards are interesting, but once you start speaking on how to improve things you speak about it in such a broad sense that it makes it's unclear what you're actually trying to say. It would be much better if you simply show directly what you're trying to explain in a real life scenario, where you're actually using Anki, the video title even says 'How to use Anki like a pro' but you haven't showed anything of Anki in a 20 minute long video. You're spending more time explaining how much experience you have as a teacher and how many degrees you have instead of actually teaching, which is rather ironic, this shines through even more considering the only comments you placed under the video are to get people to join a newsletter or study program, which will probably lead to people indirectly having to give you money in one way or another, all in your own benefit, nothing in the benefit of people actually trying to learn how to properly learn via Anki

    • @user-to1sz4ow4v
      @user-to1sz4ow4v Před měsícem +13

      hypocrite, this even more yap, i aint reading allthat

    • @Carpface
      @Carpface Před měsícem +13

      @@MrKanhel Agreed, 15 minutes of what doesn’t work, five minutes of general advice.

    • @MUCOM49
      @MUCOM49 Před 28 dny +3

      @@MrKanhel agree 👍

    • @TragicGFuel
      @TragicGFuel Před 27 dny +1

      Seriously, he goes into anecdotes way too many times so much for efficiency.

    • @satoshinakadashi
      @satoshinakadashi Před 4 dny

      @@MrKanhel im a long time user of Anki. Found a lot of value here. Maybe the target audience the was experienced existing anki user base rather than newbies

  • @aries3690
    @aries3690 Před 10 měsíci +95

    I absolutely agree that I can remember flashcards that are connected to others much more easily than standalone ones. Great tips, thanks for sharing

  • @Armanijesus
    @Armanijesus Před 3 měsíci +14

    Thanks god I found your channel. I live in Sweden and I'm a bit older, I took the swedish SAT test to be able to study at uni. Scored high enough to be able to study medicine and I'm starting in August but im 35 years old now and I never was good student and I haven't studied since I was 18 so I'll check out your videos and try to prepare a study system so I don't get overwhelmed. Thank you so much. I insta subscribed ty ty

    • @filipa3311
      @filipa3311 Před měsícem +1

      good luck! that's so exciting :D i hope you enjoy medicine :)

    • @actellimQT
      @actellimQT Před 9 dny

      36 starting software engineering. Just finished a robotics diploma program, and I've gotta level with you things now are nothing like they were when we were in school. The best advice I can give you is make sure you're taking digital notes, preferably in markdown format. I didn't my first year and a half and while I haven't forgotten what I've learned it's not as easy to study and refresh it. You're on the right track if you landed here; I didn't even know what Anki was until I heard about it on a podcast; I'd been programming all my flashcards into a script 😂

  • @balanced_barrister
    @balanced_barrister Před 9 měsíci +13

    SUMMARY:
    **Benefits of Flashcards:**
    1. **Active Retrieval:** Flashcards help trigger active retrieval of knowledge, enhancing memory and retention.
    2. **Effective Spacing:** Flashcards make it easy to space out repetitions, allowing you to review material at the fact or concept level.
    3. **Micro-Learning:** Flashcards enable micro-learning, allowing you to study in short, concentrated bursts.
    **Problems with Flashcards:**
    1. **Lower-Order Learning:** Flashcards are primarily suited for lower-order learning, such as direct recall and memorization.
    2. **Overwhelming:** Using flashcards for all your learning can lead to an overwhelming number of cards to review.
    3. **Repetitive:** Repetitive use of flashcards may lead to memorizing the cards themselves rather than the knowledge they represent.
    **The 3-Part Split Strategy:**
    Dr. Sung introduces a strategy to use flashcards effectively:
    1. **Targeted Review:** In your long study sessions, start by reviewing flashcards you got wrong three times in a row. Dedicate 5-10 minutes per card to consolidate knowledge and build networks.
    2. **Consolidation and Preparation:** During the week, review new material and create flashcards for facts and concepts. Focus on improving your encoding method to reduce the need for flashcards.
    3. **Preview:** Before you forget the material, use short, regular sessions to preview new information. Previewing helps you retain knowledge and prevent overwhelm.
    **Upgrading Flashcards:**
    Combine flashcards with related content to create higher-order questions. For instance, merge flashcards about "protein synthesis" and "hormone reception" into a new question like "How do hormones influence protein synthesis?"

    • @TheQuasarDragon1706
      @TheQuasarDragon1706 Před 8 měsíci

      great

    • @lvplvp
      @lvplvp Před 6 měsíci

      Thank you for summarizing it! There were parts where it got confusing

  • @tullochgorum6323
    @tullochgorum6323 Před 9 měsíci +72

    You can also use an SRS like Anki to manage your revision schedule. Give each of your mindmaps an ID and enter it into Anki. Whenever Anki throws it up, do your active review (One good way is to try and redraw the mindmap from memory. Another is to reformulate the material on the map to answer a related but different question). Working like this, you're going to develop a rock-solid understanding of your material before the exams come around. I can tell you from experience - this beats desperate last-minute cramming on every possible measure!

    • @nanaa4407
      @nanaa4407 Před 5 měsíci

      How please explain the ID part

    • @tullochgorum6323
      @tullochgorum6323 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@nanaa4407 Well, you would organise your mind maps with some kind of code - for example MH12 for the 12th map of your Medieval History course. You would write the code on the map, and file it so you can find it by the code.
      Then you would create a card named MH12 in Anki. When that card comes up, you review the mind map.

