I have only memories of the College. The faces you showed were all new to me except Dr. Prof Aseem Tikku who was quite junior to me and Dr. Shadab who was class fellow in MDS first year.
Evidence-based study techniques: i) Study. ii) Sleep. iii) Exercise. iv) Eat healthy v) Have fun. Skip one item and your grades will fall. Study, but do so smartly. 2. Focus on learning concepts, not rote learning as new exams test these, unlike earlier ones,which only tested memorization. Focus on clinical applications in every topic. Build strong foundation in preclinical and esp. paraclinical subjects. Only then skyscraper can come up. Make brief, illustrated mind map notes of important topics throughout college course (see Ali Abdaal). Will help in revision and PG preparation. Scan regularly. Revise previous years' subjects too. Spend 80% in current year's subjects, 20% on weekends revising earlier years' material. Don't wait till last year! Reading books is passive (recognition). Instead, ask yourself questions, do exams, teach someone (active recall). In real life, you must extract stuff from your brain. Take notes of how profs do procedures and dissections. Make checklists (read Dr. Atul Gawande's Checklist Manifesto). 3.Watch RUclips videos on the subject, such as Dr Najeeb Lectures, Rose Jose, Ninja Nerd, Medcram, Osmosis, Lecturio the previous night. In morning, review at 2x or 3x speed. Then scan textbook’s chapter heads, subheads and bold-type points, pictures, tables, captions, flowcharts, and most important, questions at back of chapter. Then attend lecture. 4. In class, don't take notes. Try to write in mind maps (Tony Buzan's videos and book). 5. Back in your room, don’t read. First, write points of the lecture. Then, read book, asking questions why, what, how, etc. With another colour pen, write points you missed. Watch more RUclips videos, such as Sam Webster, Pathoma, to reinforce ideas. 6. Make up questions. Load onto both ANKI and Excel/Google spreadsheet. Add photos, drawings, cartoons (Picmonic/Sketchy medical), vulgar mnemonics (Google), bizarre stories/skits to remember them, songs, audio in the answer decks. Use mind maps, memory palaces (Google these). Use BMJ medical, Geeky Medics, Revise daily (Anki has edge here with spaced repetition as it automatically asks when retention curve dips, but disadvantage is you have to go through huge stacks of cards unlike the spreadsheet, where you can mark difficult ones in red and read only them. Best is to use both). Use Anki DAILY, even while walking to class or while waiting for professor or next patient. A minute here, a minute there add up. 7. Colour code syllabus in Google Spreadsheet or Excel. Focus on "must know". Mark each review (recalling, not readimg books). Mark date after each revision and difficulty in 3-5 colours (easy green, medium orange, hard red. Focus on red). Write in one column why you found it difficult or if just guess. Find solution to problem. 8. The more you draw, the more you will remember. Use colour. 9. Read standard books, such as Guyton, Medium Robbins, and Gray's Anatomy for Students rather than exam-oriented point-wise books like B.D. Chaurasia, AK Jain. These may help you pass but will not build concepts. Most books, including Pathoma, are available free on Library Genesis; most videos on RUclips or BitTorrent. 10. Focus on what professors teach. They have read the important books.concentrate in class. Never skip practicals and clinics. 11. Spend maximum time in practicals and clinics. Dissect as much as possible. Volunteer to do procedures. See how to use knowledge for practical problems. Eg: see videos of "Athlean-X" and "Ask Dr Jo" or quick memorisation techniques of Dr.James Preddy on each muscle and what happens when it is injured and what exercise to do. Do with each subject. Make up questions requiring info from various subjects. Most people have neck ache, backache, knee problems. Can you solve them with exercises and therapeutic yoga (See Krishnamacharya techniques) even as a student? Incorporate Ayurveda, Siddha, Unani, Yoga, naturopathy, alternative medicine, plant-based whole foods. Learn tips from them. Don't automatically debunk them. 12. If you want to remember something really well, write down key points and read it 15 times immediately before going to bed and 15 times within first five minutes of waking up. 13. Google the topic “medical punch words”. Questions contain these words. Load in ANKI and revise daily. 14. Use Pomodoro technique to study. Buy a small alarm clock, not phone alarm. Study in 25-min blocks, then do anything else for five minutes. Do it again. After two hours, take a 30-min break. Reward yourself. Do NOT look at phone, saying "only one minute". It will suck you in. Study with a friend (More than 4 people gets disruptive). In groups, tap on desk to start, tap again to indicate break, tap to resume. Study in library rather than in hostel to reduce distractions. 15. Teaching someone without using notes is the best form of recall. If there is no one, just walk around (don't sit) and lecture to empty bedroom. Use drawings, write points on whiteboard and hand gestures. 