1. active recall (talk to yourself about what you just learn, ask questions) 2. design environment (lock phone/fridge, go to library) 3. rotating between diffuse and focused mindset (if you are stuck, let your brain relax, then comeback to the problem) 4. interleaving (mix up different topics) 5. priming (introduce new content before learning it)
That feel when i've been doing this in College(Healthcare graduation course) unintentionally and decided to call it 'Tryhard mode'. Just stopped after i passed & beat the board exam because i thought it was super weird and different compared to the others. I'm actually in tears right now since this is Vindication for me. Edit: Goes without saying that once i stopped that, i completely started to suck lol.
I remember reading another one of barbara oakleys books about focused vs diffuse mode applied to math and it reaffirmed a lot of my own observarions on cognitive performance, it can be applied to a lot of things like if you try to have that overly focused / specific mode youll be too tunnelvisioned on some micro detail that you will miss the macro or bigger picture. Or "miss the forest for the trees". For problem solving a lot of the time you have to think outside the box, and be creative. If youre too tense (whether on a neuron level or a cognitive level) it doesnt allow you to think freely and broadly. Thats why people dont perform as well when they are stressed because everything about them is in a tense state. Looking at it through the effects of different drugs on cognition it also tells a similar story, adderall or caffeine work as a stimulant and constricts your blood vessels and makes your brain go faster and more pumped and focused but brain activity is more localized around our working active memory and can make it harder for someone to create more connections across different parts of the brain and affect the ability to be as creative, but then with other drugs that have the affect of increasing connections across the brain like weed and shrooms create a more global network of neuron connections allowing creativity to flow much more and often times artists in a rut make a breakthrough with this mode of cognition or people stuck on a math problem find the solution after taking a break and are in a more clear minded brain state. I believe it is explained also by conscious vs unconscious connections, the more focused and conscious you are, the more you get trip yourself up, but when in that more diffuse relaxed state, not distracted by your own consciousness, your unconscious mind is free to branch out and make connections and the answer often comes to us, an ephiphany. One other way to look at the effect of too much of a focused state is the stress / inflammation response in the body. If our brains get inflammed it clogs up the function, making neurons fire slower and blood doesnt flow as freely, so our brain isnt as free either. Some of the best things to help reset your brain to be more diffused and clear is a nap, exercise, or meditation.
@@emmaurarefers to secondary footage ie the small video clips inserted every now and then to help with understanding or just to make the main , primary footage more entertaining. Hope this helps :)
@@mementomori1022 You are aware that a toc is common practice everywhere right? From books to films. Even university professors encourage the use of summaries and mixed overview and detail-oriented reading techniques.. Work smarter not harder imo.
As a persone with ADHD the focused and defused thinking is something we are really good at, between hyperfocus and hyperdistracted we get in the flow really easy (if we are interested) and when we hit a wall we often switch right away into hyperdistracted (you know the moment where you get frustrated and you want to throw something. Well we look around for something to throw forget we were going to throw it and start fiddling with it, our emotions disolve and then 15min later we remember we were working on something and come back to it.)
I came to RUclips to learn how to trade after listening to a guy on radio talk about the importance of investing and how he made $460,000 in 4 months from $160k. Somehow this video has helped shed light on some things, but I'm confused, I'm a newbie and I'm open to ideas.
It is also possible to produce superior performance provided you do something different from the majority. However, most of us tend to pay more attention to the shiniest position in the market than to the cost of proper diversification.
One of the big culprits behind this week’s slide lower are the stablecoins, and crypto investors should continue to monitor instability in this corner of the market, particularly UST and LUNA.
Almost all of this is brought up in Barbara Oakley's "A Mind For Numbers"/"Learning How To Learn" which you have often and justifiably given credit to. Still, I have to say, I absolutely love how you're putting it into these well-produced and concise videos that are able to reach and inspire so many people and also reflect your own journey/thoughts. Thanks, Tina!