    • @mrz.x6810
      @mrz.x6810 Před 5 měsíci

      @@tullochgorum6323 Which app would you recommend for mind maps? If you don’t mind telling

    • @gramos3526
      @gramos3526 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Please explain the reformulate the material

    • @shrikantdash9656
      @shrikantdash9656 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@gramos3526 Perhaps he means , re-stucture the mind map + add new info on it , to answer a different but related question

  • @Lyriks_
    @Lyriks_ Před 9 měsíci +17

    Hey Justin, i was studying some programming concept and did you know that what you described in this video are two fundamentals paradigms in program developpment ?
    DRY : Do no repeat yourself , akin with the problem with too much focus on previously built flashcard
    ACID : Atomicity,consistency,isolation,durability which is an efficient transaction mechanism in database management
    Basically you showed us how to program ourselves to upgrade our internal database 😎

  • @runningriot7963
    @runningriot7963 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Regarding to language learning, I've found that this also works quite well. Without even being aware I've found out that using sentences in anki instead of stand alone vocab has been a huge help. I guess it's majorly due to the fact that I'm using a realation between the words and not just the simple standalone translation. Thanks for sharing! Just discovered this channel recently and I love it, just subscribed!

  • @brandoutmusic
    @brandoutmusic Před 10 měsíci +71

    THIS is the video we needed! It's been a long time of talking about the drawbacks to flashcards without much discussion about how to best utilize them in combination with your other strategies but you did a great job here.
    To give some perspective on why so many people use Anki and stuff throughout medical school is that, as you know, there is an insane amount of content covered even within 1 year of med school. So to be able to keep 2 year's worth of material fresh for USMLE or COMLEX (not sure if you took either of these) did require some form of spaced repeition and active recall for lots of the small details you're expected to know. Of course though, as doctors we must understand the material before using the flashcards. Thanks for the positive video on other study methods :)

    • @shanwall1544
      @shanwall1544 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Hi. So what is the best strategy you found for learning and retaining concept information in med school?

    • @user-sx8vq3bm5d
      @user-sx8vq3bm5d Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@shanwall1544Justin has a video on USMILE, I'm pretty sure he took it, not sure though.

    • @brandoutmusic
      @brandoutmusic Před 10 měsíci +4

      In general, learning and understanding should always come before retaining. This may look like learning from YT videos, lecture videos, slides etc. Drawing relationships, pathways or diagrams is helpful too. I feel like if you can explain a concept in your own words and in simple terms, you understand it pretty well.
      As for retention, I personally do use Anki, but I use the premade Anking deck which includes only cards for the highest yield topics for Step 1/2. Once I understand the material, I'll unsuspend any cards where I feel like I need a flashcard to remember a certain detail. For things that just "make sense" however, I don't find I need cards for that. Helps reduce the overall # of cards! Hope that helps :)@@shanwall1544

    • @askredditstudios8055
      @askredditstudios8055 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Romans 10:9 because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.

  • @DoubleYouMM
    @DoubleYouMM Před 10 měsíci +77

    Just in time when I was contemplating how I can memorize minor important details, facts and stuff while practicing encoding. Gone through a bunch of your previous videos and put in into practice. It's going well so far. Everyone told me to study since but nobody actually taught me how to. Thanks to you Justin that I can step ahead further.

    • @phanikatam4048
      @phanikatam4048 Před 10 měsíci +2

      I am suffering from anxiety ,could you help ? I want to talk with you ...any contact like insta I appreciate that

    • @safar_within
      @safar_within Před 10 měsíci

      He is justin 😅

    • @phanikatam4048
      @phanikatam4048 Před 10 měsíci

      @@safar_within how you learn effectively man ? i am suffering with adhd etc , please help ?

    • @safar_within
      @safar_within Před 10 měsíci

      @@phanikatam4048 bro binge watch Justin's all vdos

    • @LindemLV
      @LindemLV Před 9 měsíci

      @@phanikatam4048 do you still need someone? Or...

  • @strangerintheselands251
    @strangerintheselands251 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Great point about memorizing the flashcard rather than the knowledge. It really needs creativity to break through that.

  • @bnandan9352
    @bnandan9352 Před 5 měsíci +62

    This video is little hard to understand for first time anki users .

    • @aryaafdi5554
      @aryaafdi5554 Před 2 měsíci +7

      agree its ma first time studying about anki stuff, i cant even comprehend 20% of what he said. JUST CHILLING watching it.... 🎉🎉
      SKIMMING THROUGHOUT THE BOOK is better rather than not reading it at all, right?

    • @bnandan9352
      @bnandan9352 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@aryaafdi5554 yeah
      Something is better than nothing

    • @madmax8620
      @madmax8620 Před 2 měsíci

      You need to be chineseeee

  • @kknn523
    @kknn523 Před 10 měsíci +21

    Great! I don't use your content for school work. I do use your content for improving productivity, and effectiveness. I like how you simplify things to present them in a logical manner, while also, doing the grunt work to calculating things properly to derive a near optimal answer.

  • @robertwhite3503
    @robertwhite3503 Před 10 měsíci +6

    I had stopped watching Justin's videos, because I did not really understand them. I was always about Anki and past examinations. This video made more sense to me.

    • @murmureetpensees4599
      @murmureetpensees4599 Před 10 měsíci

      Do you still struggle to understand him ?

    • @robertwhite3503
      @robertwhite3503 Před 10 měsíci

      @@murmureetpensees4599 If you take out the fancy words like "encode" and "conceptual", you are left with few actual things to do. Say you are studying law, you need to know case names and statute numbers. Say you are learning physics you need to learn formula, you cannot spend time working out the speed of a falling object from first principles. Say you are studying history, you need to know dates. Yes there are concepts. In law, do not steal things but you need cases and laws.. In physics, there is gravity, which is not a force but the affect of time and space, but you still need the calculations. In history Napoleon rose to power, there was revolution in America, the slave trade was happening, industrial revolution was happening. All of these things over-lapped and have a relationship, but you still have to call out dates. I find it hard when the advice is to avoid rote learning and focus on the underlying conceptual framework for encoding the meta fabric of the interleaved layers of higher learning. 🙂

  • @SimGunther
    @SimGunther Před 10 měsíci +17

    Worst thing that can happen with flash cards is that rote learning of facts can turn into cued learning. If you must use flash cards for rote fact acquisition, rewrite the question and forget about it for a while so you don't know the exact cue that led you to the answer.
    If you made it this far, the biggest takeaway from flash cards is that the facts in the cards are a tool that lead you towards synthesis and higher level judgments so you can make fun and amazing projects, not a replacement for higher level learning itself.

