How to study for exams - Evidence-based revision tips

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  • čas přidán 3. 04. 2018
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    Today we're learning how to study for exams with scientifically-proven techniques. We start by talking about why rereading, highlighting and summarising are pretty inefficient, and then talk about the evidence behind Active Recall as the most efficient revision technique. We end with a few suggestions as to how to incorporate Active Recall into your study routine. Enjoy xx
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    TIMESTAMPS:
    1. 01:29 - Popular but inefficient technique #1 - Rereading
    2. 03:29 - Popular but inefficient technique #2 - Highlighting
    3. 04:51 - Popular but inefficient technique #3 - Summarising
    4. 06:42 - Active Recall, and the evidence behind why it's the most effective revision strategy.
    5. 09:18 - Study #1 - Spitzer 1939
    6. 10:22 - Study #2 - Butler 2010
    7. 11:16 - Study #3 - Karpicke & Blunt 2011
    8. 13:41 - Specific, practical strategies for incorporating Active Recall into your revision / study routine.
    9. 14:19 - Strategy #1 - Anki flashcards
    10. 16:07 - Strategy #2 - Closed-book spider diagrams
    11. 17:33 - Strategy #3 - Questions instead of notes, the Cornell note-taking system
    12. 19:18 - Summary and closing remarks
    LINKS:
    If you’re actually interested in looking up these studies, the Dunlosky review paper (Link #1 below) is probably the best place to start. The references section there is full of useful links, all of which i cba to include in this video description :)
    1. Dunlosky et al 2013 - [Improving Students’ Learning With Effective Learning Techniques: Promising Directions From Cognitive and Educational Psychology. - PubMed - NCBI](www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2...)
    2. Karpicke 2016 - [A powerful way to improve learning and memory](www.apa.org/science/about/psa/...)
    3. Spitzer 1939 - www.gwern.net/docs/spacedrepet...
    4. Butler 2010 - sites.utexas.edu/mdl/files/201...
    5. Karpicke & Blunt 2011 - [Retrieval Practice Produces More Learning than Elaborative Studying with Concept Mapping | Science](science.sciencemag.org/content...)
    6. Anki - [Anki - powerful, intelligent flashcards](apps.ankiweb.net)
    7. Make it Stick - geni.us/MakeItStickBook
    8. Podcast episode with the author of 'Make it Stick' - www.artofmanliness.com/2018/0...
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Komentáře • 5K

  • @aliabdaal
    @aliabdaal  Před rokem +233

    If you enjoyed this video, you might like my weekly newsletter, where I share actionable productivity tips, practical life advice, and high-quality insights from across the web, check it out here: go.aliabdaal.com/subscribe-sundaysnippets

  • @tashanelly182
    @tashanelly182 Před 3 lety +16397

    I just gotta say, I got my best ever mark on a science test by spending an hour explaining to my dog everything I knew about the topic the night before the test.

    • @dxnial9371
      @dxnial9371 Před 3 lety +645

      Nice 😂👌 what was your dog's reaction ?

    • @noahark4832
      @noahark4832 Před 3 lety +296

      I have an exam in a month and i want to try this method. Is a month too short of time for this technique?

    • @tashanelly182
      @tashanelly182 Před 3 lety +345

      @@noahark4832 a month is definitely not too short but I would also recommend studying with some other methods as well. 👍

    • @tashanelly182
      @tashanelly182 Před 3 lety +293

      @@dxnial9371 she looked confused😂

    • @noahark4832
      @noahark4832 Před 3 lety +51

      @@tashanelly182 Thank you for replying. What other methods do you suggest?

  • @Uunidentifiedd
    @Uunidentifiedd Před 3 lety +6465

    If we are all honest ... rereading is just us READING BECAUSE WE NEVER PAID ATTENTION IN CLASS IN THE FIRST PLACE

    • @MariaL483
      @MariaL483 Před 3 lety +154

      Heheh i feel ATTACKTED

    • @richenricod6530
      @richenricod6530 Před 3 lety

      @@MariaL483 18

    • @KH-ks7si
      @KH-ks7si Před 3 lety +137

      Lol I pay attention in class and work almost the least in my classes and still get straight A+ and an A in all honors classes. Paying attention is super important. When youre in school you cant do anything so fun anyway so you might as well pay attention so you have more leisure time later.

    • @moon.937
      @moon.937 Před 3 lety +211

      @@KH-ks7si not all of us have good teachers. I try to pay attention, but it still doesn't make sense. The concept seems complicated but when I study on my own I realize how easy it is and how difficult they make it seem. I get straight A's only when I study on my own or with my parents' help. Teachers dont always help💀

    • @nore4442
      @nore4442 Před 3 lety +60

      @@moon.937 true and there are teachers who would get mad or get baffled why only few got the lesson. like, girl, it's not my fault you can't teach

  • @fazlayrafique3132
    @fazlayrafique3132 Před 2 lety +3957

    1.Active recall
    2.Practice test
    3.Making notes (with the books closed)
    4.Writing Questions for yourself

    • @raunakchodankar1843
      @raunakchodankar1843 Před 2 lety +52

      Instead of questions framing yourself you can use past year papers or purchase stand-alone practice queestions.

    • @bobschmidt6565
      @bobschmidt6565 Před 2 lety +14

      the guy literally said taking notes and making summaries dont work and here you are.......

    • @raunakchodankar1843
      @raunakchodankar1843 Před 2 lety +66

      @@bobschmidt6565 he said that making notes with book closed is active study technique.

    • @bobschmidt6565
      @bobschmidt6565 Před 2 lety +11

      @@raunakchodankar1843 If you close the book then you're reciting/recalling but whatever

    • @raunakchodankar1843
      @raunakchodankar1843 Před 2 lety +12

      @@bobschmidt6565 😅 even just reciting it once thought to thought and then doing practice questions or framing questions and answering them is a great way of active recall

  • @Belal-nc9um
    @Belal-nc9um Před 2 lety +5025

    Went from 45% to 95% in computer science. Thank you!

    • @mariash9197
      @mariash9197 Před 2 lety +56

      congrats! only did well in it bc of projects but this video will definetly bring my grade up :)

    • @davidchavarriamendez9091
      @davidchavarriamendez9091 Před 2 lety +83

      Curious about how do you apply this techniques in your studies.

    • @GameCyborgCh
      @GameCyborgCh Před 2 lety +31

      @@davidchavarriamendez9091 really want to know to because I look at the material that I have and I'm not sure how I would translate it into flashcards

    • @sadiquesalman7915
      @sadiquesalman7915 Před 2 lety +31

      @Db I want to know that too... cause I am also a CS student, yet I don't understand how to apply "active recall" system in a subject like CS.

    • @belishcyzon9317
      @belishcyzon9317 Před 2 lety +14

      yeah, can you please tell us how you applied active recall to computer science :D?

  • @lithiumkwan848
    @lithiumkwan848 Před 4 lety +11039

    His speaking speed perfectly explains a doctor's handwriting.

  • @HISANY83
    @HISANY83 Před 3 lety +7433

    Did you know that your video is actually being used by the University of Toronto as a guide on science-backed study approaches? I thought that was pretty cool.