Anime for life. Also I’m that type of person who just can’t help binge watching anime, but I also binge my homework afterwards when there’s like 3 hours left until school lol Meanwhile this anime nerd is still somehow the top of the class Welcome to the peak of procrastination
Active recall is extremely effective - though I rarely use the self-talking since I tend to be quiet out of habit. Depending on the subject, I either listen to a lecture/read then formulate my thoughts on a summary to immediately write it down(if I can properly learn mindmaps then this would be the time to form/add to one), or I apply new info to resolve a theoretical problem I create as I take in instead of doing the summary. The former is what I use for learning new concepts for software testing, and the later is something that's easier done when I'm working on python. Though when I start doing test cases I can see the later being extremely useful for software test practice. Though both techniques can be applied to every subject in some manner depending on the scope and type of concept being learned. Another for python that helps to study techniques I've already learned - Instead of partially ignoring the code that's being typed if I know/have used it before, I focus on whats being done and I mentally create the logical flow in my head as the program example is being typed out to illustrate the new concept. This way I'm already focused when the new concept is introduced along side the code I already know, and my understanding of old code is reinforced. Sometimes I may do this if hand writing code as well, but I've done less of this the farther into python I've gotten unless its a concept I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around. I used to just auto-pilot through parts I already know then try to focus when it gets to the new part, but I don't do that now and it especially helps when learning new subjects. It was more work trying to do this when I first it, but now its become habitual. I dunno if this qualifies as active recall, but its super effective - highly recommend. This would have made learning math/physics much easier. Oddly the environment design I've known about for awhile, but I didn't consider what it meant effectively nor a name to it other than the phrase my dad used: "Out of sight, out of mind." Its something he's said since I was young, and he used it for two things - if something isn't out on display then people are less likely to consider stealing from you, and the second is that you're less likely to think about something if its not within eye shot so keep snacks where you're unlikely to see them unless you specifically go looking haha But I guess that's more or less environment design, I just needed to orient it around studying. This is why I installed linux as dual boot and its my study environment. It took some time, but now when I login, I immediately start thinking about being productive. Once I'm in the mindset, then I can switch to Windows if needed without getting distracted since its easier for me to tell my brain "No" when I'm already rolling. When I login to windows first in contrast, my brain thinks Discord, Steam or whatever game I played last :p
Piggybacking off of Active Recall: I always approach my recall as if I'm going to have to explain the concept or train someone. How would I explain it to them? What are the key concepts if I trimmed down all the "fat"/excess info. This always helps me solidify the most important aspects of a topic in my mind and be able to recall it! I also make a point of practicing by ACTUALLY explaining to someone. Usually my partner, a friend, or even a coworker if we are chatting. I will always notice where I'm forgetting details of something, and then I make a point to go back and re-study that!
The importance of active recall can't be stressed enough. If I had to choose one thing that really helps me study and absorb new information, that's it.
Active tab thumb: "Don't work so hard" tab 1 (tina old video) "Why I work so hard" hummm, suspect Ok, it was just a fun coincidence (or not). BTW, You're doing great. Not hard, but clever.
I cannot relate myself to most of the things.. The way you put it was like you have 0 self control and you seek distraction.. Maybe this video was not for me..i don't really comment but this most of things mentioned in video don't apply to most of people.
The concept of environment design seems so feasible, even when you look at what you put on your phone. I have all of my game apps in a carpet where I don't even remember they are there. And since I did that I lose less time playing in those apps. So yeah, it's like "out of sight, out of mind". Sorry for the horrible English, not my first language 😅
Maybe you have not slathered enough conscious mayonnaise on your brain. This is a well-kept secret held by the top 1% of geniuses, and I'm giving it to you for free.
Hi Tina, please speak a little slowly in your videos, it's good advice but when you speak I feel like you're speed reading through a script, please speak slowly I would like to learn more from your videos!
Hate to tell you but Barbra Oakley must have gotten it from Thinking fast and Slow ruclips.net/video/9rGweuLdook/видео.html , as these books are a decade apart in publication. But I wonder why do you know the former book but not the latter?
i do the active call makes me other people look crazy but its ok and the method you for a walk...and buy something but i added exercise like biking or do some calisthenics or doing some household chores makes me release the hindrance of studying it again....
i wonder if she ran into a problem where the capstone project only covers a portion of learned material and ends up missing stuff. maybe it's not important because you probably can't remember everything but idk
i would recomend getting a girlfriend and to do that u code and earn money , i got my internship this way and bought a bike with that money and maybe i will get a ppo and then i can ask her out
the focussed and diffused minset reminds me of actual search algorithms with exploration and exploitation phases. brilliant. like the sponsor of the video :p
I find it to be really helpful when you put timestamps in your videos. It helps me for priming and it helps me remember what I learned and what I didn't learn well because it chunks everything you talk about into 2-3 words.