    • @phanikatam4048
      @phanikatam4048 Před 10 měsíci

      What about pretend to teach a kid ,by this way we try to understand in depth of information because we need to explain in a very simple manner and with real time example ( apply ) , analyse already we had relationships in a topic ..so we just understand how they related ...
      Now making questions and active recall in spaced interval

    • @SimGunther
      @SimGunther Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@phanikatam4048 edit: I agree that the relationships in that high level learning matters a lot more for your lecture than just rote knowledge.
      With that technique in mind, you'd still need a way of evaluating how other people absorbed the lesson, so making tests the way the professor would make the test in the course helps not just yourself during study time, but also the people you're teaching.
      There'd have to be one version of the test before your lecture and one after your lecture so that you understand what gaps they need to fill in with your lecture. That kind of testing would not be fool proof, but it gives you a general picture for both your understanding and the effectiveness in ability for others to learn the subject.
      You'd also need to go through a progressive lecture such that you start with the most basic fundamentals of the subject and move towards more complex parts of the subject later on in the lecture. Think of it like those 4 levels cooking videos from Epicurious and how each level of proficiency would approach the subject in the lecture.

    • @gerunkwon2598
      @gerunkwon2598 Před 10 měsíci

      @@phanikatam4048that’s called the Feynman method. Justin has praised it in other videos.

  • @benno8699
    @benno8699 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Mindblown! Wish this is taught earlier in the actual course.

  • @weronikaszejnoga1826
    @weronikaszejnoga1826 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I can relate to most of the problems you mentioned. I also got sucked into this "Anki community" and it didn't really help me. Thanks for the video!!

  • @alandelon8175
    @alandelon8175 Před 6 měsíci +9

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:14 Flashcards *effectiveness*
    02:35 Flashcards *benefits*
    04:41 Flashcards *limitations*
    11:42 Learning *strategy*
    18:25 Review *and fuse*
    19:06 Prioritize *preview*
    19:36 Engaging *flashcards*
    Made with HARPA AI

  • @Gigusx
    @Gigusx Před 10 měsíci +21

    Great video! I don't know if my question in the previous one prompted this or this was already in the making, but it's answered some of my questions. I've noticed with my own flashcards that memorizing cue can easily make you feel like you know the fact (not the same topic, but it's even more apparent in language learning) so I've been thinking on how to counteract that, especially for cards that I *always* get right (on the plus side, I think a lot of is just encoding the material well in the first place). The idea with evolving-flashcards that continuously get more difficult and interconnected is actually pretty awesome, I'm definitely be giving it a try.

  • @senjutsu3400
    @senjutsu3400 Před 5 měsíci +1

    5:50 My strategy to deal with this is working well. My cards are common 1 - 1 cards for Japanese words (Kanji front). Instead of actually testing other things, many cards will become a short review session of grammar structure, for example. Many cards have one or more other card with the same picture and sentence on the back, so I am also reviewing how those words relate to eachother. I often skip the back entirely if I get the front easy. It would be bad to stay several minutes on the back of a card trying to cram on the answer, but I find that working on the sentence instead helps me with increasing my retention.

  • @pdcx
    @pdcx Před 10 měsíci +7

    In targeted review, you talked about how we can merge several related flash cards into one card of a higher-order question/card, but previously around 5:20 you also mentioned creating such higher level exam typed questions can be messy as we are testing multiple concepts per card that our answer may not 100% covers what should be answered. Is there a difference between the two and are the said problems mitigated with the bottom-up merging approach(start simple, then merge), compared to the top-down approach(testing multiple concepts in 1 card first)?
    I think I got an answer for this one. Justin answered at 17:40 that the bottom up approach allows we build correct foundational knowledge first, such that when we attempt higher level questions we are unlikely to be consistently wrong or missing certains parts of the full answer. The key is to make sure you have the simpler card concepts mastered first before going crazy with them.
    Some features I thought while watching the video:
    Card hierarchy (parent sibling child cards) (card merge without deletion)
    Card tags (allows filtering and testing cards around a topic: i.e related cards)
    Card versioning/snapshots
    Card answer correctness based on percentage rather than only 0% and 100%, especially when cards are virtually composite cards that test on multiple concepts/answers
    Card test/revision with filters (single card: %correct, correct count, mistake count; tags; time; length; etc)
    In note-taking software(Obsidian/Logseq), mark certain nodes as flashcard and their child blocks as answer. Nodes can include metadata/redirect to an actual flashcard node to change card presentation.

  • @matthewreimer9774
    @matthewreimer9774 Před měsícem

    I've used anki a lot but this feels like a gamechanger. One of those why didn't I think of that moments. Thanks so much, I will either learn more or have more time for relaxing, both maybe!

  • @AkhilJain
    @AkhilJain Před 10 měsíci +281

    You talk so much, but value connect is so less..entire video can be summarised in 5 minutes .you just make longer video for retention..content is stretched by repeatin same stuff..

    • @lxwkey67editor
      @lxwkey67editor Před 10 měsíci +56

      Not all videos are supposed to be short,this is one of them.Time steps are there for a reason.

    • @AkhilJain
      @AkhilJain Před 10 měsíci +12

      @@lxwkey67editor OK, this is subjective. thanks for sharing.

