Never approach studying like this

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  • Опубликовано: 20 авг 2022

Комментарии • 97

  • @BboyKeny
    @BboyKeny Год назад +371

    Sounds like making a concept map first by grouping all the concepts, procedures and facts. Then seeing how it relates to eachother and then you can jump into mastering it per topic.
    I think usually the topic to start with jumping in, is the topic you're interested in or curious about the most. Since the best way to learn is the way you enjoy most, at least for me having my curiousity satisfied makes me never forget it.

    • @fernandofrio5863
      @fernandofrio5863 Год назад +8

      Thanks

    • @jeongsungmin2023
      @jeongsungmin2023 Год назад +11

      More like put the info into context, then u won’t need to bother memorising it forcefully because it naturally sticks in your long term memoru

    • @jmalla6656
      @jmalla6656 Год назад +4

      If you're learning a new subject, you do not want to just throw together all the keywords into a concept map and only then try to organize it. This is exactly what he was advocating against in this video.
      What you really want to do is to organize the info immediately after acquiring it. Like Justin said, you have less than a minute to do this.

    • @the_god_killah
      @the_god_killah Год назад +1

      @@jmalla6656what do u do then. This sounds like the most logical way to to do it

    • @MONEYNOSLEEP
      @MONEYNOSLEEP 10 месяцев назад

      💯

  • @animesock1671
    @animesock1671 Год назад +83

    ahh, the lord of studying blesses us with his presence yet again. I am eternally thankful.

  • @jahdxn9290
    @jahdxn9290 Год назад +54

    One thing I’ve learned when it came to studying a specific topic is you have to be interested.

    • @jeongsungmin2023
      @jeongsungmin2023 9 месяцев назад +4

      That doesn’t always work. You can’t rely on your feelings, you need to hypothesise how certain parts are relevant to prior knowledge

    • @lolyiz971
      @lolyiz971 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@jeongsungmin2023 its true what you said and dont you think its also true that interest is also a factor. Its aleast the like the first step not the walk or running but the first step of even pursuing to go that direction.

  • @kittycatgirl1139
    @kittycatgirl1139 11 месяцев назад +17

    Pushing beyond comfort zone**
    Changing speed, terrain, go beyond edge of performance!

  • @Jiya301
    @Jiya301 2 месяца назад +1

    Yes!! I always used this approach to first organize then memorize a d it works 💯

  • @potapotapotapotapotapota
    @potapotapotapotapotapota Год назад +42

    this works for people who think in patterns but for people who think in information just absorb it all and organize it later because you literally will be able to remember it

    • @AlexTalksTwo
      @AlexTalksTwo Год назад +21

      I think that is a rare subset. Humans naturally organize information into groups and clusters. So naturally almost everyone (I'll give to say maybe there are individuals who dont) will benefit from patterns. Only problem is adjusting when your model of the clusters is faulty

    • @goldencookie5456
      @goldencookie5456 Год назад +13

      If you literally memorize isolated bits of information after seeing it a few times without thinking that much about it, then you just have incredibly exceptional memory. Trust me, most people cannot ever dream of doing that.

    • @potapotapotapotapotapota
      @potapotapotapotapotapota Год назад +2

      @@goldencookie5456 I know plenty of people with memories like an elephant. The stories they tell are so detailed it blows my mind. There really are people with good memories out there. I work with them every day as a chef.

    • @expeditioner9322
      @expeditioner9322 Год назад +3

      ​@@potapotapotapotapotapota But how do you know what causes them to have such exceptional memories? You can't see what goes on inside their brains. Is it because they can memorize information better that others or is it they are better at thinking deeply about the info and organising it?

    • @potapotapotapotapotapota
      @potapotapotapotapotapota Год назад +1

      @@expeditioner9322 human brains adapt to whatever situations life throws at them, so some develop skills that others do not and vice versa

  • @CHARGING.TARTARUS
    @CHARGING.TARTARUS 3 месяца назад

    This is how i first encountered my best and favourite ever channel in RUclips, you truly did change the way i think after 7 months of this trial ( after binge watching your videos ofc)

  • @cheriyashi583
    @cheriyashi583 Год назад +17

    I find that writing or typing down acronyms for sequential groups of information help me to memorize and understand concepts, this video further validated that it's an effective learning method. Wasn't sure for a long time already since lots of other learning methods didn't work as well for me.

  • @XAEX12
    @XAEX12 5 месяцев назад +5

    First session (30 min):
    Figure out the connections between all concepts and sort it out through either sequential and/or relational (grouping) ordering.
    Second session:
    Read, understand, and think of HOW and WHEN to apply the information

  • @adan4477
    @adan4477 Год назад +6

    Justin I learned things from you... I consider you a teacher
    Thanks

  • @Dancexangel.
    @Dancexangel. Год назад +73

    JUSTIN STOP IM TRYING TO GATEKEEP U UGH

  • @alishaanimations3058
    @alishaanimations3058 Год назад +7

    Changed my life

  • @Nyowind
    @Nyowind Год назад +78

    Justin, I want to gatekeep your knowledge, but you’re growing so much that my fellow overachievers will find this channel.