    • @sofiaguerrero0969
      @sofiaguerrero0969 Před 3 lety +330

      I wish this was shown in high schools! In America, they don’t really teach you how to study so this would benefit a lot of students.

    • @scrappydoo69
      @scrappydoo69 Před 3 lety +13

      micaelasebaton yes exactly

    • @iii-eestigoymaryroseb.8704
      @iii-eestigoymaryroseb.8704 Před 3 lety +7

      😯😯😯😯

    • @bingchilling3120
      @bingchilling3120 Před 3 lety +43

      He must be happy after reading this comment 👍

    • @KarolineKasey
      @KarolineKasey Před 3 lety +42

      @@sofiaguerrero0969 I agree because parents thinks they’re children is lazy when they often put off things they dread doing. A lot of people don’t discuss about this I think this comes from our fears of not wanting to do them. Because we fear of not being able to get it done, good enough, and get it correct.
      The way how to beat procrastination by writing down a list of things you dread, and need to get done. After that use one of the many methods that works for you the reward system, pomodoro method, and etcetera. By doing this you defeated procrastination, still this will take a lot of work.

  • @ivyrose7204
    @ivyrose7204 Před 2 lety +1359

    Update! I got 94%!! This is the highest grade in science I have ever received!
    To be completely honest my exam was a couple of weeks away by the time I watched this video so unfortunately I had to cram a tiny bit, however I always kept in mind this principle of active recall and it worked! What I found was most effective was writing down everything you could remember from the top of your head and then adding to it. This worked SO much better than just copying notes because in this respect I was putting the concepts into my own words and so that demonstrated where my faults were so much easier. Anki also was an absolute gem for this. I recommend putting in terms as you go, but even cramming Anki worked extremely well instead of just watching videos. For chemistry I highly recommend Tyler Dewitt, every single video I watched from him was relevant for my exam.
    I am thrilled by these results and will continue studying in this manner!
    This will probably get drowned in the sea of comments but I'll put this here:
    I have exams in a couple weeks and I am most concerned about my science exam. I am curious to see what happens when I use these study techniques. Guess I'll edit this after I get my results back!
    1. Practise testing (!!!)
    - Anki
    2. Making notes with the book closed, then open book to see what you missed.
    - Spider diagrams
    3. Cornell note-taking method
    - Write questions to actively answer them
    Welp, here goes!

  • @grooshume
    @grooshume Před 2 lety +1593

    TIMESTAMPS:
    1. 01:29 - Popular but inefficient technique #1 - Rereading
    2. 03:29 - Popular but inefficient technique #2 - Highlighting
    3. 04:51 - Popular but inefficient technique #3 - Summarising
    4. 06:42 - Active Recall, and the evidence behind why it's the most effective revision strategy.
    5. 09:18 - Study #1 - Spitzer 1939
    6. 10:22 - Study #2 - Butler 2010
    7. 11:16 - Study #3 - Karpicke & Blunt 2011
    8. 13:41 - Specific, practical strategies for incorporating Active Recall into your revision / study routine.
    9. 14:19 - Strategy #1 - Anki flashcards
    10. 16:07 - Strategy #2 - Closed-book spider diagrams
    11. 17:33 - Strategy #3 - Questions instead of notes, the Cornell note-taking system
    12. 19:18 - Summary and closing remarks

  • @ejnn5351
    @ejnn5351 Před 3 lety +7686

    To anyone who is reading this comment, I wish you the best on your upcoming exam!
    If you don't have an exam coming up, then good luck with whatever you're studying! It will all pay off someday,

  • @cheryl-lynnmehring8606
    @cheryl-lynnmehring8606 Před 3 lety +2100

    1. Rereading
    2. Note taking
    3. Highlighting
    ☝Everything I was doing is WRONG!!!

    • @techboywitha7887
      @techboywitha7887 Před 2 lety +66

      Note taking wasn't wrong just revising it timely was important 🙌 and practicing q. And ans timely too

    • @unggulwidiatmodjo2861
      @unggulwidiatmodjo2861 Před 2 lety +20

      if you use note taking for what do you read then you copy it on your note book that will gonna be wrong, note taking is for summary not for copy a text form your book

    • @imnonexistent7301
      @imnonexistent7301 Před 2 lety +2

      I’m a high school student and I wonder if it’s alright if I note take and write questions at the same time during lectures. Because I might not be able to find the answer for the question if I don’t note take. Or should I just write questions

    • @otsukaharu4501
      @otsukaharu4501 Před 2 lety

      If you take elaborative notes you'll work on understanding and will be able to remember better.

    • @lpsemcookie989
      @lpsemcookie989 Před rokem

      NOT wrong just not AS effective

  • @shezymessi10
    @shezymessi10 Před 2 lety +248

    PART 1: Popular But Inifeccient Study Methods
    01:29 - ReReading does very little and is inefficient
    03:29 - Highlighting is inefficient and is used as a safety blanket for students
    04:51 - Summarizing and taking notes is generally inefficient, but can be good if you know how to effectively summarize and take notes (Falls around the middle of the pack in terms of study strategies)
    PART 2: Active Recall - The Evidence Behind It
    06:42 - Active Recall is King because it Involves Retrieving Information Out of Our Brains Instead of Putting Information Inside of Our Brains and can be done by practice testing (i.e. Answering Questions based on material learned); studies back this up
    09:18 - Study #1 - Spitzer 1939: Proves that doing Practice Tests at the end of your study sessions dramatically improve your marks by 10% - 15%
    10:22 - Study #2 - Butler 2010: Tested Students on Facts & Concepts and proves that Practice Tests at the end of your study sessions dramatically improve your marks on Facts & Concepts by 10% - 15%
    11:16 - Study #3 - Karpicke & Blunt 2011: Shows that Trying to Acitvely Recall Information Once is better than ReReading Passively 4 TImes on Verbatim & Inference Tests
    PART 3: Active Recall - Specific Strategies That You Can Use
    14:19 - Strategy #1 - Anki flashcards: Anki is a Flashcard app that allows you to say if the flashcard was easy, medium, or hard, and depending on your answer, it calculates when to give you that flashcard again; Good for Memorizing Particular Facts AND Good for
    16:07 - Strategy #2 - Closed-book spider diagrams: Making Notes with the book closed, writing everything you know about the topic, then opening up you're lecture/textbook to see what you've missed
    17:33 - Strategy #3 - Questions instead of notes, the Cornell note-taking system: Write Questions for Yourself Based on the Material such that when you revise the material, you look at the questions and actively recall it

  • @RynL840
    @RynL840 Před 2 lety +124

    It is SO GOOD to hear a Cambridge Medical student say "I use pretty colours because it makes me feel good." I feel validated. I get absolutely demolished in STEM for my pretty notes but man if it isn't the most satisfying thing in the world to have a page full of perfect notes. What I had to learn the hard way though is that you cant get by on aesthetic notes alone - active recall is gold. Thank you!

    • @HawkLad
      @HawkLad Před rokem +2

      Leave STEM to the men, hon.

    • @benimoo7894
      @benimoo7894 Před rokem +1

      @@HawkLad u also

    • @neonch1
      @neonch1 Před rokem

      @@HawkLad bruh

    • @VV-zj5uw
      @VV-zj5uw Před rokem +8

      @@HawkLad What was your reasoning behind making this silly comment? I'm genuinely curious.