That cookie analogy with point two is SO relatable! I don't have ANY snacks (outside of fruit) at home, because I would've eaten all of it. no matter WHAT it is, or how MUCH =D
On a serious note, the tips/tricks/info you provide about studying/learning in this video (+ a few of the others I've watched) can be helpful to literally everybody, but may be *especially* helpful for people with neurodevelopmental differences like ADHD that make learning in the "traditional" sense extremely difficult &/or demoralizing. So thank you for sharing your wisdom, because I feel like you've armed me with the mindset & knowledge I need to be confident and actually make real progress with learning to program.
Build deliberate learning processes! Deliberate learning requires feedback, intentional thought, and interaction with others. The outcomes must be represented in actions and behavioral changes in order to solidify in our minds
Active recall helps me so much especially now in university when I do not understand a concept I find myself saying it over and over again until I get it. Thank you so much for these tips.
Lol, no wonder why I'm better at solving questions when I get back from the bathroom. I love math. A couple of times by accident I focus on solving some math questions, then I get stuck. I brought this question with me when I had to go to the bathroom. As I sat there, the solution suddenly occurred to me. After that, when I get stuck on some questions for a while, I'll be like, how about a bathroom tour, to see how it goes LOL.
Wow that was awesome. I would do priming so that I too could get excited about what I could learn and get a sense of the structure, but I didn't know that was a good technique. I felt so guilty that I would skip and not read in order. Thanks for sharing. I will definitely try incorporating that more guiltfree. The same applies to interleaving, but you are right about the caveats of it turning into multitasking and making sure to get a good foundation of the new subject first before doing that.
1. active recall (talk to yourself about what you just learn, ask questions)
2. design environment (lock phone/fridge, go to library)
3. rotating between diffuse and focused mindset (if you are stuck, let your brain relax, then comeback to the problem)
4. interleaving (mix up different topics)
5. priming (introduce new content before learning it)
Bless you
thank you
That feel when i've been doing this in College(Healthcare graduation course) unintentionally and decided to call it 'Tryhard mode'.
Just stopped after i passed & beat the board exam because i thought it was super weird and different compared to the others.
I'm actually in tears right now since this is Vindication for me.
Edit: Goes without saying that once i stopped that, i completely started to suck lol.
Thx
I remember reading another one of barbara oakleys books about focused vs diffuse mode applied to math and it reaffirmed a lot of my own observarions on cognitive performance, it can be applied to a lot of things like if you try to have that overly focused / specific mode youll be too tunnelvisioned on some micro detail that you will miss the macro or bigger picture. Or "miss the forest for the trees".
For problem solving a lot of the time you have to think outside the box, and be creative. If youre too tense (whether on a neuron level or a cognitive level) it doesnt allow you to think freely and broadly. Thats why people dont perform as well when they are stressed because everything about them is in a tense state. Looking at it through the effects of different drugs on cognition it also tells a similar story, adderall or caffeine work as a stimulant and constricts your blood vessels and makes your brain go faster and more pumped and focused but brain activity is more localized around our working active memory and can make it harder for someone to create more connections across different parts of the brain and affect the ability to be as creative, but then with other drugs that have the affect of increasing connections across the brain like weed and shrooms create a more global network of neuron connections allowing creativity to flow much more and often times artists in a rut make a breakthrough with this mode of cognition or people stuck on a math problem find the solution after taking a break and are in a more clear minded brain state.
I believe it is explained also by conscious vs unconscious connections, the more focused and conscious you are, the more you get trip yourself up, but when in that more diffuse relaxed state, not distracted by your own consciousness, your unconscious mind is free to branch out and make connections and the answer often comes to us, an ephiphany.
One other way to look at the effect of too much of a focused state is the stress / inflammation response in the body. If our brains get inflammed it clogs up the function, making neurons fire slower and blood doesnt flow as freely, so our brain isnt as free either.
Some of the best things to help reset your brain to be more diffused and clear is a nap, exercise, or meditation.
Great advice, thank you!
Please make a video about how to study personal finance
Thank you !!! 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩 It's help a lot !
I thing a lot of it was in "learn how to learn" course you mention.
This video is so good
Tina do you have a video that links your desk setup?
1. this is seriously helpful for someone like me who suffers from anxiety disorders lolol.
2. i think im in love with you. lmao jk but no rlly lolol
My persona is like this
That's why I have 0 friends
Literally 0🙂
😘
Did anyone notice an increase in B roll? it makes me so happy to see Tina enjoying her time 😭💖 she deserves the absolute best
What is this b roll you speak of?
@@emmaurarefers to secondary footage ie the small video clips inserted every now and then to help with understanding or just to make the main , primary footage more entertaining. Hope this helps :)
@@zahrabahjawi867 yes, I learned something new! Thanks for answering!
