www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wzJnWCBWkI
3 Users
0 Comments
3 Highlights
0 Notes
Tags
Top Highlights
You're Not Slow: Become a Speed Learner in 20 Minutes
Blaroe 4 個月前 (已編輯) TLDR (because i’m adding this to my notes) 1. Safety Netting: Making sure you have the reasons on why you want to learn something Questions to ask: what are we talking about? why is it important? how important is this? what can i do when i learn this? what can i NOW do even after i learned this? where can i find further knowledge? these makes sure you have a more realistic and calculated expectation and reduce disappointment when you feel like you haven’t learned enough more realistic scenario like in lectures: what we’re talking about is…? what you actually meant by that is…? so when this happens, this happens? 2. Focusing on the Core Basics Making sure that the rules that are SO simple that teachers and educators forget about them because they think that people learning about something already know about the core basics these are the things that can make learning faster as this is the backbone of what you’ll need to continue to learn further ask yourself “what are the core basics i can teach myself?” things to ask: what are the things you do every day/week without fail what’s essential here what distinguishes the pro from the amateur how fast can i learn this then focus deep on the basics progress: - identify a core skill - test the core skill in different contexts - find where i can’t use the core skill (basically the limits) - strong core basics means better and faster learning later 3. Categorizing Information - Safety net: the logical backbone. Everything relies on this - Core basics: Significant and Immediate - Admin: Hard for me and not that much of a priority - Good for you: You don’t really care and aren’t important slowed read the information and slot the main topics in the categories and prioritize the safety net and core basics 4. Jumpy Learning don’t learn the things in the order given to you, learn them by how interested you are in it. this keeps your attention and motivation high and avoid early dull parts.
1. Safety Netting: Making sure you have the reasons on why you want to learn something Questions to ask: what are we talking about? why is it important? how important is this? what can i do when i learn this? what can i NOW do even after i learned this? where can i find further knowledge? these makes sure you have a more realistic and calculated expectation and reduce disappointment when you feel like you haven’t learned enough more realistic scenario like in lectures: what we’re talking about is…? what you actually meant by that is…? so when this happens, this happens? 2. Focusing on the Core Basics Making sure that the rules that are SO simple that teachers and educators forget about them because they think that people learning about something already know about the core basics these are the things that can make learning faster as this is the backbone of what you’ll need to continue to learn further ask yourself “what are the core basics i can teach myself?” things to ask: what are the things you do every day/week without fail what’s essential here what distinguishes the pro from the amateur how fast can i learn this then focus deep on the basics progress: - identify a core skill - test the core skill in different contexts - find where i can’t use the core skill (basically the limits) - strong core basics means better and faster learning later 3. Categorizing Information - Safety net: the logical backbone. Everything relies on this - Core basics: Significant and Immediate - Admin: Hard for me and not that much of a priority - Good for you: You don’t really care and aren’t important slowed read the information and slot the main topics in the categories and prioritize the safety net and core basics 4. Jumpy Learning don’t learn the things in the order given to you, learn them by how interested you are in it. this keeps your attention and motivation high and avoid early dull parts.
Glasp is a social web highlighter that people can highlight and organize quotes and thoughts from the web, and access other like-minded people’s learning.