    • @natalierodriguez7288
      @natalierodriguez7288 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@HawkLad “LeAvE sTeM tO mEn” blah blah blah… I’ll continue excelling in my Petroleum Engineering degree and having companies wanting me to work for them when I graduate. 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @elvore
    @elvore Před 5 lety +2297

    I don't consider highlighting and underlying as a study performance. It's just a preparation before learning and studying.

    • @rameshhansaravendra
      @rameshhansaravendra Před 5 lety +64

      .
      100%

    • @RuthieOnTheMobile
      @RuthieOnTheMobile Před 5 lety +41

      Me too.
      I highlight important words on assignments, I don't miss anything then

    • @jguillermooliver
      @jguillermooliver Před 4 lety +29

      Exactly. I do that to make it a more digestable source to test myself and to compare with it.

    • @lkmxvst5081
      @lkmxvst5081 Před 4 lety +63

      Same thing on summarising in my opinion. If you have a script with 700 or more pages, summarize it and then go to the active recall..

    • @katozrippla1497
      @katozrippla1497 Před 4 lety +76

      Same. For me, highlighting is just to pick out the important information so I don't have to waste time finding it again when I want to make flashcards (active recall).

  • @followyourideas
    @followyourideas Před 3 lety +1898

    The fact that they don't teach us this in school is preposterous.

    • @au7407
      @au7407 Před 3 lety +37

      LITERALLY WAITING FOR THE TEACHERS TO TEACH ME HOW TO MF REVISE!!!

    • @Truestpoint
      @Truestpoint Před 3 lety +5

      It’s evil lol!

    • @luc188
      @luc188 Před 3 lety +3

      @@samueltunde4210 Action strange? dumbass.

    • @itsmesanto
      @itsmesanto Před 2 lety +5

      Even the teachers don't know this technique.

    • @followyourideas
      @followyourideas Před 2 lety +1

      @Miguelle Landry is a perfect 10 this should be taught at the elementary level

  • @Dr.Hiba353
    @Dr.Hiba353 Před rokem +35

    I got 6 A grades in my 3rd year of medical school by applying active recall technique !
    This stuff is life changing.

  • @khawlahalmohimeed9722
    @khawlahalmohimeed9722 Před rokem +115

    I know this video is 4 years old, but I really enjoyed watching it and I liked that it is packed with evidence behind these efficient techniques along with your personal experience as well. Thank you ever so much.👍🏼

  • @aaliyahloanjoe7690
    @aaliyahloanjoe7690 Před 3 lety +1904

    the amount of times i came back to this video to remind myself how to study effectively because i went back to my old study habits is out of this world.

    • @rabiabanu1633
      @rabiabanu1633 Před 3 lety +18

      Yes true, may be that’s why I get lost in the middle of the semester too 🤔

    • @areeba3996
      @areeba3996 Před 3 lety +3

      Do you find it effective? Is it working for you?

    • @aaliyahloanjoe7690
      @aaliyahloanjoe7690 Před 3 lety +46

      @@areeba3996 yes it is very effective. The only hard thing to do is to be consistent. Because i LOVE to procrastinate, so thats the only thing holding me back but its very effective especially if you are learning a new language

    • @anishaa6216
      @anishaa6216 Před 2 lety +1

      i knowwwwwww 😂

    • @maryamashraff8096
      @maryamashraff8096 Před 2 lety +1

      Highfive kid

  • @user-ob9pw8nx7f
    @user-ob9pw8nx7f Před 4 lety +5253

    FINALLY A REAL STUDY VIDEO....Im tired of seeing study vids of girls doing study with me vids with perfect handwriting and unnecessary long notes

    • @vienamine
      @vienamine Před 4 lety +164

      Haretz Juddin IKR I try their methods and I’m just disappointed

    • @pigeonlove
      @pigeonlove Před 4 lety +380

      EVERYONE IS DIFFERENT, DEAL WITH IT

    • @geniea501
      @geniea501 Před 4 lety +300

      They're clearly doing well with the methods so it works for them

    • @yuni_strawberi
      @yuni_strawberi Před 4 lety +1

      Haretz Juddin lol

    • @moodysullie
      @moodysullie Před 4 lety +154

      I use "study with me" + "highlighting" methods when it's my 1st time reading because when I look up from my textbooks and see someone in front of me(or around me) "study with me" it makes reading feel less tiring and boring. Next, I'll go for "rereading + active recall", but I don't take notes, instead I close my books, think of a topic then speak out loud like I'm talking or explaining to myself, to check whether I understand what I've read or not.
      Everybody is different. We all have our own method that suits ourselves, mine includes many.

  • @dulanabeysundara4422
    @dulanabeysundara4422 Před 2 lety +222

    I think this applies to some subjects like Medicine more than others like Engineering/Maths which are much more concepts heavy, so having a set of concise notes where you can quickly reunderstand a concept is more useful.

    • @pranjaldas5774
      @pranjaldas5774 Před 2 lety +51

      Maths is everything about practice bro. Just make a formula sheet and paste it somewhere and watch it everyday. And try to solve a handful of questions

    • @saloni.sharma
      @saloni.sharma Před 2 lety +17

      You're right.. I think for engineering, it's crucial to have some form of formula bank and charts at hand... I had color coded summaries and formulas when I used to study... But it's still useless if you don't practice questions. Practising solidifies the formula and it's application in our brain much better than just memorising formulas. It's something that definitely worked so I see why he's emphasising the active recall techniques.

    • @matjazmuc-7124
      @matjazmuc-7124 Před 2 lety +15

      STEM field is not about memorising equations, its about understanding concepts and being able to draw conclusions from a set of facts, thefore making notes which describe difficult concepts in your own words guarantees that you very likley understand the topic.

    • @aarnzoo5124
      @aarnzoo5124 Před 2 lety +8

      I think having a set of concise notes you can use for reference to refresh your memory and then testing yourself regularly afterwards using active-recall methods and practice questions is the best way to revise for any STEM subject.

    • @tranqquiu
      @tranqquiu Před rokem +4

      Well, for Maths, i’ve applied this studying method by practising maths questions in spaced repetition. Try not to make the same mistake that u did is crucial as well

  • @zwink37
    @zwink37 Před 2 lety +48

    When I was in the navy one of the strategies we used to memorize a lot of information quickly was to write and rewrite from memory the text or diagrams we needed to learn. Most people had a white board that they would use so you could write it, erase, write it again, etc. It was very effective.

  • @AnthonyTang
    @AnthonyTang Před 4 lety +2636

    i rate this video as having high utility.