16. Write very brief points, flowcharts on sticky notes (also called Post-It Notes) above your desk for every topic (Anas Nuur Ali how to memorize). Scan them for 15 min daily. By the end of the year, you would have seen them hundreds of times, sometimes while doing other tasks. Unlike ANKI, it jumps at you any time you stand there or walk by. 17. Don't study one after the other. Do topic 1&2, then test yourself by recalling topic 1. After studying topic 3, test on topic two. Do same with the rest. While studying several subjects, jump from one subject to another and come back to any of them at any point. 18. Before sleeping, write out plan for tomorrow. Mentally review what did you studied today and what you want to do tomorrow. The brain will focus on these when sleeping. Sleep 7-9 hours daily. Sleep by 10 pm and wake up at 5 (no wonder military institutions worldwide do that). Immediately exercise vigorously. Then study. Most students stay awake all night, sleep for 4-5 hours, wake up 15 min before class and run there unbathed! Tests showed that they retained only 30% of what they had studied all night. Studying in the morning after a good sleep helps in better retention. 19. Studying daily for one hour over a week is better than studying the whole thing in seven hours in one day. Before exams, concentrate on studying and recalling your weak areas. Read the red chapters. The night before exams, sleep rather than study all night. If you study without sleeping, you will not remember what you studied. If you must, first sleep, wake up early and study. During exams, stop every 30 minutes and take three breaths of 4 sec inhalation, 7-sec hold and 8-sec exhalation. Sure, you could have answered a few questions in those 57 seconds but did you get them right? Doing this exercise will boost oxygen level and make you more alert to tackle the other questions correctly. 20. Watch Marty Lobdell, Ali Abdaal, Kharma Medic, MDprospect, Dirty Medicine, Anuj Pachchel for tips. See videos of coaching institutes, such as DAMS and Dr Bhatia for tips, especially latest ones. Use stuff like Marrow, Prepladder. 21. Spend weekends, holidays and whenever possible helping people and listening to their stories in cancer wards, old-age homes, schools for children with special needs, physically and mentally handicapped people. Be empathetic. Never be arrogant. Everyone is a teacher. Nurses have a lot of experience as they spend more time with patients unlike doctors. Be extra courteous to them. Involve them in treatment decisions. Get 2nd, 3rd,4th opinion from various doctors. (Read Dr Lisa Sanders "Diagnosis" about rare cases that doctors couldn't identify but solved by the public using common sense). Ask seniors and professors for tips, their memorable experiences and what they would have done differently today. Learn from them. Listen to patients without interrupting them or getting impatient. If you listen long enough, you will know the problem. Rely on brains, not costly diagnostics to decide. Imagine you are in deep forest without them. 22. Don't focus on money in life. Don't be greedy and seek commissions or do unethical things even if others are doing it. Prescribe cheaper drugs. Read inspirational articles about doctors who went out of the way to serve people, often getting no money. 23. Improve your handwriting. Nearly all doctors have terrible handwriting! Many drugs have similar names with only one letter different. 24. Improve your command of English and public speaking skills. Listen to BBC radio, read English newspapers. Find a friend who will agree to and talk with you only in English. Yes, you WILL make mistakes. Never mind. As you gain confidence and experience, you will improve. Ignore friends who will tease you and mock you for speaking in English. 25. Be punctual. It will help you in life. See how many minutes it takes to go from room to classroom desk. Learn self defense during college. Will make you fit and will make you safe in life. Extra: Study of 1,000 world leaders, CEOs found that they all sleep well, and wake up early, often at 4 a.m. They do not look at phone on waking up. Instead they immediately exercise vigorously, do pranayama, meditate and write a daily journal (mentioning three things they are grateful for that day and why). Only then they touch their phone. They all focus intensely on the job on hand. They work like crazy during the week and party like crazy in the weekend! They all have a hobby that they actively pursue. They read a variety of books lifelong. Their aim: be happy, healthy and helpful to all.
@@shifaali7813 hours doesn't matter... Pahle mai bhi yahi puchta rahta tha..... And one important tip : practise one book 10 times instead of 10 books 1 time
My dream college. 🥰🥰🥰🥰
ruclips.net/video/D64He6wQNGA/видео.html
Proud to be a product of this prestigious institute
ruclips.net/video/D64He6wQNGA/видео.html
I have only memories of the College.
The faces you showed were all new to me except Dr. Prof Aseem Tikku who was quite junior to me and Dr. Shadab who was class fellow in MDS first year.