Yeah I did. It's GREAT B roll too! Really vibey~
I needed this!
What circumstance is monotonous. It 🔏 went unnoticed
Add this to the video description or at least pin this comment! @Tina Huang
@@mementomori1022 You are aware that a toc is common practice everywhere right? From books to films. Even university professors encourage the use of summaries and mixed overview and detail-oriented reading techniques.. Work smarter not harder imo.
@@mementomori1022 Let's agree to disagree
@@mementomori1022 If you want to battle by essay, look elsewhere.
damnnn you need to give us some skincare advice
As a persone with ADHD the focused and defused thinking is something we are really good at, between hyperfocus and hyperdistracted we get in the flow really easy (if we are interested) and when we hit a wall we often switch right away into hyperdistracted (you know the moment where you get frustrated and you want to throw something. Well we look around for something to throw forget we were going to throw it and start fiddling with it, our emotions disolve and then 15min later we remember we were working on something and come back to it.)
so true, thanks for raising that point.
I came to RUclips to learn how to trade after listening to a guy on radio talk about the importance of investing and how he made $460,000 in 4 months from $160k. Somehow this video has helped shed light on some things, but I'm confused, I'm a newbie and I'm open to ideas.
Investing in stocks is a good idea, a good trading system would puts you through many days of success.
It is also possible to produce superior performance provided you do something different from the majority. However, most of us tend to pay more attention to the shiniest position in the market than to the cost of proper diversification.
Exactly, the trick is to diversify your investment, don't panic when everyone else do and invest consistently
@Gadafy Moses That's impressive. Are you giving him your money or it stays in your trading account? What's really the idea behind copying trades.
One of the big culprits behind this week’s slide lower are the stablecoins, and crypto investors should continue to monitor instability in this corner of the market, particularly UST and LUNA.
Almost all of this is brought up in Barbara Oakley's "A Mind For Numbers"/"Learning How To Learn" which you have often and justifiably given credit to. Still, I have to say, I absolutely love how you're putting it into these well-produced and concise videos that are able to reach and inspire so many people and also reflect your own journey/thoughts. Thanks, Tina!
Heteroscedasticity!!!! 🤪😂
#ActiveRecallFTW
The MOOC "Learning how to learn" made by Barbara Oakley that you've mentioned and Dr. Sejnowki is a must-do.
Anime for life.
Also I’m that type of person who just can’t help binge watching anime, but I also binge my homework afterwards when there’s like 3 hours left until school lol
Meanwhile this anime nerd is still somehow the top of the class
Welcome to the peak of procrastination
I love these tips!!! I’m going to focus more on my environment because it’s literally everything.
Also, going to try to interleave more 🎉
yay!! 🌻🌻 lmk how it goes!
Active recall is extremely effective - though I rarely use the self-talking since I tend to be quiet out of habit. Depending on the subject, I either listen to a lecture/read then formulate my thoughts on a summary to immediately write it down(if I can properly learn mindmaps then this would be the time to form/add to one), or I apply new info to resolve a theoretical problem I create as I take in instead of doing the summary. The former is what I use for learning new concepts for software testing, and the later is something that's easier done when I'm working on python. Though when I start doing test cases I can see the later being extremely useful for software test practice. Though both techniques can be applied to every subject in some manner depending on the scope and type of concept being learned.
Another for python that helps to study techniques I've already learned - Instead of partially ignoring the code that's being typed if I know/have used it before, I focus on whats being done and I mentally create the logical flow in my head as the program example is being typed out to illustrate the new concept. This way I'm already focused when the new concept is introduced along side the code I already know, and my understanding of old code is reinforced. Sometimes I may do this if hand writing code as well, but I've done less of this the farther into python I've gotten unless its a concept I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around. I used to just auto-pilot through parts I already know then try to focus when it gets to the new part, but I don't do that now and it especially helps when learning new subjects. It was more work trying to do this when I first it, but now its become habitual. I dunno if this qualifies as active recall, but its super effective - highly recommend. This would have made learning math/physics much easier.