  • @mackiesenpai1566
    @mackiesenpai1566 Před 3 lety +2198

    Anyone else here because they had the urge to improve themselves academically at like 1am?
    P.S. I’m not the one to care about how many likes I’ve gotten, but I hope every single one of you that have interacted, liked or viewed my comment have great luck and success in both their exams and their future. (I wrote this at 3:29am lmao)

  • @alyssaguihama3539
    @alyssaguihama3539 Před 2 lety +6

    This is the most efficient CZcams video I have watched in awhile. Thank you, genuinely, for having evidence backed by research and the helpful study tips! I think you may have saved me from drowning in my nursing school studies by forcing me to study differently than my previous academic pursuits. Keep up the amazing work & lovely timestamps! :)

  • @malakehhusisy6098
    @malakehhusisy6098 Před 2 lety +55

    I have a Bs degree in biology and medical science and today I’m a med student and let me tell you something - I’ve never knew how to study right. I’ve actually suffered, mentally and physically, from my choices of study. Thank god you’re here sharing your experience and showing us that there’s always another, better way to do things!
    God bless.

    • @shahwarghazi2551
      @shahwarghazi2551 Před 2 lety

      Hey, I'm in 8th grade and my goal is to become a doctor but I have depression and anxiety, and can't focus on things can you give me some tips.

  • @inmed8721
    @inmed8721 Před 4 lety +2009

    Active Studying Techniques summary
    - Flash cards ♦️ ♥️ Anki
    - Writing ✍️ notes 📝 while book 📚 is closed , retrieving from your brain instead of copying
    - Writing ✍️ Questions instead of passively taking notes 📝
    - Practice Papers

    • @ateamacad
      @ateamacad Před 4 lety +7

      You can also try the Feynman Technique. Check out this vid for more info: czcams.com/video/oWboQWXt8Yk/video.html

    • @detectivejonesw
      @detectivejonesw Před 4 lety +27

      Shouldn't you have written these out as questions xD

    • @detectivejonesw
      @detectivejonesw Před 3 lety +3

      @Mello Lieb I've been trying to use it for maths too and let's just say I'm far from convinced

    • @chrisheartman9263
      @chrisheartman9263 Před 3 lety +13

      what if you stopped writing with those stupid emojis?

    • @jasm3307
      @jasm3307 Před 3 lety +2

      Practice papers ..? Did i missed smthn ?

  • @SihamabdiAbdi
    @SihamabdiAbdi Před 3 lety +3132

    Me spending 6 hours of studying everyday and still getting bad grades, feeling anxiety exhaustion worthless. Somehow got this recommendations out of nowhere; it surprised me in a different way which I’m very thankful. Make sense why you are a doctor manshalaah. May Allah increase your intelligence even more

    • @debprasadbanerjee5005
      @debprasadbanerjee5005 Před 3 lety +132

      6 hours of studying is absolutely nothing you are not practicing questions, just practice questions and you’ll ace.

    • @geordi5054
      @geordi5054 Před 3 lety +26

      IQ matters.

    • @shutup7231
      @shutup7231 Před 3 lety +3

      @@geordi5054 yep

    • @khanzaman214
      @khanzaman214 Před 3 lety

      How do you use active recall

    • @debprasadbanerjee5005
      @debprasadbanerjee5005 Před 3 lety +26

      @@khanzaman214 it's bullshit,Invest time in studing and you'll achieve

  • @pankajswami4570
    @pankajswami4570 Před 3 lety +11

    This video is probably gonna change my life. I had used these techniques but never had thought about them in such a systematic and organized way.Thank you very much Ali abdaal for putting such quality content on the internet. Hats off🙏

  • @qingzhou3981
    @qingzhou3981 Před 2 lety +5

    I made a set of anki deck cards immediately and tested myself on this video - love it so much, thank you thank you thank you Ali! Excited to train my brain to be a super fast learner + retainer!

  • @danielwong126
    @danielwong126 Před 5 lety +1558

    Active Recall/ Practice testing
    -anything that uses cognitive effort
    1) make notes with the book closed
    2) use anki
    3) in class, use the cornell note taking method, write questions for yourself and then answer them at a later time when you are revising (try to practice test yourself as many times as possible and as frequently as possible = spaced repeatition)
    ultimately the 2 most effective learning techniques are active recall AND spaced repetition!

  • @sarahjanesalvan8202
    @sarahjanesalvan8202 Před 5 lety +2849

    I had to check my settings to see if the speed is set to x2 lol

  • @JAYYDEE11
    @JAYYDEE11 Před 2 lety +2

    I am so glad you mentioned we are expected to know how to study. I am in my final year of uni and I am freaking out because I know how much this year means but I still think I dont know how to study effectively. So what happens is I procrastinate and get anxiety because I want to do well but do not want to study and barley learn anything. This has given me so much hope you wouldn't believe and for that I am so grateful!

  • @nemanyas
    @nemanyas Před 2 lety +104

    I just realized I've been using active recall intuitively my whole life. I used to do it as a game, like "playing the teacher" when I was a kid. I still do it when I'm bored to death by the subject.
    One downside of active recall is that it's extremely time-demanding, if our educational systems are taken into account. Sometimes, it's faster to cram as much information in when all you need to do is pass a test and that's where our systems fail us.

  • @davidbrumels5911
    @davidbrumels5911 Před 5 lety +15111

    Who else came here just to procrastinate on studying for their exams?

  • @sophiehaugen1190
    @sophiehaugen1190 Před 4 lety +826

    Used this! And got highest grades I’ve ever gotten!
    Top grade in the class on the chemistry exam. Follow these tips it’s wonderful.

    • @ayeshajahan1291
      @ayeshajahan1291 Před 4 lety +6

      Congratulations

    • @mrs.potatohead8471
      @mrs.potatohead8471 Před 4 lety +3

      Well done 💕💕💕

    • @pigeonlove
      @pigeonlove Před 4 lety +12

      Well done, but that other person who got top grades doesn't use these techniques and e.g. rereading gets them to the same place. The presenter says 'i used to do it all the time'' (while dissing highlighting). He got to Oxbridge using the techniques he puts down. I'm always wary of ppl trying to reinvent the wheel and he quotes one author for his 'new' discoveries. I think we are all different, so different techniques work. I don't think there is one way.

    • @mimamimoo
      @mimamimoo Před 4 lety +2

      Yeaahh but how do i apply this to math tho lol

    • @gilgamesh7264
      @gilgamesh7264 Před 4 lety

      @@mimamimoo for me I usually just do alot of practice questions not easy ones but difficult ones

  • @alinikuPiano
    @alinikuPiano Před 2 lety +27

    I’m from Japan and there’s this certain type of highlighter that hides the words when you put a “red sheet” over it. Literally EVERYONE in Japan uses it and you have to think while you read your textbook or whatever it is you highlighted so I don’t know if many of you know about it but it is a wonderful method for me.

    • @sans4124
      @sans4124 Před 2 lety +1

      I can see how that works

  • @mbel1488
    @mbel1488 Před 2 lety +69

    I must say these strategies really do work. While getting my psych degree, I had to work 50hrs a week and took 18 units each semester. My friends would get upset because I would do better on all my exams, while spending a fraction of the time they did on studying. They were all very intelligent. However, studying smarter not harder really does make a difference in understanding the material. Good Luck to everyone! Remember to meditate as well! Happy studying 📖

  • @parthmaheshwari3323
    @parthmaheshwari3323 Před 4 lety +558

    DONTs
    Highlighting
    Summarising (copy from book)
    Underlining
    Rereading
    DOs
    Anki/active recall (cognitive work)
    Close book and summarise
    Create list of questions

    • @michellemckinney4678
      @michellemckinney4678 Před 3 lety +27

      Thank you for this. He spoke so fast, I stopped listening and hoped a kind soul would summarize his video. Parth: you are that kind soul. Thank you for this.