Myy dream cllg😍😍😍😍This year im coming kgmu .......love u😘😘💜💜💜💜💜💜
Hii
@@iJotii where r u from
@@iJotii thanks
Unacademy neet preperation
Deep Shikha chaurasiya
My dream clg.... I m preparing hard for there....
I wnt to be frst person from jammu kashmir to study there
Same plan of mine bro
ruclips.net/video/D64He6wQNGA/видео.html
I am already studying there
@@darzahid889 how I take admission in bsc nursing can u plz tell me admission process?
@@darzahid889 how the college for Pg courses,what about workload?
nice video thank you for sharing
Proud to be student of this beautiful college❤💖😍
Kgmu is my dream college❤ mbbs is my love😘😘❤
Got admission or not??
My top most favorite college.. 😍😍
Evidence-based study techniques:
i) Study. ii) Sleep. iii) Exercise. iv) Eat healthy v) Have fun. Skip one item and your grades will fall. Study, but do so smartly.
2. Focus on learning concepts, not rote learning as new exams test these, unlike earlier ones,which only tested memorization. Focus on clinical applications in every topic. Build strong foundation in preclinical and esp. paraclinical subjects. Only then skyscraper can come up.
Make brief, illustrated mind map notes of important topics throughout college course (see Ali Abdaal). Will help in revision and PG preparation. Scan regularly. Revise previous years' subjects too. Spend 80% in current year's subjects, 20% on weekends revising earlier years' material. Don't wait till last year!
Reading books is passive (recognition). Instead, ask yourself questions, do exams, teach someone (active recall). In real life, you must extract stuff from your brain. Take notes of how profs do procedures and dissections. Make checklists (read Dr. Atul Gawande's Checklist Manifesto).
3.Watch RUclips videos on the subject, such as Dr Najeeb Lectures, Rose Jose, Ninja Nerd, Medcram, Osmosis, Lecturio the previous night. In morning, review at 2x or 3x speed. Then scan textbook’s chapter heads, subheads and bold-type points, pictures, tables, captions, flowcharts, and most important, questions at back of chapter. Then attend lecture.
4. In class, don't take notes. Try to write in mind maps (Tony Buzan's videos and book).
5. Back in your room, don’t read. First, write points of the lecture. Then, read book, asking questions why, what, how, etc. With another colour pen, write points you missed. Watch more RUclips videos, such as Sam Webster, Pathoma, to reinforce ideas.
6. Make up questions. Load onto both ANKI and Excel/Google spreadsheet. Add photos, drawings, cartoons (Picmonic/Sketchy medical), vulgar mnemonics (Google), bizarre stories/skits to remember them, songs, audio in the answer decks. Use mind maps, memory palaces (Google these). Use BMJ medical, Geeky Medics,
Revise daily (Anki has edge here with spaced repetition as it automatically asks when retention curve dips, but disadvantage is you have to go through huge stacks of cards unlike the spreadsheet, where you can mark difficult ones in red and read only them. Best is to use both). Use Anki DAILY, even while walking to class or while waiting for professor or next patient. A minute here, a minute there add up.
7. Colour code syllabus in Google Spreadsheet or Excel. Focus on "must know". Mark each review (recalling, not readimg books).
Mark date after each revision and difficulty in 3-5 colours (easy green, medium orange, hard red. Focus on red). Write in one column why you found it difficult or if just guess. Find solution to problem.
8. The more you draw, the more you will remember. Use colour.
9. Read standard books, such as Guyton, Medium Robbins, and Gray's Anatomy for Students rather than exam-oriented point-wise books like B.D. Chaurasia, AK Jain. These may help you pass but will not build concepts. Most books, including Pathoma, are available free on Library Genesis; most videos on RUclips or BitTorrent.
10. Focus on what professors teach. They have read the important books.concentrate in class. Never skip practicals and clinics.
11. Spend maximum time in practicals and clinics. Dissect as much as possible. Volunteer to do procedures. See how to use knowledge for practical problems. Eg: see videos of "Athlean-X" and "Ask Dr Jo" or quick memorisation techniques of Dr.James Preddy on each muscle and what happens when it is injured and what exercise to do. Do with each subject. Make up questions requiring info from various subjects. Most people have neck ache, backache, knee problems. Can you solve them with exercises and therapeutic yoga (See Krishnamacharya techniques) even as a student? Incorporate Ayurveda, Siddha, Unani, Yoga, naturopathy, alternative medicine, plant-based whole foods. Learn tips from them. Don't automatically debunk them.
12. If you want to remember something really well, write down key points and read it 15 times immediately before going to bed and 15 times within first five minutes of waking up.
