12:20 yep! An iPad is not necessary to draw effective mind maps or concept maps. That is why I keep coming back to your videos, Zain, you show people how mind maps can be both a cheap and effective learning tool
Hi Zain ! I usually don't comment that much but your video was so great I really wanted to share my appreciation. I've been loving your content ! It's really nice to see a less scripted video that actually shows how the tips are implemented in a real study session. I'd love to see a part 2. Keep up the good work ! 😊
Your approach to mind mapping is just incredibly and efficient... I'm a Med student so i literally understand every thing and like your thoughts process... Started looking into mind mapping two week ago read a number of books on it and I've been steadily adjusting it without altering the core principles to suite med school studying and i can say my current approach is just a few steps away from your..will definitely take some more effective pointer of this, Thanks, Really helpful.
Bro I’m from Fiji and I watch your videos whenever you have time because you kinda resonate with me a lot so I’ll suggest this channel to my classmates. Even if you don’t have a lot of subscribers bear in mind that some of us are really really understanding well through your channel dawg
FINALLY A VIDEO WORTH MY TIME!! I’ve been studying all the time in a linear way and it’s so hard to memorise info. Other RUclipsrs do not explain mind mapping properly it really annoys me. I’m so glad to come across your video, I can’t wait to see some more of your study videos. May I also ask for the three diseases that you are studying in this video, were they three separate lectures or just one lecture? 💞
Zain,I have been following your channel for a very long time.And i deeply appreciate your efforts.In every other video you try to introduce us to various learning techniques and try to draw a very clear picture of it.....And this video is beyong amazing....it is such a great initiative....very less study youtubers could have thought about this approach...thank u so much.
Finally, someone dropped the best guide for mindmaps. The tips mentioned by you are actually quite unique and useful as well! I'll definitely use them. Thank you so much!! :)
Thank you again man. Please keep making videos as engaging and transparent as this one, because that way the viewers are able to takeaway as much as possible from your videos. Great job!
You make our study process very simple and easy . Million thanks 🙏. Keep it up all the good work 👍. Please do keep these videos coming. And watching your videos always feels very inspiring ❤🙏
Justin really gets into the finest of details with an aim to upgrading your mindmaps. So it is more complex, tho still it has its pros if you really take the time to understand what the hell he is saying and apply it, you will upgrade your learning more than you do with just these basics. Overall, i think yes, your right, but its better to learn a upgrade a skill required for long term use. even tho i said that i am here lol cuz i bit off more than i could chew with justins videos xd
Thank you so much Now I can grasp it better As you categorise and collect keywords you differentiate and then you see the relationships without going in to deep into the topic Fantastic 😊
This was really helpful and insightful. You've got the best tips for studying bro...and I like that you're straightforward and honest about the process. Thank youuuuu🎉🎉
I recently putting in lots of my time into studies and fed up with the fact that i have to revise more and more along with the complex theories and various models of sums from the exact same topic... I guess people giving regular advises must need to use the disclaimer that more you do the same topic more you will retain.. On the contrary what fascinates me from your content is you focus on retaining the content rather than saying you completed 700 pages in one hr.. So brother im eager to follow your procedures so that i can implement it in my last revisions before my upcoming exams... Need layering part too !!!!
Honestly, amazing video, feels like it condensed years of how to study videos that I've been watching on youtube, really like it, what´s really funny to me is how u say it took u more time than normal and in reality was only 30min which it amazed me jajaja Thank u for the content, really appreciate it!!
Thank you so so much!!... Ill love to see the drawings of your mind maps.. then the links you create and key words.. you didn't show us the exact stuff.. you simply talked about it. Yes please a part 2 and 3😅
Of course I can but how do you think I can show it all more clearly? More camera angles perhaps? I tried to show it on screen and show the mindmap as I was making it?
Thanks, this was very helpful. And I think I find this channel legitimate as you aren't trying to sell any products (which I can't say about most studying channels). :)
Asalam alaikum zaid, I have to say that your advice is the only one which I agree with as someone who studied multiple study methods and techniques yours is the most straightforward, easy to understand and best for learning . No wonder your a med student in such a prestigious university. Inshallah you will be a wonderful doctor and continue to help others. I wish you the best and after saying this I’m hoping your a Muslims because it seems like it 😅😅😅 Also thank you so much for giving such in depth information which a lot of people don’t do. Your truly life saver and I hope you become successful. Also is there any disadvantage to creating the mind map on my phone????