    • @EfrahNaz
      @EfrahNaz Год назад +2

      😂😂😂 I have same fear

    • @resafuentes
      @resafuentes Год назад

      😂😂

    • @expeditioner9322
      @expeditioner9322 Год назад +2

      Gatekeeping knowledge would be if Justin controls what you learn and what you don't learn. I don't think Justin is doing that. He is sharing alternative methods you can use to learn the things you want to learn.

    • @normaaliihminen722
      @normaaliihminen722 11 месяцев назад

      I'm not overachiever and I still dont understand these topics what are discussed.

    • @chrismundanchery4357
      @chrismundanchery4357 11 месяцев назад

      Bruh why would you want to gatekeep this?

  • @Scottlp2
    @Scottlp2 Год назад +2

    Once you have framework, outline, etc much easier to fill in details

  • @tanzimalmahi7084
    @tanzimalmahi7084 11 месяцев назад +2

    I can't find the link to the full video..... can somebody drop it? I would appreciate it

  • @reality_official
    @reality_official Год назад +4

    Where is the link?

  • @user-de1px7om1x
    @user-de1px7om1x Год назад +3

    Full video link??????

  • @seetsamolapo5600
    @seetsamolapo5600 Год назад +52

    How do you form groups of what you don't even know?

    • @jakubkucera1973
      @jakubkucera1973 Год назад +19

      Honestly, guess. Oftentimes you can get pretty close just based on what you know already. Then when you're learning you'll be looking for where you were right and wrong instead of just blindly trying to memorize.

    • @g12nm
      @g12nm Год назад +3

      ​@Jakub Kučera
      Let's say you are learning a new language or math how will you arrange or organisewithout knowing the fundamentals

    • @user-dn5on6lg6z
      @user-dn5on6lg6z Год назад +5

      Make groups as you go, say you learned a new word today, what group does it fit in? What tense? Is it a verb or a noun? Would you use it in formal or casual conversation? What is it used for, a greeting, descriptive word, inanimate object?

    • @skyissoblue
      @skyissoblue Год назад +2

      I guess utilizing the learning objectives, and skimming thru the entire chapter

    • @seetsamolapo5600
      @seetsamolapo5600 Год назад

      @@skyissoblue one way I've found out through brute force studying (SAA CO3)lately is to put info into categories according to different options of the same type

  • @bisnisldy1
    @bisnisldy1 Год назад +4

    How can I group first if I don’t know what the information is to know what groups to create?🤔

    • @bongiwemabasa6141
      @bongiwemabasa6141 Год назад +2

      Ask questions about differences and similarities about related concepts eg cellular respiration vs photosynthesis in biology

  • @ChiragNagpal375
    @ChiragNagpal375 2 месяца назад

    I request plz put main facts in shorts. I'm a student,, sometimes i see youtube and i want to see yours

  • @gadgetboyplaysmc
    @gadgetboyplaysmc Год назад +8

    how do you group the information if you dont understand which pieces of information should be part of which?

    • @marktan8423
      @marktan8423 Год назад +11

      Hmm good question. Maybe try looking at the outlines of several chapters/topics to get a quick gist of them - and then see how each one links to the other(s). Just my theory anyway
      For example, cuz of the presence of chloroplasts, photosynthesis happens, which leads to glucose being made, etc.

    • @gadgetboyplaysmc
      @gadgetboyplaysmc Год назад +4

      @@marktan8423 Good insight man. I guess skimming through the outlines before going through all the content helps a lot

  • @hikikomorihachiman7491
    @hikikomorihachiman7491 11 месяцев назад +1

    Is this method applicable in engineers field too?
    Like using stereo net to find stable/unstable planes?
    Or in advance hydraulics, for saint-venant equations?

  • @abhinavk1375
    @abhinavk1375 Год назад +7

    Full video link??

  • @mouhou9795
    @mouhou9795 Год назад +31

    Sorry but to me this is just a bunch of buzz words.
    Please elaborate.

    • @mmccrownus2406
      @mmccrownus2406 Год назад +9

      His whole channel is elaborating

    • @mystery6411
      @mystery6411 Год назад +12

      Here's an elaboration, BOOM BOOM BOOM!

    • @orangeroad_
      @orangeroad_ Год назад +1

      he has Livestreams check them out

  • @avnigarg3616
    @avnigarg3616 Год назад +2

    second comment, your advice has really helped me, thank you!

  • @blizzred2143
    @blizzred2143 Год назад

    Retrieval structure ? Or gastalt

  • @princessleai
    @princessleai 11 месяцев назад +1

    but i dont have questions until after i've put in info in.....

  • @smiless101
    @smiless101 8 месяцев назад

    Where is the link your talking about??

  • @XAEX12
    @XAEX12 Год назад +14

    But how would arrange and organize the information before learning it and understanding it?? Don't you have to learn the info to know how to organize it??