    • @yohannjacob9232
      @yohannjacob9232 Před 3 lety

      @@michellemckinney4678 watch the video hes a troll dont do it like that

    • @isagiyoichi5207
      @isagiyoichi5207 Před 3 lety +2

      @@yohannjacob9232 shuuuuush parth gave him the right points

    • @koketsobaholo7
      @koketsobaholo7 Před 3 lety +3

      Good news!!!!!!!!!
      Therefore repent and turn back, so that your sins may be wiped out, that seasons of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord, and that he may send Jesus, who has been appointed for you as the Messiah.
      Acts 3:19‭-‬20 CSB
      From then on Jesus began to preach, “Repent, because the kingdom of heaven has come near.”
      Matthew 4:17 CSB
      “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news!”
      Mark 1:15 CSB
      Jesus replied, “Truly I tell you, unless someone is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.” Jesus answered, “Truly I tell you, unless someone is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.
      John 3:3‭, ‬5 CSB
      Jesus told him, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.
      John 14:6 CSB
      For God loved the world so much that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not die but have eternal life.
      John 3:16 GNB
      bible.com/bible/296/jhn.3.16.GNB

    • @Amulyachoudhary-si1wt
      @Amulyachoudhary-si1wt Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for this one.. saved me 15 minutes heheh !

  • @patriciachabikuli6795
    @patriciachabikuli6795 Před 5 lety +1806

    I just scored my first B+ as a medical student & it's all thanks to you and this video. It literally changed how I study. Thank you infinitely much!

    • @sakuraharuno4667
      @sakuraharuno4667 Před 4 lety +97

      *_you're lucky for not having Asian parents and relatives_*

    • @soniatsui7606
      @soniatsui7606 Před 4 lety +50

      Sadia Khan Asian parents: what? Only a B? That’s not good enough. You have to at least get an A!

    • @sakuraharuno4667
      @sakuraharuno4667 Před 4 lety +63

      @@soniatsui7606 *_lol.. not an A.. they want A+ and 90% marks all the time.. still they won't stop comparing..😂😂_*

    • @soniatsui7606
      @soniatsui7606 Před 4 lety +28

      Sadia Khan Asian parents cont.: What A+ is the highest grade you can get? I don’t care. Get an A+++ or I will kick you out!

    • @sakuraharuno4667
      @sakuraharuno4667 Před 4 lety +17

      @@soniatsui7606 *_I got an A (total) in my exams and my tutor is like: what?? You got only 52 in maths?? When I was in your age I always got 90%.. or even 100.. I also said I got 86 in chemistry and 82 in biology, my preparation was not good I just passed somehow.. my teacher is so annoying.. if my mom and dad was here then they would've killed me tho😂😂😂.._*

  • @cheryllock697
    @cheryllock697 Před 2 lety

    i am blessed to watch this video one month before my exam! i like his voice and his speed when he speak, also i feel very convinced by what he says, thank you!

  • @ianawilsonn
    @ianawilsonn Před rokem +2

    This was gold. Retrieval technique has definitely taken me much farther than note taking alone.

  • @sandman2995
    @sandman2995 Před 3 lety +828

    this man is so efficient he does 40 minutes of speaking in a 20 minute video

    • @shynessbreakthroughcommuni826
      @shynessbreakthroughcommuni826 Před 3 lety +9

      lol! You'll find that many of the efficiency CZcamsrs speak about the same speed

    • @sandman2995
      @sandman2995 Před 2 lety

      @Krishna Patel ok

    • @aleksandrsavchenko714
      @aleksandrsavchenko714 Před 2 lety

      Is that applicable to sex also - can you be 2x faster and productive? :))

    • @viniciush.6540
      @viniciush.6540 Před 2 lety +5

      Different from my teachers that do a 40min class that could be done in 20, because they speak so fucking slow its insane

    • @LivingAloneTips
      @LivingAloneTips Před 6 dny

      He listens to audiobooks double speed, he's become the audiobook himself 😎

  • @hannie9124
    @hannie9124 Před 3 lety +2001

    Ali Abdaal: active recall is the most effective way to learn
    Me: I don't have something to recall, my brain knows nothing

  • @MM84267
    @MM84267 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for speaking quickly. Not being sarcastic. So many youtubers speak so slowly. I just feel like you are so easy to learn from because you speak quickly. Thanks

  • @meditalentsadministrator7641

    This video made me recall what I used to do when I was in junior school. Somehow active recalling style of revision fades away as you move higher level ! Strangely! Thank you , Ali, gonna revisit this technique for my masters program 😊

  • @chanmi.j
    @chanmi.j Před 3 lety +371

    "We learn far better by practicing and retrieving stuff from our brains rather than putting stuff into our brains." WOW. I've restarted studying for the MCAT over 3 times. Each time, I've wasted time simply rereading because I was scared my brain forgot everything. But I need to trust that I got this. I will definitely try active recall this time. Thank you!

    • @moonchild5267
      @moonchild5267 Před 3 lety +8

      I have wasted three chapters by reading them again ND again and not practice the questions.....

    • @leavemealone7108
      @leavemealone7108 Před 3 lety

      Same

    • @assassin7250
      @assassin7250 Před 2 lety

      How do you practice the question? Where do u find that?

  • @eillet7
    @eillet7 Před 4 lety +683

    the technique actually worked! (cause at first i was skeptical about it) but the previous exam i had 43/100 on my bio and this exam i improve myself 68/100 which surprise everyone (including myself) just by active recalling
    not for attention but just wanted to share it :)

    • @ZzantaQf
      @ZzantaQf Před 4 lety +31

      Well done, all the best for the coming future.

    • @tikweirdtok7746
      @tikweirdtok7746 Před 4 lety +7

      Telisha Hello there, did you use this technique for GCSEs. May you please help me with what you did by using active recalling. I’m doing AQA Higher

    • @alphz1328
      @alphz1328 Před 4 lety +8

      @@tikweirdtok7746 I made notes and used anki on those notes and got all 9 apart from Spanish

    • @hamzashafie4821
      @hamzashafie4821 Před 4 lety +4

      Cryptol bro did u really send £24 on that anki app?

    • @alphz1328
      @alphz1328 Před 4 lety +3

      @@hamzashafie4821 used the website or used it on my computer. It's worth it

  • @FriendlyLuck
    @FriendlyLuck Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing this, I think it’s going to help a lot! You’ve made me excited for my future

  • @magtibayalexiafrancesca5061

    Thank you! I've been struggling with my past technique of studying now I am in the 3rd year level of Medical Technology! This week will be my PRE LIMS 🤗 I'll probably use these techniques to improve and hoping to pass examinations ❤️

  • @anitanirmal27
    @anitanirmal27 Před 3 lety +658

    You are the first youtuber who says "Feel free to skip video" and other youtubers say "Don't Skip" and I think in one of his videos he said "Don't watch this full video bcoz it's too long, Timestamps are given in discription, feel free to skip"

    • @penguin-tc1cx
      @penguin-tc1cx Před 3 lety +18

      erm I wouldn't say the first but okay

    • @crunkky8736
      @crunkky8736 Před 3 lety +7

      @@penguin-tc1cx nah he is actually the first to do it.