Thank you so much for the kind words my friend, really happy the videos help! And no phone isn't bad but it's just nicer to do it on a paper or bigger screen (more flexibility)
I like your videos a lot, especially how practical, effective and efficient they are. Also I'm interested in hummanities, could you make a live session with a philosophical or political topic, or one of this style?
How can I use mind mapping (MM) for highly factual concepts? For eg, Qs: "Describe the detailed procedure for construction of a highway in a hilly terrain." Here, I am expected to write all the steps and explain them and there are lots of pure facts that must be remembered for eg. the trace cut path way must be 1.2 m, ruling gradient up to 5% for above MSL 3000m etc... My point is there can be so many facts that you can't write in a MM and I realize that the steps themselves can be recalled in a broad sense using a MM but how to deal with such density?
Correct me if im right First find something like a logic by asking questions that finds their similarities and differences that enables you to cover everysingle one in a most intuitive logic (or prolly find also a topic that has many connections?) 2nd create a 2nd layer that supports the logic Then last is the little details that supports the 2nd layer Then the last little details will be put into memorization tricks like anki?
Hi! Loved your video and it's honestly so helpful for me, I've been mindmapping for a couple years now but I was wondering how many topics do you mindmap within a single mindmap as I'm not sure if I'm doing too much because it does take about 6hrs for me to encode a topic (sometimes 4 if it's easier for me to group)... I'm an A-level student and for geography for example i do an entire unit/topic at a time, is this too much? How do you know how/when to split up a unit/topic? How long should the process take? Thank you so much.
And also how about when you are studying a huge topic like the entire subject example pathophysiology combine sub. How will you organize it? can you make a video for that? I really appreciate it. There's no one I've seen here that is detailed as you do. ❤❤
Hi Zain, First of all, thank you for your amazing videos! I'm a struggling med student in Spain. Here, the exams are based on the professors' lectures and 90% of the exams are random details, so we rely heavily on notes from previous students. Each subject has around 300 to 500 pages of notes filled with details, so time management is crucial. We usually have 5 or 6 subjects per four-month term (we have 2 terms), and only final exams, so it's a lot of information to retain all at once. My biggest struggle is memory-I have a very bad long-term memory, so I struggle to retain information for that long. Therefore, I need a good pace to cover all the content and do revisions. We have 30 to 50 topics per subject; would 2 hours per topic be effective using this method? It would be really helpful if you could reply. Thanks! P.S. I'm excited for part 2!
Hello zaid, your videos are eye openers for many of the students like me , thank you for that , i have a ques if you dont gave proper notes and yu have to fair a copy of notes for your study and then you have to make recall questions out of them, wont it take very long hours for completing just one subject ? So in that case how to balance between notes and making recall questions? ⁉️
I would try my best to avoid making normal notes tbh. Make questions directly from the information source (ie. your books or lectures). That way you can test yourself on them and fill the gaps directly from the books.
Hi , how do you learn the so many details within each topic/concept. if there are around 80 concepts in a book and each concept has around 10 points of details that makes it around 800 points of details , how do you capture those in the mindmap or learn them
You don't! That's the best part. You decide what's important to include depending on what your exam specifies. You don't include all the details. You focus on BUILDING A BASE for the topic. One that you can refer to for the entirety of your revision. So that when you revise the topic, you can think of this mindmap and attach what you're learning to the basics on it!
For tip 8, you said to not create recall questions immediately but wait 30-45 minutes. During that 30-45 min, are you actively reading to deepen your understanding of the topic beyond what you put in your mind map? And then once the minutes are up, you start over again and make recall questions?
Hey I just to ask have you ever watch Justin Sung video? Yeah his video about mind mapping, encoding, space repetition…etc and your method of mind mapping, and creating recall question is very similar to his? Just curious that’s all, if not then maybe you could get some insight into his learning system. His is a learning coach, and was a medical doctor, but he only does helping people to learn. And I’m not fully understand his learning system, but maybe you might have some insight into his learning system and share on your RUclips to improve your mind as well. I’m just just curious.