13. Google the topic “medical punch words”. Questions contain these words. Load in ANKI and revise daily.
14. Use Pomodoro technique to study. Buy a small alarm clock, not phone alarm. Study in 25-min blocks, then do anything else for five minutes. Do it again. After two hours, take a 30-min break. Reward yourself. Do NOT look at phone, saying "only one minute". It will suck you in.
Study with a friend (More than 4 people gets disruptive). In groups, tap on desk to start, tap again to indicate break, tap to resume. Study in library rather than in hostel to reduce distractions.
15. Teaching someone without using notes is the best form of recall. If there is no one, just walk around (don't sit) and lecture to empty bedroom. Use drawings, write points on whiteboard and hand gestures.
16. Write very brief points, flowcharts on sticky notes (also called Post-It Notes) above your desk for every topic (Anas Nuur Ali how to memorize). Scan them for 15 min daily. By the end of the year, you would have seen them hundreds of times, sometimes while doing other tasks. Unlike ANKI, it jumps at you any time you stand there or walk by.
17. Don't study one after the other. Do topic 1&2, then test yourself by recalling topic 1. After studying topic 3, test on topic two. Do same with the rest. While studying several subjects, jump from one subject to another and come back to any of them at any point.
18. Before sleeping, write out plan for tomorrow. Mentally review what did you studied today and what you want to do tomorrow. The brain will focus on these when sleeping. Sleep 7-9 hours daily. Sleep by 10 pm and wake up at 5 (no wonder military institutions worldwide do that). Immediately exercise vigorously. Then study. Most students stay awake all night, sleep for 4-5 hours, wake up 15 min before class and run there unbathed! Tests showed that they retained only 30% of what they had studied all night. Studying in the morning after a good sleep helps in better retention.
19. Studying daily for one hour over a week is better than studying the whole thing in seven hours in one day. Before exams, concentrate on studying and recalling your weak areas. Read the red chapters.
The night before exams, sleep rather than study all night. If you study without sleeping, you will not remember what you studied. If you must, first sleep, wake up early and study.
During exams, stop every 30 minutes and take three breaths of 4 sec inhalation, 7-sec hold and 8-sec exhalation. Sure, you could have answered a few questions in those 57 seconds but did you get them right? Doing this exercise will boost oxygen level and make you more alert to tackle the other questions correctly.
20. Watch Marty Lobdell, Ali Abdaal, Kharma Medic, MDprospect, Dirty Medicine, Anuj Pachchel for tips. See videos of coaching institutes, such as DAMS and Dr Bhatia for tips, especially latest ones. Use stuff like Marrow, Prepladder.
21. Spend weekends, holidays and whenever possible helping people and listening to their stories in cancer wards, old-age homes, schools for children with special needs, physically and mentally handicapped people. Be empathetic. Never be arrogant. Everyone is a teacher. Nurses have a lot of experience as they spend more time with patients unlike doctors. Be extra courteous to them. Involve them in treatment decisions. Get 2nd, 3rd,4th opinion from various doctors. (Read Dr Lisa Sanders "Diagnosis" about rare cases that doctors couldn't identify but solved by the public using common sense).
Ask seniors and professors for tips, their memorable experiences and what they would have done differently today. Learn from them. Listen to patients without interrupting them or getting impatient. If you listen long enough, you will know the problem. Rely on brains, not costly diagnostics to decide. Imagine you are in deep forest without them.
22. Don't focus on money in life. Don't be greedy and seek commissions or do unethical things even if others are doing it. Prescribe cheaper drugs. Read inspirational articles about doctors who went out of the way to serve people, often getting no money.
23. Improve your handwriting. Nearly all doctors have terrible handwriting! Many drugs have similar names with only one letter different.
24. Improve your command of English and public speaking skills. Listen to BBC radio, read English newspapers. Find a friend who will agree to and talk with you only in English. Yes, you WILL make mistakes. Never mind. As you gain confidence and experience, you will improve. Ignore friends who will tease you and mock you for speaking in English.
25. Be punctual. It will help you in life. See how many minutes it takes to go from room to classroom desk. Learn self defense during college. Will make you fit and will make you safe in life.
Extra:
Study of 1,000 world leaders, CEOs found that they all sleep well, and wake up early, often at 4 a.m. They do not look at phone on waking up. Instead they immediately exercise vigorously, do pranayama, meditate and write a daily journal (mentioning three things they are grateful for that day and why). Only then they touch their phone. They all focus intensely on the job on hand. They work like crazy during the week and party like crazy in the weekend! They all have a hobby that they actively pursue. They read a variety of books lifelong. Their aim: be happy, healthy and helpful to all.