    • @lxwkey67editor
      @lxwkey67editor Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@AkhilJain yes it is

    • @BeingAuthenticBeingUnique
      @BeingAuthenticBeingUnique Před 9 měsíci +19

      But I love long talks as it adds more clarity

    • @artehurso
      @artehurso Před 9 měsíci +4

      Some videos are that way, but not the case of this one

  • @B4nanaKun
    @B4nanaKun Před 10 měsíci +25

    1. MAKING ANKI FLASHCARDS WASTES LEARNING TIME
    One of the hardest parts about learning a language as an adult is finding the time to get it all done. The demands of work and family life often leave us precious few hours to devote to our target languages.
    For that reason, I strive to spend most of what language learning time I have actually absorbing and using the language in a natural way: by reading authentic texts, listening to authentic podcasts, watching authentic films, and having authentic conversations with native speakers (affiliate links).
    If I were to inject Anki into my language practice, I'd have to devote a chunk of that time to inauthentic tasks, most of which boil down to tedious data entry.
    To create a good-quality Anki card, you need to:
    Type in what goes on the front of the card
    Type in what goes on the back of the card
    Add an image file (if you can find one)
    Add an audio file (if you can find one)
    Decide what other information you want to include, like tags, formatting, and different card formats.
    Save the card
    That's at least several minutes of work, and only just for one card! If you're creating a deck of tens, or hundreds, or even thousands of cards (as some people do), that's A LOT of time lost! Even if Anki does help speed up your memorization process on the other side, that's a huge amount of time spent up front just creating and managing your flashcards. And that's if everything goes well! From what I've been told, Anki isn't the simplest and most functional piece of software, so you'll probably lose even more time just figuring out how to get everything working the way you want!
    Not at all worth it, in my opinion. Save that time, and apply it directly to using and absorbing your target language.
    2. ADDING NEW CARDS CAN BECOME AN ADDICTION
    Despite the work that it takes to put together a good deck of flashcards using Anki, a lot of that setup is front-loaded. Once you've planned the structure of the deck, configured the layout of individual flashcards, and then added enough cards to get started, growing the deck actually becomes pretty easy.
    Assuming you know where all of your card data is coming from, adding a new card can take anywhere from a couple seconds to a minute. And while the ability to quickly add new cards might seem like a good thing (and often is), it's something that can quickly become addicting.
    The whole value proposition of Anki is that it can help you remember anything you want. Since Anki flashcards are entirely digital, this actually seems feasible-nowadays, modern smartphones make it trivial to carry card decks containing thousands of cards or more, anywhere you go.
    Essentially, Anki removes nearly all costs associated with adding new flashcards to your card deck. Assuming you have the time to make the additions, there's nothing else preventing you from adding every phrase you hear in your target language right to your virtual "memory bank".
    There's even software out there that can make this simple process even easier. Using programs like subs2srs and voracious, you can turn an entire movie or television show into an Anki deck of thousands of cards, in just a few clicks of a button.
    You might wonder what I'm complaining about here. Certainly having a fast way to turn movies and TV shows into learning material is a good thing, right?
    Yes, of course it is! But if you don't know how to do all this in moderation, the size of your Anki decks can quickly spiral out of control.
    This is because once you've got a deck of Anki cards, you need to actually learn them and review them. This, incidentally, brings me to my next point:
    3. REVIEWING OLD CARDS CAN BECOME A CHORE
    If you recall my explanation of the forgetting curve, you'll remember that each time you learn or review something, there's an ideal point at which you should review it again. This helps you strengthen the memory and slow the speed at which you'll forget it in the future.
    As a software program, Anki's job is to show you a piece of information (a flashcard), and then algorithmically determine when that next ideal review should occur.
    So, for example, it might show you a card for the first time, and test you on its contents. Based on that result, it could then decide that you need to review again in a few hours, or a few days. When it comes time for you to actually do that review, Anki will show the card to you automatically; you don't need to do any extra work.
    This is fine for one card. But as you go through and learn dozens or hundreds of cards, these reviews will start to pile up. Before you know it, you could be spending more than an hour each day going through your Anki reviews-and that's before you even get to learning new cards for that day.
    And if that sounds bad, then you shouldn't even think about taking a day off. Because while you're taking your break (because you're busy, sick, or just unwilling to review that day), your Anki reviews are still piling up. When you come back to Anki (assuming you will, which is not guaranteed), you'll have a mountain of reviews to work through. And that's terrible for motivation.
    People first become addicted to adding new cards, but then become opposed to actually reviewing them. This becomes a vicious cycle which ultimately causes learners to feel overwhelmed and give up their language learning. I've seen it time and time again, and it's not good for anyone.
    The tools you use should not only motivate you to learn, but help you stay on the learning path for as long as possible. Anki doesn't seem to do that for the vast majority of people, which is a major reason why I don't recommend it.
    But I'm not done yet. Let's move on to the next reason.
    4. FLASHCARDS TAKE LANGUAGE OUT OF CONTEXT
    My next gripe against Anki is one that I have against flashcards in general: by definition, they remove the language you are learning from its natural context.
    Just think about it. When you picture a flashcard in your head, what do you see? A simple card with a word or phrase in your target language on one side, and the equivalent expression in your native language on the back.
    For all its bells and whistles, Anki boils down to just that: a way to take foreign language content and chop it up into small, isolated pieces, so that each piece can be absorbed, reviewed, and tested individually.
    Breaking down a lot of information into small chunks is a great way to learn in general, but it goes against how language inherently works.
    Language is not just a series of isolated words and phrases placed neatly next to each other in a row, like so many beads on a string. Rather, language functions as a network. Each word in a phrase, each phrase in a sentence, and each sentence in a paragraph or utterance serves to reinforce everything else around it. If you remove any one of those things from its network-the natural context that it finds itself within-it begins to lose meaning.
    In fact, the loss of meaning can become so great that in many cases, when you remove a word from its surrounding context, it becomes essentially meaningless.
    You see this practically anytime you look up a word in a dictionary. Most words you know have more than one meaning. But to determine which meaning is actually being used in a given situation, you have to look at the surrounding context.
    To give a quick example, think of the word "light". On its own, light could mean the visible radiation coming from the sun, or the relative weight of an object. But if you put just "light" on one side of a flashcard, you'd have no idea which of those two kinds of "light" was intended-at least, not without more context.
    However, if you had never heard the word "light" before, and I showed you a video about the sun, you'd quickly learn one meaning of "light", and automatically connect it to dozens of words and phrases which can give you context for that meaning, like "sun", "star", "solar system", "radiation", "wavelength" and more.
    There are ways to mitigate the loss of context that comes with taking target language content and putting it on flashcards; however, that generally requires you to squeeze more information onto each flashcard, which can then make the whole flashcard creation more laborious, as I explored in my first point.
    Given the issues that come along with creating and managing flashcards with Anki, wouldn't it be great if we could get all of the benefits of spaced repetition, but without the extra hassle?
    We can! Which is why, in my next point, I can say that...