@@mhammadaytour7862 and you tell me the video of him sharing this? Even if I watch almost every Justin sung video, but fail to apply and grabs the foundation and the result is disappointing for me. But anyway thank you 🙏
Yep Justin's done really well with introducing higher-order learning to the masses. I've incorporated mindmaps into my learning this last year but most find this to be difficult, I'm hoping these videos would help simplify the process and give the perspective of a beginner applying these more efficient techniques. Let me know what specifically you're having trouble doing.
@@zain_asif hmm... what about history that has to remember detail events and dates that contribute to this and that? And the keywords should I only pick keywords that only nouns that made sense for me conceptually? When encoding or thinking about relationships, similaities differences, evaluation (which is most important) and intention? Should I use a notebook that track my thought process that led to the roots cause? What is root cause 😅? What about many different topics that aren't related or similar topic into one big picture? 😢 Is it just to read many topic all together to form difference, similar and a broad understanding?
Content idea💡 Can you do like a 1-2 hour study with me before you have a real life test or exam? You can go live..Using your techniques then you tell us what you have when your results are released. Thank you
I mean don't force yourself to, but continuously use that initial mindmap you create by thinking about the new information in context of that structure. And you'll automatically have it in your head.
Tell me more specifically, is the content lecture-based or from books? Is the exam more problem-based or SAQs or MCQs? Can't really give insight without knowing more.
How to create mindmap when you're not actually studying thse type of complex subjects, I want to create mind map for Nursing Foundation but it's mainly about the functions so how should I create?
Thank u sir for this. According to jaabaal which is a graduate in medical school of californaia, he said mind maps are only helpful teat requires deep understanding not courses that requires memorization like pharmacology and Physiology? How true is this?
Nothings good for short term rote memorisation, even those subjects are to need some level of understanding and mindmaps are good for the baseline regardless
Watching the mindmapping process unfolding is interesting and very useful, but as you yourself said the fact that yoúre videoing it and communicating to a potential audience actually changes the process. f For the next video talk to yourself out loud rather than to the camera, you can edit in your commentary to us later.
That's an excellent idea. Do you mean do a voiceover later after I've made it to show you what I'm doing at each step while doing the mindmap/layering or studying so you guys can see me do it more naturally?
Yeah but this short-term memory. It’s not hard to recreate mind map because you just read the topic. I would like to see you do the mind map after three days with no materials.
The purpose of creating the mindmap isn't for recall. It's to form a strong initial understanding that links all the concepts of a topic in a memorable way. You use it in your future revision sessions by linking all the new things you're learning to it in your head. And PS- it would be very doable to recreate 90% of it even 6 months after making it, if you wanted to test yourself on the basics. But only if one followed the steps right and actually linked new knowledge to it during their revision.
Why dont you just give us your keyword list and your material so that we can compare and understand. You just repeat your videos bro :((. I am so confusing about making keyword list HuHuHu
Keyword list- notes for your mindmap. All we are doing is preparing to create our mindmap. I didn't think my specific keywords and phrases would help. But here you go. There might have been more but I think this was what I had. **Addison’s** - Autoimmune destruction of the adrenal glands → reduced cortisol and aldosterone - Features: Lethargy, weakness, anorexia, nausea & vomiting, weight loss, 'salt-craving' **Cushing’s** - ACTH pituitary adenoma → more ACTH → adrenal hyperplasia → more cortisol and aldosterone - iatrogenic: corticosteroid therapy (this is the main form) - ACTH-dependent causes - Cushing's disease (a pituitary adenoma → ACTH secretion) - ectopic ACTH secretion secondary to a malignancy - ACTH-independent causes - adrenal adenoma - central obesity weight gain, proximal myopathy, bone (osteopenia osteoporosis, hirsutism, acne, thin skin bruising, increased glucose, depression, hypertension due to sodium - investigation: lab (hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis), overnight low dose dexamethaone suppression test (affects ACTH) so if low then non-ACTH cause, 24hr urinary cortisol - management: - First-line = trans-sphenoidal removal of pituitary tumour (hypophysectomy) - Second-line = repeat trans-sphenoidal surgery, pituitary radiotherapy - Third-line = bilateral adrenalectomy **Conns (primary aldosteronism)** - adrenal adenoma - hypertension, hypokalemia, metabolic acidosis - investigations: aldosterone/renin ratio (high ald levels, and low renin due to sodium retention), high reso CT abdomen and adrenal vein sample to diff between unilateral and bilateral of aldosterone excess. - management: adrenal adenoma (laproscopic adrenalectomy), bilateral adrenocortical hyperplasia (aldosterone antagonist spironolactone)
Why to do so much work by creating diagram when you already has Netter Green( for medicine) and osmosis I am not getting why not showing students the easy way to create mind map
This is the mindmap video we’ve needed for ages! I’m gonna rewatch this multiple times. Thank you!!