    • @TheHiroClaw123
      @TheHiroClaw123 Год назад +8

      I believe this is called priming. He has a video example of how he does it practically: ruclips.net/video/tkkey3ADfCI/видео.html

    • @TheHiroClaw123
      @TheHiroClaw123 Год назад +20

      (I think) it's like identifying the important idea of a group of information. Then identifying the important idea of another group of information. Then, comparing the similarities/differences in the nature of each group.
      So, say you have 20 boxes of different items. You can read the labels for each, then create larger categories for the boxes, say 10. Then you can create categories for those categories, say 3. But there's tons of ways you can organize information. You could take out the items out of the boxes and make your own labeled boxes. You can stack the boxes next to each other, around each other. Boxes could exist between different categories. Boxes can be of different shapes and sizes, colours, etc. You could have boxes inside boxes. You could have items taped to boxes, etc.
      After you prime in a way that makes sense to you. Once you learn the details of your topics, you can just stick it into your system of boxes and voila, you remember it for a long time

    • @biksonkris1965
      @biksonkris1965 Год назад +1

      It is called pre read / visualize as you know then you read and re confirm

  • @gagandeepkaurtagore3196
    @gagandeepkaurtagore3196 11 месяцев назад

    Hiii, this clip is a part of which video?

  • @cardiffvannburgosjr.8647
    @cardiffvannburgosjr.8647 5 месяцев назад

    Ohh dear

  • @Googler-nz2sh
    @Googler-nz2sh Год назад

    Simply, for me it's just overview all over bold points in a chapter. Skimming on any important things, like may be theorems, or just read subunit, or maybe only the summary. Sometimes, I had gotten the entire point of what are discussed there. Then, I write down after classifying them by my prior knowledge before trying problem solving. If I got more fails, I start to read difficult discussions. 😣😖😫😫😫😩 butt isokayy relaxxxx first and take a deep breath to start enjoyable thinking.
    Fun fact, I just accept many theorems in a chapter in Calculus 2 because all of those are obviously make senses, double integrals maybe, and got 100/100 scores only just read summary and do some problems, until I can do 6 difficult problems. I remember the one of those is polar coordinates related but I also need to review to chapter on Vector and 3D curves equations.
    Sometimes maths/logical related subjects intuitively make senses for us, so just think of it instead of reading all through, or if it is still difficult just read the theorem and prove it only by intuition (if ur major doesnt even need to improve more, like cs), then just do strategical practice, until at least I can do 3 most difficult problems (like the highest level in those chapters) before really sure to be ready got an A for exams 😂😂

  • @rinzzlerr963
    @rinzzlerr963 Год назад +3

    Okay, then I got the 3rd comments and thanks for content, you got good tips out there. 👊😎

  • @abhinavkumarsingh5382
    @abhinavkumarsingh5382 10 месяцев назад +2

    How can you form groups of concepts which you don't even know about ? it may be possible in humanities subjects, because for example history follows a pattern no matter which time period you study ? the king, the culture, the changes and any major developments within that time period. But when you go into something like fluid mechanics, every sentence is a buzzword, it takes a lot of time to first understand the concept itself, then workout the examples, solve some questions, only then can you group it in ok so, what are the type of applications that I can do here with this knowledge? before knowing the concept itself, you can't do anything.

  • @Prince-op7lp
    @Prince-op7lp Год назад +4

    Where can I watch the full video

  • @22-s-universe
    @22-s-universe Год назад

    ❤️

  • @raphieh2452
    @raphieh2452 Год назад

    Can someone explain

  • @aruji-sama
    @aruji-sama 11 месяцев назад

    How to pass exam?

  • @mohneeshsharma
    @mohneeshsharma Год назад +2

    Hey man, first comment and hey, I really love your content

  • @zahrademmane8610
    @zahrademmane8610 12 дней назад

    So I have a study method which I think is not very convenient, for anybody who reads this comment, comment what you think about it...
    So I start by reading about the topic and writing as many notes as possible then after this long process I start my revision which involves asking and answering questions. I think this is lower level thinking because it takes me forever to accomplish phase one but I got so used to it that it's hard to do anything else. Also, studying content on yt is overwhelming me, if you've been in this please help😢

  • @ninjycoon
    @ninjycoon Год назад

    Gatekeepers bad

  • @sarazohar4923
    @sarazohar4923 Год назад

    Fantastic way I follow but the issue here is this works only when u read summaries of the subject to know before hand the boxes to make and then. Fill them

  • @Zetsuke4
    @Zetsuke4 Год назад

    ???

  • @atch300
    @atch300 9 месяцев назад

    I don’t know what any of this means. Organizing what? Knowledge together? If a lesson on a subject doesn’t intrinsically organize new information with established information then it’s simply isn’t a good lesson.

  • @ILoveMaths07
    @ILoveMaths07 Год назад +1

    I think Justin has ADHD.

  • @jihadbadejo4732
    @jihadbadejo4732 6 месяцев назад

    Link to full video please