Oddly the environment design I've known about for awhile, but I didn't consider what it meant effectively nor a name to it other than the phrase my dad used: "Out of sight, out of mind." Its something he's said since I was young, and he used it for two things - if something isn't out on display then people are less likely to consider stealing from you, and the second is that you're less likely to think about something if its not within eye shot so keep snacks where you're unlikely to see them unless you specifically go looking haha But I guess that's more or less environment design, I just needed to orient it around studying. This is why I installed linux as dual boot and its my study environment. It took some time, but now when I login, I immediately start thinking about being productive. Once I'm in the mindset, then I can switch to Windows if needed without getting distracted since its easier for me to tell my brain "No" when I'm already rolling. When I login to windows first in contrast, my brain thinks Discord, Steam or whatever game I played last :p
Piggybacking off of Active Recall: I always approach my recall as if I'm going to have to explain the concept or train someone. How would I explain it to them? What are the key concepts if I trimmed down all the "fat"/excess info. This always helps me solidify the most important aspects of a topic in my mind and be able to recall it! I also make a point of practicing by ACTUALLY explaining to someone. Usually my partner, a friend, or even a coworker if we are chatting. I will always notice where I'm forgetting details of something, and then I make a point to go back and re-study that!
Number 1 tip! Talk to myself in public to be smarter. Love it! ❤ 🌻
“Tips to be smart”
Tip #1: Be Tina
Tina, I'm really grateful that you share your knowledge with us, you are really inspirational to me! Thank you a lot!
Yo, what's with this upload consistency? 😉
I pretend to teach someone the stuff I just leanred. Works like a charm.
The importance of active recall can't be stressed enough. If I had to choose one thing that really helps me study and absorb new information, that's it.
omg yasss sis love your videos
btw drop the skin care routine
All these tips actually I am doing without having any idea, but now I have a clear idea what I am doing.
Thanks to you.
Just playing with RUclips speed settings, lets see: 0.75x.... 1x...... 1.25x...... Tina X ! 😮 btw, thanks for your video!
The quality and sheer awesomeness in Tina's videos are growing soo fast!!! Thank you for the amazing content you bring to us!!!
Priming for sure omg I didn’t know there was a name for it
Active tab thumb: "Don't work so hard"
tab 1 (tina old video) "Why I work so hard"
hummm, suspect
Ok, it was just a fun coincidence (or not). BTW, You're doing great. Not hard, but clever.
I cannot relate myself to most of the things..
The way you put it was like you have 0 self control and you seek distraction..
Maybe this video was not for me..i don't really comment but this most of things mentioned in video don't apply to most of people.
Last Thing shoul be first, meaning priming!!!!! Absolutely Great !!!!
if there is a cookie that is sitting there, I will 100% go and eat the cookie 🍪 😋 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 I'm with you on this🤣
The full title should be Tips to Learn Technical Things Faster so you can watch more ANIME. To be honest, is the only motivation you will ever need.
she's just repeating this : The Student Brain - Dr. Michael Mauk (another RUclips video)
The concept of environment design seems so feasible, even when you look at what you put on your phone. I have all of my game apps in a carpet where I don't even remember they are there. And since I did that I lose less time playing in those apps. So yeah, it's like "out of sight, out of mind". Sorry for the horrible English, not my first language 😅
Maybe you have not slathered enough conscious mayonnaise on your brain. This is a well-kept secret held by the top 1% of geniuses, and I'm giving it to you for free.
Hi Tina, please speak a little slowly in your videos, it's good advice but when you speak I feel like you're speed reading through a script, please speak slowly I would like to learn more from your videos!
Hate to tell you but Barbra Oakley must have gotten it from Thinking fast and Slow ruclips.net/video/9rGweuLdook/видео.html , as these books are a decade apart in publication. But I wonder why do you know the former book but not the latter?
Thanks Tina! love your channel! and by the way, it would be amazing to see you competing on the Iron Analyst
I'm Learning English and it pretty hard to understand you, you talking so fast XDDD
Damn studying with Luke around with his hair untied would be hard 🤤
😂😳
i do the active call makes me other people look crazy but its ok and the method you for a walk...and buy something but i added exercise like biking or do some calisthenics or doing some household chores makes me release the hindrance of studying it again....
Such good tips! Thanks Tina, you’re amazing 🙌🏻
Brilliant advice. BF Skinner also advised people to focus more on changing their environment than themselves.
i wonder if she ran into a problem where the capstone project only covers a portion of learned material and ends up missing stuff. maybe it's not important because you probably can't remember everything but idk
I finally know what that "ohhh so that's what that meant" moment was called whenever I did what was apparently called Priming.
No in the library they’ll ask you to stop speaking even if it’s to yourself that’s what happened to me they’re say you should not speak
smelling the flowers or some shit like that LOL
I love that you're lefty. 🙃
Also, nice video LOL
Thank you for saying that you cannot do more than 4 hours of studying a day. I thought there was something wrong with me :D
Application called Zero helps for Intermittent Fasting 😉
Thank you very much for this video, really helpful
I can't say it in some ones else words. What a stupid phrase. Good advice in the comments.