Thank you man im glad i could make it for u guys :)
Summary at the end of the video is helpful, so I do not need to stop and drop down key points while watching 😊
Exactly!
12:20 yep! An iPad is not necessary to draw effective mind maps or concept maps. That is why I keep coming back to your videos, Zain, you show people how mind maps can be both a cheap and effective learning tool
These live sessions are incredible, thank you very much! We definitely need a part 2 👏
Part 2s gotta happen then lets go
@@zain_asif part 2 as in a revising sesion would be awesome
Hi Zain ! I usually don't comment that much but your video was so great I really wanted to share my appreciation. I've been loving your content ! It's really nice to see a less scripted video that actually shows how the tips are implemented in a real study session. I'd love to see a part 2. Keep up the good work ! 😊
Thank you for the support, glad it helped and for sure part 2s gotta happen now
You litreally helped me pass this year's biology test thanks to your tips, defo gonna try this out !! Thank you !
Appreciate that lets go
Your approach to mind mapping is just incredibly and efficient... I'm a Med student so i literally understand every thing and like your thoughts process... Started looking into mind mapping two week ago read a number of books on it and I've been steadily adjusting it without altering the core principles to suite med school studying and i can say my current approach is just a few steps away from your..will definitely take some more effective pointer of this, Thanks, Really helpful.
Super happy it's working well for you! Well done, takes a lot of effort to change the way you work!
Bro I’m from Fiji and I watch your videos whenever you have time because you kinda resonate with me a lot so I’ll suggest this channel to my classmates. Even if you don’t have a lot of subscribers bear in mind that some of us are really really understanding well through your channel dawg
Thanks dawg appreciate the support
FINALLY A VIDEO WORTH MY TIME!! I’ve been studying all the time in a linear way and it’s so hard to memorise info. Other RUclipsrs do not explain mind mapping properly it really annoys me. I’m so glad to come across your video, I can’t wait to see some more of your study videos. May I also ask for the three diseases that you are studying in this video, were they three separate lectures or just one lecture? 💞
They were separate sub-topics in a chapter in my book :) And thank you for the kind words really appreciate it!
Zain,I have been following your channel for a very long time.And i deeply appreciate your efforts.In every other video you try to introduce us to various learning techniques and try to draw a very clear picture of it.....And this video is beyong amazing....it is such a great initiative....very less study youtubers could have thought about this approach...thank u so much.
Thank you for the kind words but ya just trying to help to the best of my ability :)
Finally, someone dropped the best guide for mindmaps. The tips mentioned by you are actually quite unique and useful as well! I'll definitely use them. Thank you so much!! :)
Cmonnn, thank you !
Thank you so much; this is incredibly helpful ❤
The moment has finally come! Thank you so much for the amazing content, Doc!
My pleasure!
Thank you again man. Please keep making videos as engaging and transparent as this one, because that way the viewers are able to takeaway as much as possible from your videos.
Great job!
Thank you bro I'll try my best :)
This is really quality stuff man thank you
Appreciate that!
You make our study process very simple and easy . Million thanks 🙏.
Keep it up all the good work 👍.
Please do keep these videos coming.
And watching your videos always feels very inspiring ❤🙏
Thats exactly what I wanna hear! Thank yoy!