Very good medical university
Which hostel is alloted to Ms surgery pg residents? Single occupancy or double? facility?
How to fecility of kgmu for bds dipartment
I'm preparing for iit i dont know why am i seeing this😂😂😂😂
bcz you can easily distract from your path when youtube recommend you this video
@Sana khanam well said 😂😂
Wtf same next week is my itt jee adv exam lol
which hostel is alloted to ms surgery student ? single occupancy? facility
Sir , BSC nursing 2021 ka Application form kb tk aayga
How is Pulmonology in kgmu ??? Toxic or good ??? Anyone help
Yaha huspital name ke liye hai MRI ke liye marij 15 din pahle no. Laga ke aaye uska bhi MRI usdin bbhi hone ka chance nhi hai
This university is aweeeesome. I wanna come too. It will be a honour to be a student of this university. I hope I can get good enough marks.
ruclips.net/video/D64He6wQNGA/видео.html
Rose inner motivation. Thank u sir
I just love it💞
Me2 bhai
my grandma studied here :)
@@Mr_nauman1All indians have same behaviour...Tats why girls in India are not safe bcz of ppl like u
I am preparing in first year bds course it a very best surgeon
I want admission in KGMU in Dpharma. In next year 2020 what is the fee for diploma in pharmacy. Plz tell me fast
Bhai aap ka admission ho gaya ya nhi please answer me
Similar vibes to King Edward Medical University,Lahore,Punjab,Pakistan
BDS is good option to do in this clg?
One day i will come to kgmu
ruclips.net/video/D64He6wQNGA/видео.html
Sir tmj ka ilaj hota hai
great work
Sir kgmu bsc nursing na form Kb aayaga
Coming soon as a student.
ruclips.net/video/D64He6wQNGA/видео.html
Dream college 😍
ruclips.net/video/D64He6wQNGA/видео.html
my favourite college 😍
My Dream clg 😍💫
I want to admission 2019
Ot tecnision
@@sakshimishravarsha3527 upmcp exam do
Here is a Proud Georgian 😇
Aapi mein ek neet aspirant hun..pls mujhe thora tips do..8 months ..kitne hours padhun?
@@shifaali7813 hours doesn't matter... Pahle mai bhi yahi puchta rahta tha..... And one important tip : practise one book 10 times instead of 10 books 1 time
@@shifaali7813 koi nahi bateyga ye mai bta rha hu.... Avoid physics ncert book for neet... But you can study it for aiims' assertion reason questions
@@rajatmehta5905 tk 🙂
@@rajatmehta5905 aur tips de do bhai 👍
My dream college.😍😍
ruclips.net/video/D64He6wQNGA/видео.html
bsc nursing me admission karwana hai extrance exam date bto bhai 2021 me
My dream college ❤️❤️
My dream college...😍😍😘
Dream college😍😍
My dream college I’m tried to hard for catch my dream ⚡️⚡️⚡️⚡️
Kgmc ke upar or video upload kare.
Dream college..!
ruclips.net/video/D64He6wQNGA/видео.html
my dream college,I will achieve it
My dream college
ruclips.net/video/D64He6wQNGA/видео.html
❤
My dream collage 🥰🥰
I am coming this college
Hlw my dream collage i m coming soon.🥰
Dream college
Super University
Coming soon as mbbs student.
Aa raha hu . wait me
mai aa rhi kgmu😚😚😚😚😚
Really dear
Kha ho??
Moti Lal Nehru medical College ka bhi Bana do
Now it will renamed as-
Pt. Deendayal Upadhyay Rog aevam chikitsha Mahavidhalay.... probably 🤣
Love college
Dream..!!
Infection control is the top most priority. .. 😂😂😂
Hatiya MRI
Bahot hi chutiya clg hai
Regards a mbbs intern
Its very bad hospital and university.its record who admitted in hospital for cancer treatment no anyone live more than 1-2 months😢😢😢😢😭😭
Bhai kya baat kar rhe ho up ka sabse best medical college hain.
It's under top 5 ...aisey to AIIMS me kisi ki death hi Ni hoti
Cancer agar last stage pe leke aaoge toh aiims bhi nhi cmbacha payega ..... terminal cancer is fatal disease , you cNt judge a hospital on this basis
Bhaii jab tum me se Kisi Apne ki death hogi naa inke galat treatment se tab samajh me ayga😭😭😭
@@sebu8634 are bhai dil par mat le yrr
My dream college ❤️❤️❤️
My dream college