*locks box
*incoming urgent call from my boss 2 seconds later
i would recomend getting a girlfriend and to do that u code and earn money , i got my internship this way and bought a bike with that money and maybe i will get a ppo and then i can ask her out
Thank you your videos are most helpful I truly appreciate them
lol the b-roll is awesome
Gotta be honest: I was looking at my bestie Panda the entire time 🐼🐼🐢🐢
I wish we could add this to personal playlist super helpful
no thanks.... I stopped learning
the focussed and diffused minset reminds me of actual search algorithms with exploration and exploitation phases. brilliant. like the sponsor of the video :p
thanks for the tip. but how did you know I want to watch more anime???? :o
I find it to be really helpful when you put timestamps in your videos. It helps me for priming and it helps me remember what I learned and what I didn't learn well because it chunks everything you talk about into 2-3 words.
Wow yup
I found myself doing those tips without realizing
what if we study different subjects in 2-3 hrs?
This was extremely helpful. Thanks for posting. Brilliant is really helpful, especially if you’re neuroatypical.
That cookie analogy with point two is SO relatable! I don't have ANY snacks (outside of fruit) at home, because I would've eaten all of it. no matter WHAT it is, or how MUCH =D
Priming is an interesting process, I try doing it between technical Papers
Now Luke will be like : so that's where the cookies went lol .. Very informative video Tina thank you 🌻
Quite a few cookies were lost in the making of this video 🤔😂
I found interleaving hard waht does that means ???
I love this Tina. Please do one for starting coding.
I love how fast you are talking, I have time to watch another one )
at 12:33 in the top there is somewhat like a table that it looks as if you took hand written notes, is it an ipad?
Very good 👍 thanks 🙏
Alternate (+ irrelevant & verbose) video title: "How to Learn Anything, for People whose Brains are Hardwired with Irrevocable Access to a Bug-filled 'Co-pilot' Feature that Allows an lmpetuous, Unicycle-riding Demon Lord named ADHD to: A) Thwart all Attempts at Learning; B) Inhibit the Host-Brain's Ability to Encode Information; and C) Make its Host Endlessly FrUsTrAtEd by Slowing Down both Info Processing AND Info Retrieval" ™️©️
On a serious note, the tips/tricks/info you provide about studying/learning in this video (+ a few of the others I've watched) can be helpful to literally everybody, but may be *especially* helpful for people with neurodevelopmental differences like ADHD that make learning in the "traditional" sense extremely difficult &/or demoralizing. So thank you for sharing your wisdom, because I feel like you've armed me with the mindset & knowledge I need to be confident and actually make real progress with learning to program.
Looks like someone has been using SQ3R method
Can you post the link to the blockchain course?
Build deliberate learning processes! Deliberate learning requires feedback, intentional thought, and interaction with others. The outcomes must be represented in actions and behavioral changes in order to solidify in our minds
I recently started learning how to code and found out myself spending way too many hours taking notes..and came across this video! Thanks!
too fast the content is nice but you not interesting because it was fast
Active recall helps me so much especially now in university when I do not understand a concept I find myself saying it over and over again until I get it. Thank you so much for these tips.
I talk to myself too recently. I wonder why
How you learned English?
Lol, no wonder why I'm better at solving questions when I get back from the bathroom. I love math. A couple of times by accident I focus on solving some math questions, then I get stuck. I brought this question with me when I had to go to the bathroom. As I sat there, the solution suddenly occurred to me. After that, when I get stuck on some questions for a while, I'll be like, how about a bathroom tour, to see how it goes LOL.
LoL, isn't that what some people call multitasking?
how does one do priming when you learning online?
Always waiting for your video Tina Huang 😍
读Atomic haits的程序媛~
I just go to sleep or play FIFA
active recall, you are mine, you are mine, you are mine.... next few year you belong to me, lolx. jkjk
LOL subliminal messaging? 🐙
One of the best segues into an ad I've ever seen.
Me as a starving artist: I'm all set, I guess.
Wow that was awesome. I would do priming so that I too could get excited about what I could learn and get a sense of the structure, but I didn't know that was a good technique. I felt so guilty that I would skip and not read in order. Thanks for sharing. I will definitely try incorporating that more guiltfree. The same applies to interleaving, but you are right about the caveats of it turning into multitasking and making sure to get a good foundation of the new subject first before doing that.
does that photo of panda help on learning too?🤣
I missed you so much my crush.