These is amazing buddy. You have explained it much better than justin
Glad it helped :)
Justin really gets into the finest of details with an aim to upgrading your mindmaps. So it is more complex, tho still it has its pros if you really take the time to understand what the hell he is saying and apply it, you will upgrade your learning more than you do with just these basics. Overall, i think yes, your right, but its better to learn a upgrade a skill required for long term use. even tho i said that i am here lol cuz i bit off more than i could chew with justins videos xd
Bro I needed this exposure 😊🎉
Thank you so much
Now I can grasp it better
As you categorise and collect keywords you differentiate and then you see the relationships without going in to deep into the topic
Fantastic 😊
Exactly exactly !
This was really helpful and insightful.
You've got the best tips for studying bro...and I like that you're straightforward and honest about the process. Thank youuuuu🎉🎉
Appreciate that so much that's exactly what I'm trying to do!
BROOOO
THat what i have been looking a live evaluation not just a bunch on words that's sonde fancy but makes nonsense
Thank u ❤
THANK YOU FOR A LIVE DEMO
Glad it could help :)
I recently putting in lots of my time into studies and fed up with the fact that i have to revise more and more along with the complex theories and various models of sums from the exact same topic... I guess people giving regular advises must need to use the disclaimer that more you do the same topic more you will retain..
On the contrary what fascinates me from your content is you focus on retaining the content rather than saying you completed 700 pages in one hr..
So brother im eager to follow your procedures so that i can implement it in my last revisions before my upcoming exams...
Need layering part too !!!!
For sure! Glad it's helped
Honestly, amazing video, feels like it condensed years of how to study videos that I've been watching on youtube, really like it, what´s really funny to me is how u say it took u more time than normal and in reality was only 30min which it amazed me jajaja Thank u for the content, really appreciate it!!
Thank you for the kind words! Ya you get faster and faster over time, glad it's helped.
جزاك الله خيرا و بارك فيك .
Jazakallah
thank you for your videos, i knew about mindmaps before..but didnt know if it was effective learning method
Thank you so so much!!... Ill love to see the drawings of your mind maps.. then the links you create and key words.. you didn't show us the exact stuff.. you simply talked about it. Yes please a part 2 and 3😅
Of course I can but how do you think I can show it all more clearly? More camera angles perhaps? I tried to show it on screen and show the mindmap as I was making it?
great video
Thanks, this was very helpful. And I think I find this channel legitimate as you aren't trying to sell any products (which I can't say about most studying channels). :)
Thank you for making this video ❤
Ofc ❤️
Asalam alaikum zaid, I have to say that your advice is the only one which I agree with as someone who studied multiple study methods and techniques yours is the most straightforward, easy to understand and best for learning . No wonder your a med student in such a prestigious university. Inshallah you will be a wonderful doctor and continue to help others. I wish you the best and after saying this I’m hoping your a Muslims because it seems like it 😅😅😅
Also thank you so much for giving such in depth information which a lot of people don’t do. Your truly life saver and I hope you become successful. Also is there any disadvantage to creating the mind map on my phone????
Thank you so much for the kind words my friend, really happy the videos help! And no phone isn't bad but it's just nicer to do it on a paper or bigger screen (more flexibility)
Thank you for giving us so precious advices❤️
For my next test. Im gonna try things you said. And update if my grades went up.
Done goodluckkk
I like your videos a lot, especially how practical, effective and efficient they are. Also I'm interested in hummanities, could you make a live session with a philosophical or political topic, or one of this style?
I'm very happy to, just give me a topic and where to find the textbook with the info for it
Great video deserves way more views
Thank you tiger hrm
Great job man 🎉
Thank you bro
Thanks!!!!
Thanks 🙏🏽❤
I enjoyed the video and I'll try the ideas out 😊
Glad it helped :)
ik ga het uitproberen, wellicht maakt het een verschil in mijn kennis. dankje wel voor het delen mijn vriend!!!!
How can I use mind mapping (MM) for highly factual concepts? For eg, Qs: "Describe the detailed procedure for construction of a highway in a hilly terrain." Here, I am expected to write all the steps and explain them and there are lots of pure facts that must be remembered for eg. the trace cut path way must be 1.2 m, ruling gradient up to 5% for above MSL 3000m etc...