    • @emailben18
      @emailben18 Před 10 měsíci +9

      I read that whole thing only to be left with, "we can, which is why, in my next point, I can say that....."

    • @laylapanteleyeva
      @laylapanteleyeva Před 10 měsíci +13

      This is the longest commend I’ve ever encountered on YT

    • @bubbles3983
      @bubbles3983 Před 10 měsíci

      😂

    • @palovibes
      @palovibes Před 9 měsíci +2

      How much caffeine you had whilst writing this. Hehhehe JK. But yea, is actually simple man, lighten up.
      No need to write a whole ass dissertation to confuse people reading this crap. Make connections, your brain will map shit, the more fun to connect you make it the more you will remember. See I forgot what I said cause this was not fun

    • @dreambig1311
      @dreambig1311 Před 8 měsíci

      @@laylapanteleyeva Yeah, he knows too much.

  • @ReflectionOcean
    @ReflectionOcean Před 10 měsíci +3

    Flashcards are beneficial for active retrieval of knowledge, spaced repetition, and micro learning.
    However, they have limitations when it comes to higher-order learning and building knowledge networks.
    Focusing on building connections for higher order learning.
    Prioritize previewing material to prevent feeling overwhelmed.

  • @GoWithAndy-cp8tz
    @GoWithAndy-cp8tz Před měsícem

    Dr. Sung, You are so expressive and straightforward. I enjoy your video very much. I really appreciate it. Cheers!
    BTW your English is fantastic and easy to comprehend. Your justifies are so much in point.
    You convey your knowledge and experience in best possible way.

  • @numairblack6451
    @numairblack6451 Před měsícem +1

    I am a student of Pharmacy. I use flashcards for memorising drug names, indications and side effects.

  • @Wfb_DVM
    @Wfb_DVM Před 7 měsíci +1

    Got Deans List today at my Vet school and Anki was 100% the reason 😂

  • @Kai-my6lo
    @Kai-my6lo Před 7 měsíci +2

    Anki

  • @gragorron
    @gragorron Před 7 měsíci +5

    Thanks for the high quality, incredibly informative video, Justin!

  • @Yuuki-nb6ko
    @Yuuki-nb6ko Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thanks to your video, I managed to make my flashcards more efficient and practical

  • @francmittelo6731
    @francmittelo6731 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Too much talking.
    Somebody please summarize the steps on how to use ANKI like a pro.
    I don't need the rationale.
    LOL

  • @alimc1867
    @alimc1867 Před 10 měsíci +5

    We had a topic in school called "learning learning" and none of what is taught here was taught there, plus most of what they taught was completely useless. Schools even when they do teach practical skills of life fail at it...

  • @sandwichbreath0
    @sandwichbreath0 Před 7 měsíci +3

    This video is giving me permission to seriously reduce Anki's role in my language learning, so thanks! You've articulated something I was only barely aware of -- most of my genuine acquisition is coming from the intensive reading and listening I do (since those words are always in context and part of a larger network of meaning), while the vocab I 'learn' in Anki only exists in my Anki deck. I keep having the experience of not understanding what's said, checking the transcript, then discovering it contained words that are 'mature' in Anki -- yet in the real-world setting my brain didn't even recognize them. So Anki needs to supplement my routine rather than dominate. Thanks for this very enlightening video -- that's a like and subscribe from me!

    • @israelsouza3782
      @israelsouza3782 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Utilizo o Anki para aprender inglês e me ajudou muito, atualmente comecei o "listening" com vídeos, séries, podcasts, etc. (antes eu lia e escutava textos como "goldilocks and the 3 bears", coisas para crianças), mas o Anki nunca foi um problema para mim, atualmente utilizo ele em outros assuntos de faculdade também.

    • @sandwichbreath0
      @sandwichbreath0 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@israelsouza3782Yeah, I won't throw it out altogether, it's just that I don't seem to learn many *new* words from it -- rather, it's best for reinforcing what I learn from books, podcasts, etc. That might just be me, though, as I know many others who've had a lot of success getting a lot of new words from Anki fast. Anyway, good luck with your English study!

  • @dreambig1311
    @dreambig1311 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I thought that the flashcard method was super easy, until I see this video. Things are way more complex as I imagined, I'll use this flashcard method someday.

  • @MuriloFPires
    @MuriloFPires Před 6 měsíci +2

    If I saw this a few months ago I wouldn't understand a single thing, but now based on my experience and mistakes trying to improve my learning methods, it's all starting to make sense lol

    • @EmDi-fr9pf
      @EmDi-fr9pf Před 2 měsíci

      how did you solve the problems with flashcards?

    • @MuriloFPires
      @MuriloFPires Před 2 měsíci

      @@EmDi-fr9pf Only create flashcards for important details. Only small things that you don't want to forget (like names of proteins if you're studying biology, for example). It's usually those details that are at the end of your mind-map branches. All the rest should be revised using other methods and included into your mind-maps. At the beginning you'll want to include everything in flashcards, but that's not going to help you long-term and will add a lot of unnecessary work

    • @EmDi-fr9pf
      @EmDi-fr9pf Před 2 měsíci

      @@MuriloFPires I appreciate your response. I am still trying to find out how to study well, and this response helps me.

  • @AngelMaldonado2
    @AngelMaldonado2 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Video starts at 11:40 - You're welcome

  • @istevanghazwan8515
    @istevanghazwan8515 Před 8 měsíci +5

    Successfully wasted 19 minutes for nothing just empty words!!

  • @pakhi3053
    @pakhi3053 Před 10 měsíci +5

    I really appreciate the consistency on this channel and popping vdos that we actually need at that time ❤... Tysm DR. JUSTIN SUNG ❤

  • @ilovebarbieandpink
    @ilovebarbieandpink Před 8 měsíci +1

    The flashcards on hard stuff/what i will forget is what i do exactly! It’s just if I had like thousands of flashcards i would get so overwhelmed 😢

  • @alexika9981
    @alexika9981 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Question: How can you flag or star anki cards that you have chose 'good' or 'again' 3 times? Is there an add-on for that?