    • @rayzenv
      @rayzenv Před 3 lety +8

      @@crunkky8736 i know many others

    • @rayzenv
      @rayzenv Před 3 lety +4

      @Mani Kantan Bailey Sarian

    • @penguin-tc1cx
      @penguin-tc1cx Před 3 lety +10

      @@crunkky8736 just because you haven’t seen it doesn’t mean there are people who have done it before...

  • @aurocado
    @aurocado Před 4 lety +722

    I've been struggling in finding a studying method for the last 20 years.. if this works out for me, you practically saved my university career

  • @madamhummingbird
    @madamhummingbird Před 2 lety

    This is the single best study practice video I've watched on youtube, period. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and research with us. I will give your study techniques a go first thing tomorrow. Bless.

  • @AmberMardones
    @AmberMardones Před 2 lety

    You have been SO helpful! thank you so much for everything you do!

  • @62294838
    @62294838 Před 5 lety +538

    "Cognitively, the more brain power it takes to recall the facts, the better strength of that connection it seems to get."

  • @sumenthrirao8489
    @sumenthrirao8489 Před 4 lety +369

    Intelligent, down to earth and a humble personality.

  • @marclanglois4875
    @marclanglois4875 Před 2 lety

    Super useful information. I never realized how much time i was wasting when it came to studying ineffectively. Still learning how to get rid of note taking and rather "take questions" instead. Love hearing evidence based studies translated into understandable English.

  • @JackieNorfleet1
    @JackieNorfleet1 Před 2 lety

    Very help information! I am definitely going to work on these techniques going forward!!! Thanks again!

  • @fuadeyuboglu
    @fuadeyuboglu Před 5 lety +782

    I just "summerized" 10 pages chapter into 12 (maybe more) . And now I'm here. 😂

    • @tiwiogunye
      @tiwiogunye Před 4 lety +9

      Batuhan Fuad Eyüboğlu im dead 😲😲

    • @isha5429
      @isha5429 Před 4 lety +7

      Omg 😂😂😂

    • @betht840
      @betht840 Před 4 lety +24

      That happens when I always try to summarize lol

    • @briochekoo
      @briochekoo Před 4 lety +1

      So true

    • @oliviaa505
      @oliviaa505 Před 4 lety

      Same my English teacher made me summarise 17 chapters of a book for English lit haha

  • @tombasu6108
    @tombasu6108 Před 6 lety +813

    This is definitely the most useful study tips video I've seen, thank You!!

  • @issel_withcells7639
    @issel_withcells7639 Před 2 lety

    This finally make sense to me, this method is not actually uncommon, but later we find it not necessary, because we tend to focus more about reminding ourselves what we miss (read more, noticing more). But actually what we need is to keep the subject on our mind, and that’s why we repeat it. Now i get it and really feel grateful for it.

  • @danieljaramillo1519
    @danieljaramillo1519 Před 10 měsíci

    I find this so useful in my premed journey, thank you for taking the time to do some research and put this together ! Your awesome 🤙🏼

  • @misse8050
    @misse8050 Před 3 lety +654

    My dad is a teacher and he's been practising Active Recall for years when he's preparing for his lectures and he always advised me to do the same. So I would pretend I'm teaching a bunch of imaginary students and I would recall everything and that helped me a lot. So I never knew this practise was actually uncommon. Now watching this I'm like ah for once I was actually doing the right thing

    • @sadiquesalman7915
      @sadiquesalman7915 Před 2 lety +32

      I also do the same, I have a whiteboard in my room where I teach 'ghosts' everyday... and that really works. It is also a part of the famous Feynman technique.

    • @leej1759
      @leej1759 Před 2 lety

      I never knew it was uncommon, either!!

    • @tayebabdullah384
      @tayebabdullah384 Před 2 lety

      Thanks

    • @e4e086
      @e4e086 Před rokem +3

      @@sadiquesalman7915 bruh😂

    • @AM-nq9jv
      @AM-nq9jv Před rokem +2

      I have did this some many years back where I would score good but after getting influenced by internet. I have spoiled the routine. Now getting back to it.

  • @souv1k985
    @souv1k985 Před 5 lety +1876

    If I get above 8.0 this semester in my electrical engineering undergrad, I'll be running around the campus with your picture stuck on my forehead. Anyways, very helpful!.
    OK this blew up! After 2 years what I realized after getting 8.34 and 8.67 is that test scores are the least important thing in education. If you truly love the subject, you will succeed! In my case, I made a wrong decision of taking Electrical Engineering and thus, I just wanted to at least keep my parents happy! So my advice as an idiot would be to take up subjects only after good amount of research. Maybe the college for your fav subject might not be great, but its the students that give worth to a college. And if you are really good at what you love doing, YOU WILL GET NOTICED. Good luck internet strangers!
    UPDATE 2: am 22 now and work at huge MNC as a DevOps engineer. I earn more than anyone in my family but most importantly have a work that I absolutely enjoy doing. Being from middle class, I now have plenty in my pocket and absolutely enjoy every passing day. All I can say is that the current education system is shit and test scores are useless.

    • @zzzzzz-wb6sj
      @zzzzzz-wb6sj Před 5 lety +48

      Ad Min looking forward to a video of you doing just that ;D

    • @souv1k985
      @souv1k985 Před 5 lety +56

      @@zzzzzz-wb6sj dude I have just one month left to pull that off, wish me luck

    • @zzzzzz-wb6sj
      @zzzzzz-wb6sj Před 5 lety +12

      Ad Min ohdamn oof all the best man exams are stressful 🤧🤧

    • @Lina-ze3fj
      @Lina-ze3fj Před 4 lety +2

      @@souv1k985 how did it go?

    • @souv1k985
      @souv1k985 Před 4 lety +47

      @@Lina-ze3fj Except for 2 subjects out of five everything was excellent. Finished just yesterday. Results will be out at a months time.

  • @SagentTile
    @SagentTile Před rokem

    I love how you structure your videos. Top content 👌🏽

  • @kitrichardson2165
    @kitrichardson2165 Před rokem +2

    Making a practice question out of the lecture notes is a great idea!

  • @Saira-er2wg
    @Saira-er2wg Před 3 lety +470

    Not the hero we asked for, but the hero we needed.

    • @brijeshsamal7035
      @brijeshsamal7035 Před 3 lety +7

      Definitely more heroic than most of the people who are called “heroic”, in my opinion

  • @lechterred9519
    @lechterred9519 Před 4 lety +572

    *TL;DW*
    *DONTs*
    Highlighting
    Summarising (copy from book)
    Underlining
    Rereading
    *DOs*
    Anki/active recall
    Close book and summarise
    Create list of questions

  • @karthikeyans1654
    @karthikeyans1654 Před 2 lety +3

    These are the most practical tips that makes studies much more enjoyable and easier.Thanks Ali!

  • @annejones3659
    @annejones3659 Před 2 lety +4

    My mom would always help me study when i was in elementary and she’d always quiz me after each section so as a kid i was actually understanding the whole topic for exams and quizzes of just memorizing info. It helped me create a good study habit of studying to understand instead of memorizing.