My point is there can be so many facts that you can't write in a MM and I realize that the steps themselves can be recalled in a broad sense using a MM but how to deal with such density?
can you make videos on how to learn a new topic ( more emphasis on understanding)
Tbh this is how I'd do new topics. But do you mean more the step after this, like understanding the topic more deeply?
@@zain_asif yes brother 🙌✨
Correct me if im right
First find something like a logic by asking questions that finds their similarities and differences that enables you to cover everysingle one in a most intuitive logic (or prolly find also a topic that has many connections?)
2nd create a 2nd layer that supports the logic
Then last is the little details that supports the 2nd layer
Then the last little details will be put into memorization tricks like anki?
Pretty much ya that works. Just make sure you build a good base of the topic in the first step though. Thats important
Good to see …how you can see Zains procedure change overtime
Cause I faced the same issue with writing out questions first
Always evolving glad its helped!
hii . I am from Bangladesh . Regularly watching your video . Great content brother .
Thanks a ton
I love u bro from India
Hi zain! Can you make a video about your journey to med school and what made you chose this specific field?
Ofcourse ofcourse its on the idea list!
Thank you so much ❤
Hi! Loved your video and it's honestly so helpful for me, I've been mindmapping for a couple years now but I was wondering how many topics do you mindmap within a single mindmap as I'm not sure if I'm doing too much because it does take about 6hrs for me to encode a topic (sometimes 4 if it's easier for me to group)... I'm an A-level student and for geography for example i do an entire unit/topic at a time, is this too much? How do you know how/when to split up a unit/topic? How long should the process take? Thank you so much.
And also how about when you are studying a huge topic like the entire subject example pathophysiology combine sub. How will you organize it? can you make a video for that? I really appreciate it. There's no one I've seen here that is detailed as you do. ❤❤
Thats a good idea actually like how to do all topics
You haven't seen anyone has detailed as him? Don't u know Justin Sung??
THANK YOUUUU
Love u from kashmir❤
Hey! How would you do a mindmap for learning the muscles of the arm? How would you proceed ?
Many ways! depending on what makes sense to you , for me ill group them by their action, then maybe their insertion and origin..
Make more in depth about the details in 2nd to 3rd layers. how to tackle does gap and weaknesses. What types of questions should be used.
Part 2 👀
Hi Zain,
First of all, thank you for your amazing videos!
I'm a struggling med student in Spain. Here, the exams are based on the professors' lectures and 90% of the exams are random details, so we rely heavily on notes from previous students. Each subject has around 300 to 500 pages of notes filled with details, so time management is crucial. We usually have 5 or 6 subjects per four-month term (we have 2 terms), and only final exams, so it's a lot of information to retain all at once.
My biggest struggle is memory-I have a very bad long-term memory, so I struggle to retain information for that long. Therefore, I need a good pace to cover all the content and do revisions. We have 30 to 50 topics per subject; would 2 hours per topic be effective using this method?
It would be really helpful if you could reply. Thanks!
P.S. I'm excited for part 2!
Thank you so much
Hello zaid, your videos are eye openers for many of the students like me , thank you for that , i have a ques if you dont gave proper notes and yu have to fair a copy of notes for your study and then you have to make recall questions out of them, wont it take very long hours for completing just one subject ? So in that case how to balance between notes and making recall questions? ⁉️
I would try my best to avoid making normal notes tbh. Make questions directly from the information source (ie. your books or lectures). That way you can test yourself on them and fill the gaps directly from the books.
Hi , how do you learn the so many details within each topic/concept. if there are around 80 concepts in a book and each concept has around 10 points of details that makes it around 800 points of details , how do you capture those in the mindmap or learn them
You don't! That's the best part. You decide what's important to include depending on what your exam specifies. You don't include all the details. You focus on BUILDING A BASE for the topic. One that you can refer to for the entirety of your revision. So that when you revise the topic, you can think of this mindmap and attach what you're learning to the basics on it!