  • @dedinacid458
    @dedinacid458 Před 9 měsíci +2

    When did you say "memorize the flashcard isn't the same thing as having knowledge" is true. I noticed a problem while learning English, I remember the flashcard answer but when I need to use that word, I forget it.

    • @EmDi-fr9pf
      @EmDi-fr9pf Před 2 měsíci

      How did you solve the problem?

    • @cgmll9199
      @cgmll9199 Před měsícem

      @EmDi-fr9pf reading nonstop, that's how you acquire vocabulary naturally

  • @shawnmendrek3544
    @shawnmendrek3544 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I still have problems remembering with ADHD. I feel like I am wasting my time. I hope this fixes it. Thanks Doc.

  • @jacques-eliescharr7013
    @jacques-eliescharr7013 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Great video,
    I'm not sure I understood " Preview " the third part, what are we supposed to do during this step ?

  • @LionSleepKing5
    @LionSleepKing5 Před 2 měsíci

    Commenting on recognition is not recall "what is the function... -> Mitochondria"
    Some tipps to avoid that.
    - make ur cards looking really similar to each other
    - use the leaat amount text/information needed
    - 2 short cards are better than 1 long card.
    - Ask urself every single time "Did I understand, because i knew it or because i recognized it?" If it s recognizing instead of learning u should ask urself if that card is really that important or if the card is filled with to much unknown information -> splitt in two
    . Function: Mitochondria -> pow...
    . Steps: Salutogenese -> 1.x 2.y 3....
    . 1.Phase: second world war ->

  • @samiulazam1850
    @samiulazam1850 Před 3 měsíci +1

    11:38 video starts from this moment

  • @FriedBananas642
    @FriedBananas642 Před 6 měsíci +1

    This is kinda mindblowing.

  • @user-ci5vi4pw8w
    @user-ci5vi4pw8w Před 10 měsíci +1

    The most powerfull things when using anki is to like this video,i love this guy

  • @NerdyNerdUHeard
    @NerdyNerdUHeard Před 10 měsíci +1

    Dang, would have needed this video earlier but rather late than never.

  • @iSpeakstheTruth
    @iSpeakstheTruth Před 10 měsíci +11

    Very timely and quality video! Definitely over relying on Anki and the decks are starting to stack up… it feels almost unavoidable at this point as consolidation could be costly due to risk of poor implementation. But there’s some practical tips here I may have to give a whirl. Thank you!

  • @TitanicTiming13
    @TitanicTiming13 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Bruteforce is a good metaphor. I'd also say flashcards are like crutches or supplements.

  • @snipamontage6222
    @snipamontage6222 Před 3 měsíci

    Thankyou so much! I was facing this issue of learning the card but not the knowledge and I was clueless on how to tackle it.
    flagging really really helps combined with a dedicated revision day for the flagged card you got incorrect 3 times.
    plus, the hybridising of already learnt cards that are easy is so good!
    i could never think of these ideas on my own

  • @ToniusPlays
    @ToniusPlays Před měsícem

    I know several people who spend more time trying to create the perfect deck and card style (and are never satisfied) than focusing on learning.

  • @dp6943
    @dp6943 Před 2 měsíci

    Make 100-150 flashcards
    Every weekend
    1- targeted
    3 times wrong 5 - 10min/cards
    Upgrade those cards which were 3 times correct by combining cards by finding interconnection
    Advantages 17:33
    2- learning new material from previous sessions and write notes
    3- preview - have not cover
    stop us from getting overwhelm before material

    • @dp6943
      @dp6943 Před 2 měsíci

      First review - 3 times wrong
      3 times correct

  • @totheknee
    @totheknee Před 6 měsíci +1

    5:00 - I use flashcards for memorizing hard facts, like multiplication/addition tables in base 16. Seems perfect for this.

  • @VidhathShetty
    @VidhathShetty Před 10 měsíci +9

    Wow this was refreshing and I've been enjoying creating my strategy to Ace my exams. Thank you for all your hard work. The insight to create harder questions and encode the relationships and make it stronger and getting them wrong to go back to strengthen relationships is a dangerous combo. Gonna study those advanced concepts with grace now🎉🎉

    • @JustinSung
      @JustinSung  Před 10 měsíci +1

      Glad you found the video useful

  • @OmarAhmed-tb7lp
    @OmarAhmed-tb7lp Před 3 měsíci

    Great tips ❤
    But i think noteworthy to say that this video not a preliminary Steps to using Flashcard, you need first to learn initiatives and use an App fir awhile then this video will be a great guide for you❤

  • @madisonmarie0613
    @madisonmarie0613 Před 7 měsíci +1

    this is so cool! I've been doing some of these methods already without even realizing (like separating my flashcards based on getting it right/wrong 3x) so it's really cool to see the science behind it and how I can improve 😊

  • @floweyy07
    @floweyy07 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Omg another amazing video!

  • @secretariatgirl4249
    @secretariatgirl4249 Před 5 měsíci

    PQRST Method! Look it up...we were taught this method in the 60's and is still going strong!!

  • @iptf
    @iptf Před 2 měsíci

    There's also the fact that testing yourself on 'what is the official residence of the french prime minister' with the answer of 'hotel de matignon' does not necessarily mean you can tell what the hotel matignon is when you hear about it. Especially in foreign languages it's easy to memorize stuff in only one direction.

  • @shimmya
    @shimmya Před 9 měsíci +1

    I think this video can be pretty useful for many people but there's part I feel don't apply to certain fields especially in uni. To retake your example of the card "How are proteins produced", well its easy to make links with other cards. However, in uni, that card in particular is the subject of a 2h lesson that is worth about 50 flashcards. And obviously, all those cards are already connected by the fact that they come from the same lesson, so it would be a waste of time to make connections on cards.
    Furthermore, since lessons are usually massive in uni, making connections between 14h of biochemistry and 18h of proteins, is impossible to do.