  • @katrina896
    @katrina896 Před 4 lety +207

    One of the rare youtubers whose sole purpose of doing a vlog is to help people. Thank you so much! Note taking isn't really for me and I find it really hard to just compile and write notes. Especially because of our coming comprehensive exam which all of our major subject's topic from the very first to the last. I was already thinking about spending my whole week after class writing and rereading the lessons. And I found this! Thank you so much!! I hope I'll do great!!

    • @pigeonlove
      @pigeonlove Před 4 lety +2

      Sole purpose? There is an advert below the video

    • @JA-hg6ee
      @JA-hg6ee Před 4 lety +2

      @@pigeonlove lmao. you must not be the target for this video ig

  • @kokodaengg
    @kokodaengg Před 3 lety +315

    I have my exams in 8 days and I was rereading, making notes and highlighting... So I started doing past papers using the active recall method and let me tell you I HAVE IMPROVED SO FREAKING MUCH

  • @Amy-jz9bx
    @Amy-jz9bx Před 2 lety

    amazing. thank you! I am studying for the MCAT right now and I have been reading and making notes. Was planing on going back and rereading and THEN making flashcards. Nope. going to employ the active recall strategy and see how it goes!

  • @vedasmusicworld1420
    @vedasmusicworld1420 Před 7 měsíci

    thank you for making this video! you've been so helpful and so nicely explained everything. I appreciate it so much!

  • @srdpnth
    @srdpnth Před 5 lety +273

    Your video just happens to pop up in my feed somehow and I must say this is the most influential video I have seen in my life.

    • @uddeshyasharma5779
      @uddeshyasharma5779 Před 4 lety +11

      Same here. Just random youtube suggestion and I end up subscribing this awesome channel that was unknown to me nearly 12 hours ago.

  • @Twylinaelizabeth
    @Twylinaelizabeth Před 5 lety +245

    I’m a law student at a state school in the US. If these study tips are good enough for a Cambridge medical student, they’re good enough for me!

  • @carrots3865
    @carrots3865 Před 2 lety

    i think this is by far the most helpful way for me to revise. in my case, ive got RE and psychology mocks coming up, and i genuinely feel like this helped my made progress with my keywords and concepts and studies.

  • @diglet553
    @diglet553 Před 2 lety +54

    This pretty much verified what I observed when revising for my A Level Physics exams. I was heading towards a D, however I found that by using mind maps to summarise chapters, develop practice tests, and then do a tonne of past exam papers, I went up to a solid B.
    I was well chuffed! Active recall really does work 😁

    • @Mm-ek5pj
      @Mm-ek5pj Před 2 lety +1

      Yo I'm doing unit 1 of physics in January please tell me how u managed to write anything at all. I am struggling hard 😭

    • @Nelo_blackgirlmagic22
      @Nelo_blackgirlmagic22 Před rokem

      How did you do it please share

    • @-SimonRiley
      @-SimonRiley Před 10 měsíci

      Bro how do you do the initial learning? You just mentioned the ways you perform revision

  • @naynikag7792
    @naynikag7792 Před 3 lety +217

    I've often struggled with study methods because:
    a) they're pretty time-consuming
    b) they're not very effective
    Spaced repetition & active recall seem like solid techniques. Using them each day now

  • @pizzacari
    @pizzacari Před 4 lety +410

    There is one cool method that my numerical methods teacher taught us in order to easily remember mathematical definitions, it goes like "try to explain it like you were explaining it to your grandma". Basically you try to reduce a topic to the most simple and understandable form, without any technical details, so that there is no way you can forget it, and then develop the idea and add more details, again like you were teaching someone who has no idea what you are talking about.

    • @harpreetjanday1660
      @harpreetjanday1660 Před 4 lety +15

      Feynman technique?

    • @mattchalk4579
      @mattchalk4579 Před 4 lety +2

      This helps me a lot. I explain concepts to the guys at work and find it helps to cement the ideas.

    • @mimamimoo
      @mimamimoo Před 4 lety +1

      How do i study math by thid techniqueeeeee

    • @mandyn0429
      @mandyn0429 Před 3 lety +5

      In university, that is also a way we are taught to write essays. Explain in such a way you'd explain to someone who has little to the knowledge of the course. In doing this, not only are you being specific in detail, but you're also giving out a lot of information and also adding to your word count😅. Our lecturers always stress that we should not ”assume” they know what we're writing about coz we end up missing a lot of vital points. Coz who knows, you paper might be featured in the schools newspaper. People who don't take your course need to understand what you wrote. Also, this helps one engage a lot more with their content.

    • @mandyn0429
      @mandyn0429 Před 3 lety +1

      Hathat Bima with Maths it's always helpful to go through past exam papers. When I'm on a time crunch, I used to skip all the book exercises and went straight to going through past papers. Not only are you actively recalling but you're also getting a feel of how questions will be asked and how they (based on the memo) want/ expect you to answer them. (I'm not saying don't be active in class and not take notes, but I do recommend spending most of your time (at least 70%) on doing past papers. Especially when dealing with numbers because not every problem is the same. It helps you think outside the box, so they say😌). This is a late response, but I hope it helps. Also I only just came across this video😅.

  • @pm0899
    @pm0899 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you so much for your informative videos! I really enjoy them and when it comes to studying and general time management, you really are a role model to me. I will implement the study techniques you have talked about in this video for my next (and last) exams of my Bachelor´s degree and will keep you updated how it went :)
    All the best :)

  • @ItunuAyinla
    @ItunuAyinla Před 2 lety

    Final exam is in a week and for some reason i've been finding it difficult to read, i am one of the people that highlights and reread. I'm so happy to watch this video and i'm implementing all you've talked about straight away.thank you so much

  • @mostlymatt7567
    @mostlymatt7567 Před 5 lety +58

    I got my first 100 on my biology test today out of the entire year a week after implementing what he's talking about. Watch this video and his part two and utilize these tools. Once you truly learn how to understand information, learning becomes addicting. Thank you Ali.

  • @muhammadahmed.7017
    @muhammadahmed.7017 Před 4 lety +111

    In my whole life, you are first person who told me how to study effectively🙂.

  • @timmyourking4482
    @timmyourking4482 Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much!!! Studying for my history exam and the anki app helped me so much.

  • @zyyy3978
    @zyyy3978 Před rokem

    SO USEFUL thank you!!i needed this reminder to feel motivated after feeling lost on how to study effectively and manage my subjects.👍👍

  • @43-vanikalyanirapelly67
    @43-vanikalyanirapelly67 Před 3 lety +269

    I did active recalling without knowing what it is when I was at school. After completion of the lesson I used to go to the questn section and think of answers in my mind. But after I got into 11th and 12 th I just forgot about it all. And I kept on rereading highlighting and summarising. And yeah I didn't score much like I did in my school. Now that I'm in engineering and completely lost on how to study. I'm glad I watched this video. I'm gonna get my old habits on track again 😁 thank u Ali

    • @hubertlainolfeschlegelstei2833
      @hubertlainolfeschlegelstei2833 Před 3 lety +12

      Omg even me! 11th and 12th ruined me

    • @leahbautista2842
      @leahbautista2842 Před 2 lety +4

      same, I've always wondered how did I do well when I was in elementary compared to now

    • @civilexplorer4720
      @civilexplorer4720 Před 2 lety +2

      Because teachers and seniors said that to understand the chapters.so we went on understanding instead of active recalling and we forgot about this technique in crucial phase

    • @premith_
      @premith_ Před 2 lety

      Same here! 😮‍💨🙏🏽
      Need to re-learn at 27 year old😅

    • @m.uporosh1180
      @m.uporosh1180 Před rokem

      Same here !!!