For tip 8, you said to not create recall questions immediately but wait 30-45 minutes. During that 30-45 min, are you actively reading to deepen your understanding of the topic beyond what you put in your mind map? And then once the minutes are up, you start over again and make recall questions?
Great
Thanks bro for the video
10:12
13:00 recall
Hey I just to ask have you ever watch Justin Sung video? Yeah his video about mind mapping, encoding, space repetition…etc and your method of mind mapping, and creating recall question is very similar to his? Just curious that’s all, if not then maybe you could get some insight into his learning system.
His is a learning coach, and was a medical doctor, but he only does helping people to learn.
And I’m not fully understand his learning system, but maybe you might have some insight into his learning system and share on your RUclips to improve your mind as well. I’m just just curious.
yes he mentionned in one of his videos that he watched a lot of justin's videos and he is precisely using the same studying method
@@mhammadaytour7862 and you tell me the video of him sharing this? Even if I watch almost every Justin sung video, but fail to apply and grabs the foundation and the result is disappointing for me. But anyway thank you 🙏
Yep Justin's done really well with introducing higher-order learning to the masses. I've incorporated mindmaps into my learning this last year but most find this to be difficult, I'm hoping these videos would help simplify the process and give the perspective of a beginner applying these more efficient techniques. Let me know what specifically you're having trouble doing.
@@zain_asif hmm... what about history that has to remember detail events and dates that contribute to this and that? And the keywords should I only pick keywords that only nouns that made sense for me conceptually? When encoding or thinking about relationships, similaities differences, evaluation (which is most important) and intention? Should I use a notebook that track my thought process that led to the roots cause? What is root cause 😅? What about many different topics that aren't related or similar topic into one big picture? 😢 Is it just to read many topic all together to form difference, similar and a broad understanding?
Wow Bengali representation. So happy to see my people
Content idea💡
Can you do like a 1-2 hour study with me before you have a real life test or exam? You can go live..Using your techniques then you tell us what you have when your results are released. Thank you
Hi Brother, Your videos are amazing. Should we have to memorize the mind map that we have created for the subject contents?
I mean don't force yourself to, but continuously use that initial mindmap you create by thinking about the new information in context of that structure. And you'll automatically have it in your head.
How do you get youtube to be fullscreen with the doc on the side like that?
Split screen :)
Coooooool
I can study effectively but I take agesss to finish, I study rlly slowly. Any tips?
Could please make a video or at least link down core website and RUclips channels for studying medicine.
Does this work for math too can you please math a video on how to make kidnaps for math
waiting for part 2
Please post the second session
Putting Dhaka on the mapppp
Would this work for subjects like Mathematics and statistics? Or it only works for theory based subjects?
What if it was physiology or biochemistry i dont think it same. But i really appreciate this video it help in patho and micro so well thanks dr❤❤❤❤❤❤
For the recall of the mind map diagram, suppose I learn to different topics , will I have to remember all the structure of the mind map which is long?
The recall is just something I do when the actual creation of the mindmap becomes passive. The mindmap should intuitively stick in your head ideally.
@@zain_asifthen I want some techniques on active learning 🙏
Any ideas for topics like psychology etc in which you have to memorise details?
With psych, you still should create the base of the concepts and only then will the details be easy to memorise. Because theyll make logical sense.
@@zain_asif thanks brother
How dobi go about study accounting and finance especially CPA?
Tell me more specifically, is the content lecture-based or from books? Is the exam more problem-based or SAQs or MCQs? Can't really give insight without knowing more.
How to create mindmap when you're not actually studying thse type of complex subjects, I want to create mind map for Nursing Foundation but it's mainly about the functions so how should I create?
Same logic tbh. Skim, categorise, differentiate between the concepts and then learn more!
Thank u sir for this. According to jaabaal which is a graduate in medical school of californaia, he said mind maps are only helpful teat requires deep understanding not courses that requires memorization like pharmacology and Physiology? How true is this?
Nothings good for short term rote memorisation, even those subjects are to need some level of understanding and mindmaps are good for the baseline regardless
@@zain_asif thank you sir. But what if I have gone to class for the particular topic, do I still need to mindmap the topic after going to class?
How will this work for math classes?