  • @user-td1st1ti6p
    @user-td1st1ti6p Před 10 měsíci +1

    Hey can you make video about why homeschooling is better why homeschool children perform better
    And the downside of regular school what are they doing wrong

  • @runthenumbers9698
    @runthenumbers9698 Před 3 měsíci

    Anki is fantastic for if you are working in a field with its own vocabulary (such as medical), with it's own acronyms (such as tech), its own language (such as coding/scripting) or of course learning languages.
    It doesn't provide mastery, but it does take care of the linguistic layer... and the process memorization layer.
    It's my belief that these are the hard part of learning. Once you have mastery of the linguistics, vocabulary, citations, etc... in any field, you add a force multiplier onto every other form of learning. Simply having a command over the linguistics means that you will be able to comprehend higher level lectures without buffering.
    If I do my due dilligence with Anki beforehand, I hardly ever need to take notes. In fact, I usually just take notes by putting cards directly into anki.

    • @thetasworld
      @thetasworld Před 2 měsíci

      What kind of coder uses flashcards?

    • @runthenumbers9698
      @runthenumbers9698 Před 2 měsíci

      @@thetasworld
      I already said it doesn't create mastery smart@ss. It takes care of linguistics and vocabulary (and long term retention).
      Try reading before you comment.

    • @thetasworld
      @thetasworld Před 2 měsíci

      @@runthenumbers9698 are you ok? Did you read my one-line question before having your meltdown? I asked where exactly will flash cards help with coding. Is your ego that fragile?

    • @runthenumbers9698
      @runthenumbers9698 Před 2 měsíci

      @@thetasworld
      That's not what you asked. Maybe you should read your own comment before posting.

    • @thetasworld
      @thetasworld Před 2 měsíci

      @@runthenumbers9698 sure thing bub...

  • @Carmen-ly3po
    @Carmen-ly3po Před 10 měsíci +2

    This is very creative!

  • @salzard9691
    @salzard9691 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Huh, kinda interesting that I was already consolidating my flashcards when reviewing and dividing up my study sessions like that

  • @MrBennyrick77
    @MrBennyrick77 Před 3 měsíci

    Writing bad questions is the fault of the person not the flash card. First thing I do when writing a question is consider what is the most important way to get the fullest answer out witht he question. So I either break it into multiple questions, or just make sure I word the question so that it implies, "5 things that make up regualation 5".

  • @vladibarraza
    @vladibarraza Před 4 měsíci

    8:28 The problem with this argument is that flashcard are not repetitive when you use an algorithm based flashcards system as Anki. The other points are sound.

  • @srazysnake0221
    @srazysnake0221 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Funny how i started Anki and this video comes up, thanks for the tips~❤

  • @Yeeeeeehaw
    @Yeeeeeehaw Před 10 měsíci +3

    Great video

  • @ronnieallobustajr.3667

    Meanwhile, in the Philippines, the top scorer in the nursing licensure exam memorized over 8,000 Anki flashcards. 😂

  • @paullebon323
    @paullebon323 Před 6 měsíci

    I used to spend days making Anki flashcards that could not exist in the material world with Latex. That was 20 years ago.

  • @alexanderbriand
    @alexanderbriand Před 10 měsíci +2

    I really like using it as a supplement for my language learning when I see a new word in an interesting context while immersing I make an anki card for it with that sentence
    I do not rely on the card to keep memorising it forever ofc not, as language is very complex and requires different contexts to truly get the details of what that word means
    I've found that anki helps kick start that word into my memory so that every time I see it used I have a rough idea of the meaning and the more I see it in other context the more I truly get to learn the word
    Anything wrong with my use of anki? Let me know people of youtube lol

    • @Gigusx
      @Gigusx Před 10 měsíci +1

      It's kinda tricky. I've used flashcards for language learning and think they're generally very inefficient.
      - great for starting out, the first 1-2k words can get you ready for reading easy novels
      - sentences give you so much context that you can easily memorize the sentence and its translation but not remember the actual unknown word in other contexts
      - single word -> definition flashcards are for that reason much better (you can still include an example sentence in the back), but the problem is that they also take much longer to create. Anytime you need to make let's say a batch of 20 cards you're missing out on thousands of words of reading (or 20+ minutes of listening) that you would be doing if you instead immersed yourself in the language.
      Still, pretty good for rare words that you will simply not encounter enough during immersion (but at that point you'll be that advanced in the language that you might not care unless you really wanted that kind of vocabulary).

    • @alexanderbriand
      @alexanderbriand Před 10 měsíci

      @@Gigusx ye I've been debating it
      I will still continue because I actually like the procces and I don't feel burned out ever as I can easiely do all my rewiews in less than 20min but It's become apparent to me that the more I add cards the less it's become usefull to my learning and also I've noticed that my listening is a bit behind my reading as well so I've been trying to listen to a lot of stuff lately

  • @BroccoliRocks
    @BroccoliRocks Před 27 dny

    @JustinSung This video inspired me to check out your course. I'm not a college student. I study in my spare time to get ahead in my field. Though I wasn't thrilled about the price of the course I would have paid it. The deal breaker for me was the length of the course. Much longer than several of the long Udemy courses I wanted to take put together. If you make an express version, I'll pay for it.

  • @yohanesliong4818
    @yohanesliong4818 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thank you

  • @madjiebimaa
    @madjiebimaa Před 7 měsíci +1

    English is not my main language. When I take notes or create flashcards, do you recommend for me to use my main language or just parallel it with English so I can learn two things at a time?

  • @erickvillaverde1444
    @erickvillaverde1444 Před 10 měsíci +8

    Amazing video as always! I've been applying and using the study techniques following blooms taxonomy, mind mapping, etc. My main question is if you can make a video or something like a mini course, explaining how to know what information should be learned through repetition (i.e knowing the definition of it) and what topics should be learned with high learning order techniques. I am more of a visual learner and a pre-med student so I still mainly work with textbooks I was wondering if you could show an example of you reading a textbook from college freshmen biology and separate which topics should be learned through higher learning and which should be learned through lower learning techniques.