  • @marwanel-halawany2879
    @marwanel-halawany2879 Před 3 lety +265

    After a Year of Practising Active Recall I Can Say That You Literally Changed My Life Man

    • @SH-iw4xr
      @SH-iw4xr Před 2 lety +1

      how did you revise bro

    • @user-bf3yh6ue7p
      @user-bf3yh6ue7p Před 2 lety

      @@SH-iw4xr he explained ina video how to do it...

    • @marwanel-halawany2879
      @marwanel-halawany2879 Před 2 lety +1

      @@SH-iw4xr i would go straight to the past year exams instead of just rereading my notes

    • @ariap9697
      @ariap9697 Před 2 lety

      how come ?

    • @harumahluv4582
      @harumahluv4582 Před 2 lety +2

      @@marwanel-halawany2879 what do you do when you can't come up with an answer to a question (while practicing last year papers a s you said)

  • @crystalholder2213
    @crystalholder2213 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I just wanted to say your video helped me so much with finishing my RN program.
    Active recall works....yea the feynman's technique works...along with concept mapping I have graduated May/2023.🎉🎉🥳🥳

  • @brendahornung1990
    @brendahornung1990 Před 7 měsíci

    I am taking notes while listening to this. Both for my class and work - I am experiencing how little my note taking is helping. I look forward to learning a new way to study! Thanks.

  • @samishikhdebes3429
    @samishikhdebes3429 Před 5 lety +360

    Oh God why didn't I discover this channel before! your videos are so well-structured and quit enjoyable to watch! Everything he says is based on scientific facts and experiments, just one Thing though; and please don't feel offended by this but the video could've been shortened to about 15~17 Minutes because you repeatedly mentioned some facts(that are extremely helpful), i think with shorter videos you could reach more audience if you manage to keep the quality like this. Nevertheless the video is phenomenal!

  • @zenithahmed9787
    @zenithahmed9787 Před 4 lety +224

    This method is basically similar to Feynman Method. He said that, the best way for you to learn something is to try and make it understand to someone who has no idea about the topic

    • @eloise-mariebamford1737
      @eloise-mariebamford1737 Před 3 lety +1

      Zenith Ahmed like a Feynman diagram

    • @samueltunde4210
      @samueltunde4210 Před 3 lety

      Ever since the lockdown started my man has been action strange so i just gotta get into his account.thank you so much💯#*
      hacker_hold_748*# your great service you are simply the best hecker on here🔥 ‪+1 (567) 303‑2969‬✅💯

  • @MrCabimero
    @MrCabimero Před 2 lety

    Thank you. As a practicing Internist for 30 years and a lifelong learner, the issues I have studying for my board re-certifications is that they test you on minutiae that you don't see all the time. These techniques are the prescription for success. Also, you could certainly make questions as part of your ANKI cards for the active recall.

  • @newdaywithann1977
    @newdaywithann1977 Před 2 lety

    I must say that after discovering his videos, watch them, and apply all of the lessons that I learn from his videos into my real life and my studyng, I become better and better in my life, honestly. Thanks a lot.

  • @naseemjamal8803
    @naseemjamal8803 Před 4 lety +329

    As someone who is blind...
    It has been boarder line impossible to keep finding and re-reading notes, highlighting and making notes.
    My mind was blown on the fact that highlighting, re-reading and making notes is pretty much useless.
    This video has changed my life!
    I only create questions now and have full faith in this process.

    • @JA-hg6ee
      @JA-hg6ee Před 4 lety +19

      that's amazing !! I'm so happy you could get this information. You must feel so great to learn this way now! ☺️
      Good luck with your studies 😃

    • @kemo1594
      @kemo1594 Před 3 lety +16

      How did you write your comment though?

    • @angela-cc7jn
      @angela-cc7jn Před 3 lety +8

      Ke MO Dictation settings, accessibility settings etc.

    • @naseemjamal8803
      @naseemjamal8803 Před 3 lety +26

      ​@@kemo1594 I imagined it, and it appeared out of thin air.

    • @solivagant1170
      @solivagant1170 Před 3 lety +3

      Blind people can comment on CZcams videos now?

  • @54762109758
    @54762109758 Před 4 lety +61

    This is the most in-depth, fact-based deep-dive video on studying I've watched. Congrats on becoming a doctor!

  • @liesllinder6296
    @liesllinder6296 Před 2 lety

    Where were you when I was struggling with distance learning in accounting? I will definitely implement them. Love the "write down questions" bit. Brilliant. Pity I only stumbled upon this vid now.

  • @user-eb7bl6wm4g
    @user-eb7bl6wm4g Před rokem

    Towards the end of this video my tummy turned and I started feeling really excited. Makes me wanna learn!

  • @muminatqanitat28
    @muminatqanitat28 Před 6 lety +300

    Dude I really appreciate how much effort you put into this videos. Don't comment on all but watch them ALL. This video is now in a playlist safe - just in case I ever forget or need to recommend it.

    • @muminatqanitat28
      @muminatqanitat28 Před 6 lety +3

      You're very eloquent mashAllah and noticed your thoughts flow with so much ease. Natural gift or do you take active steps to improve your communication skills? I definitely would like to improve in this aspect any tips?

    • @muminatqanitat28
      @muminatqanitat28 Před 6 lety +7

      Ali Abdaal lol @ brain farts. You're humble. When you have friends in videos they speak like me ...meanwhile you've captured the point in 3 words and no pause. There's no thinking time. Thanks for reply. Will try get myself out there and express myself at every chance. Genuinely wish you well in your medical and CZcams journey. You're a brilliant doctor.

    • @poojamehrotra1366
      @poojamehrotra1366 Před 5 lety +5

      @@aliabdaal hi! Could you make a video on improving communication skills too? :-) With your research-based methodologies, I am sure your viewers could benefit and become more eloquent too! Thanks for all your videos!

    • @Runpierre
      @Runpierre Před 5 lety +1

      Ali Abdaal Can you recommend any good reads on being more conversational...a better communicator..more likable? I also wrotr you o Instagram looking for some advice. ig: ppierre1984

  • @flayuhat
    @flayuhat Před 6 lety +16

    11:51 "If I just practice testing myself once, that's probably more effective than re-reading this chapter four times."
    This study showed that simple retrieval practice (simply writing down everything you can remember about a chapter). The book Make It Stick asserts that active recall and spaced repetition are the two most important study strategies.
    Pretty much anything that requires you to use cognitive effort/brainpower to retrieve information that you have learned once already is effective active recall and very efficient.

  • @lckcyy
    @lckcyy Před 2 lety

    found ur channel few days ago n its been wat im watchin the past few days n i feel like ive learnt a lot!!