Use it to build your understanding of the topic before practising questions.
Is okey if I select one day from the week which I should study the same subject any time that day comes up
Depends on how many subjects you have, how much you wanna study etc. If it helps by creating a routine then no problem at all.
Bro u should compile all ur minmaps and start a business of selling them
Sab ka bhala ho jai gaa .
👀👀
Thankyou so much ❤
Where about in Bangladesh are u from bro
9 sec no views u have dropped off man😅
Ratio fell off innit
Watching the mindmapping process unfolding is interesting and very useful, but as you yourself said the fact that yoúre videoing it and communicating to a potential audience actually changes the process. f
For the next video talk to yourself out loud rather than to the camera, you can edit in your commentary to us later.
That's an excellent idea. Do you mean do a voiceover later after I've made it to show you what I'm doing at each step while doing the mindmap/layering or studying so you guys can see me do it more naturally?
Yeah but this short-term memory. It’s not hard to recreate mind map because you just read the topic. I would like to see you do the mind map after three days with no materials.
The purpose of creating the mindmap isn't for recall. It's to form a strong initial understanding that links all the concepts of a topic in a memorable way. You use it in your future revision sessions by linking all the new things you're learning to it in your head.
And PS- it would be very doable to recreate 90% of it even 6 months after making it, if you wanted to test yourself on the basics. But only if one followed the steps right and actually linked new knowledge to it during their revision.
How to do microbiology 😅
Same idea as the video. Skim, categorise, differentiate the types in a memorable way.
Video: shortcuts your doctor took 😅
You are still fixing your memory problem for at least 2 years....... 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Huh
Are u Bangladeshi?
🇵🇰🇵🇰
Why dont you just give us your keyword list and your material so that we can compare and understand. You just repeat your videos bro :((. I am so confusing about making keyword list HuHuHu
Keyword list- notes for your mindmap.
All we are doing is preparing to create our mindmap.
I didn't think my specific keywords and phrases would help. But here you go. There might have been more but I think this was what I had.
**Addison’s**
- Autoimmune destruction of the adrenal glands → reduced cortisol and aldosterone
- Features: Lethargy, weakness, anorexia, nausea & vomiting, weight loss, 'salt-craving'
**Cushing’s**
- ACTH pituitary adenoma → more ACTH → adrenal hyperplasia → more cortisol and aldosterone
- iatrogenic: corticosteroid therapy (this is the main form)
- ACTH-dependent causes
- Cushing's disease (a pituitary adenoma → ACTH secretion)
- ectopic ACTH secretion secondary to a malignancy
- ACTH-independent causes
- adrenal adenoma
- central obesity weight gain, proximal myopathy, bone (osteopenia osteoporosis, hirsutism, acne, thin skin bruising, increased glucose, depression, hypertension due to sodium
- investigation: lab (hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis), overnight low dose dexamethaone suppression test (affects ACTH) so if low then non-ACTH cause, 24hr urinary cortisol
- management:
- First-line = trans-sphenoidal removal of pituitary tumour (hypophysectomy)
- Second-line = repeat trans-sphenoidal surgery, pituitary radiotherapy
- Third-line = bilateral adrenalectomy
**Conns (primary aldosteronism)**
- adrenal adenoma
- hypertension, hypokalemia, metabolic acidosis
- investigations: aldosterone/renin ratio (high ald levels, and low renin due to sodium retention), high reso CT abdomen and adrenal vein sample to diff between unilateral and bilateral of aldosterone excess.
- management: adrenal adenoma (laproscopic adrenalectomy), bilateral adrenocortical hyperplasia (aldosterone antagonist spironolactone)
@@zain_asif wow dang it. You are a dedcated youtuber. I want to ask that can i use the heading and the subheading of my textbook as keyword list
Why to do so much work by creating diagram when you already has Netter Green( for medicine) and osmosis
I am not getting why not showing students the easy way to create mind map
Bro if that works then you arent here looking bout mindmaps
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@@havocgaming3091
I dont search that it came in myrecommendation
Use an iPad for these mind maps Bro.
Pros and cons g
indoor baseball cap is truly annoying. why man? why??
i like the passion