    • @filippeximenes
      @filippeximenes Před 10 měsíci

      If you are really into it, buy his course. Worth every penny.

  • @brunnosilva2668
    @brunnosilva2668 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Encode the principal's. The universal knowledge. So whatever angle u look at it, u can elaborate a answer.

  • @cravarc
    @cravarc Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the info on micro-learning. I hadn't heard that term before.

  • @hakemabutayeh4876
    @hakemabutayeh4876 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I really don't get that for a beginner 😢

  • @ashutoshshrimali2001
    @ashutoshshrimali2001 Před 3 měsíci

    Informative 🤗

  • @jahayrac8636
    @jahayrac8636 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Genius. Just genius. 😌

  • @user-hd4nu8zd2q
    @user-hd4nu8zd2q Před 3 měsíci

    practical vid; hopefully I apply this.

  • @salmakhaled8888
    @salmakhaled8888 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Hello Dr Justin
    I am a final year medical school and I have got finals coming up and they are worth alot of marks.
    I have always relied on rote memorization and flashcards in my study routine after someone explains a topic to me. I truly belive in all you say. But I have scored high in my previous exams using flashcards and I don't know if switching up my whole routine would jeopardise my scores beavuse I have got only two months and lots and lots to cover (internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, and ObGyn) and my residency choice will depend on my grades. So what can I do to improve without risking too much?
    Thank you so much for your help
    I would be really grateful if you answered my question.

    • @sz-rva
      @sz-rva Před 9 měsíci +3

      In my opinion, making flashcards is time-consuming and sometimes boring, BUT there is no better tool for memorizing. This is being told to you by someone who tried to change Anki for the same reasons Justin says.

    • @salmakhaled8888
      @salmakhaled8888 Před 9 měsíci

      @@sz-rva thanks for the advice

    • @shimmya
      @shimmya Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@sz-rva Also there are some classes that are not learnable without flashcards. Medicine in particular is 95% rote memorization anyways, might as well use flashcards. Try using encoding or whatever to memorize 8hours of an embryology class lol. Maybe this video is better suited for people using flashcards to learn language.

    • @sz-rva
      @sz-rva Před 9 měsíci +1

      Exactly, in medicine you have to memorize too much and Anki is the best tool to memorize no matter what many people say. Another aspect is that many people do not learn to use Anki properly and do not know that it requires specific add-ons to work optimally.
      You do not necessarily have to study all the programmed cards, because it actually consumes a lot of time, but it is possible to study through a ***custom study*** and it works just the same. That is, study the flashcards that I want to study and not necessarily the ones that Anki programs me (this is useful for the university due to the limited time, and outside the university it is possible to study the flashcards programmed in time).
      ***The only information that I have identified that cannot be studied in Anki are those that have to do with specific long step-by-step processes (e.g., surgical techniques), and also when one is in charge of presenting a topic to an audience (such as presentations in powerpoint).***
      For everything else, it is possible to memorize it with Anki.@@shimmya

  • @xdata3267
    @xdata3267 Před měsícem

    I feel like im up to speed on flash cards now lol.. thanks!

  • @petrkrnavek2420
    @petrkrnavek2420 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Hello, do you have any tips how to create smart types of flashcards? And also smart way to make them? Thank you! :-)

  • @shrikantdash9656
    @shrikantdash9656 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Great Video Mr. Sung!! , but , guys , does anybody know , how to revise the material , that you encoded in PART 2 , but didn't put in the flashcards ??
    Is there a video explaining that ?@Justin Sung

  • @2_SS1
    @2_SS1 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Is reading a book on the content you need to know for exams a good method for preview? If not then what methods are good for preview because that wasn't mentioned very much near the end of the video. Thanks😄

  • @user-ux4pe1dq6r
    @user-ux4pe1dq6r Před 10 měsíci +1

    I just love to listen him

  • @jeanethramos2217
    @jeanethramos2217 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Thank you for all your videos!!!
    Any recommendations to study biology for Dat?
    Thank you !!!

  • @chal727
    @chal727 Před 24 dny

    interestingly i have done this method myself without knowing it was recommended
    i'm currently studying a third language, and firstly i started learning simple words, cat and table, for example, and then i put them in simple sentences, trying to fix them and put a connective between them, so like: the cat is above the table (猫がテーブルの上), and finally, i try to explain the reason on the last sentence, why is the cat there in the first place?

  • @zibbitybibbitybop
    @zibbitybibbitybop Před 8 měsíci +1

    I should really try using anki as a pure vocabulary booster. I already speak fluent Japanese, but I don't know the words to be able to talk about more intellectual topics like science or politics. Anki seems like it'd be perfect for my use case, since I already have the grammar and whatnot down at a near-native level.

  • @piotrz9546
    @piotrz9546 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Hi Justin, basically you can use anki tags to achieve that connection/networking effect for group of related cards, Is that right?

  • @Macaque919
    @Macaque919 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Just curious, could you help me define what "higher order learning" is?

  • @Wawawa8842
    @Wawawa8842 Před 3 měsíci

    0:54 blew up*, Mr language Learning expert.

  • @totheknee
    @totheknee Před 6 měsíci +1

    I was ecstatic when I saw Mr. Sung had a video on Anki. How lucky we are, amiright?

  • @thebeatles9
    @thebeatles9 Před 7 měsíci

    I'm a genius but I also have severe ADHD. I generally make connections as I read instantly, but the amount of connections is overwhelming when I inevitably lose one it sort of "tears down" the whole web and I get things mixed up. I've considered trying the infinite number of flashcard approach, since I already have the web in my head, it's just the pieces that fall out. I'm still feeling lost and considering your course.

  • @flutterin4595
    @flutterin4595 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Okay, so if I want to learn my collegue faces...
    I gotta flag the easiest faces. And hardest faces
    Next on my long study session I should review those faces and names and try to connect them with each other or with my existing knowledge.
    Now what is complicated... i don't know how should I combine my collegues which i easily recognize.... help?