To get access to IonQ systems for your company and work directly with IonQ’s applications team to prepare your business for quantum computing, head to bit.ly/3DueO39. Thanks to IonQ for sponsoring today’s video. Get the prompts here: forms.gle/rWvw11TFsyi1dP9G9 What do you want to learn?? 🤗
im learning unreal engine 5 and blueprints to become a skilled game dev ...so i have 1 year but still wathing tutorials ...this mean im so bad at learning ? :))))))) and i want c++ too but that tryed once and seems so complicated with no visual result like unreal :))))
@@MaxStudioCG2023 Bro don’t let yourself down. Everybody has a learning curve and for most people I’ve noticed that usually when they think they’re slower and falling behind it’s actually everyone is kinda falling behind. All in all, as long as you put in the effort you will be fine :)z. Edit: also to be exact I’m gonna make a Celeste copy but I’m gonna remake it in my own way. Celeste is one of my favorite indie games.
ChatGPT Is a powerful tool to learn. But sometimes the excessive use of it don't make you retain the information you prompt on it to generate the information you want to learn
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 📚 The speaker shares their struggles with traditional learning and how self-study became a valuable skill for them. 01:09 🧠 ChatGPT is introduced as a powerful tool to aggregate learning resources and provide personalized learning experiences. 02:07 🗺️ Meta learning is essential for effective learning; creating a study plan with resources and detailed timelines is crucial. 05:28 🔍 The Zoom In and Zoom Out framework is explained as breaking down the overall goal into smaller components and iterative improvement. 09:42 📝 Retrieval and retention techniques like flashcards, Feynman technique, and Socratic method enhance learning comprehension and memory. 14:48 🧪 Experimentation involves trying new learning methods and resources to overcome learning plateaus and discover effective approaches. 16:23 👥 The importance of incorporating interactions with other people, like language exchange or coding buddies, is emphasized for motivation and growth in learning. Made with HARPA AI
Summary and chapter points: 1) Asking to assemble resources and to generate a time limited personalized training course for a specific learning goal. 2:30 min:sec. 2) Generate questions likely to be asked in a techincal job interview. 8:30. 3) Generate an interactive role playing job interview. 9:50. 4) Generating flashcards for fact memorization review. 11:45. 5) Generating an interactive Fenyman Technique question and answer session to guage your level of comprehension. 12:45. 6) Generating an intetactice Socratic Method question and answer session to guage your level of comprehension. 13:30, 13:45. 7) Apply the Experimentation Method for capstone learning and to break sticking points. 15:00, 15:25. 8) Ask for alternative methods of learning. 15:55. 9) Incorporating other people into your human-based learning process. 16:40. The learning techniques were extracted from Young, "Ultralearning" (2019), but are implemented here by Huang in ChatGPT. books.google.com/books?id=jyV2DwAAQBAJ
Wow! That was great… I am retired and taking music production courses at Berklee college of music online… pro tools certification and my first certificate program that I will roll into a BA degree at a later time. I want to learned Arabic and Spanish. My community is very diverse I am starting to relearn high school and college level mathematics also and not to mention my side hobby is Physics, Astro physics, and quantum mechanics…my brain is hungry for knowledge. Maybe I have too many interest actually.
this just blew my mind!!! I'm learning Korean, time management, coding and other small things. I always struggled to create plans that i could stick to; but this.... I can now add more things to learn and do! thank you for this awesome content!
Woah you are very driven and efficient, admirable. I'm learning Japanese, Korean, and investing. I'm a fast and "organic" learner so a bit all over the place at the moment. I've never had a specific plan but maybe I should make one to finally improve more efficiently.
One of your best videos. I got a lot of insight out of this one. I'm a 77-year-old retired teacher who has been watching learning videos avidly for a decade. Yours are some of the most helpful ones out there for me.
I'm using chatGPT to explain technical concepts that I need more help with like networking, subnetting and cybersecurity. I didn't know I could ask even more specific questions. I feel like I have one up on my class because I use it so frequently. I have always done better when learning at my own pace. I've studied chemistry on my own, but failed in the classroom. Thank you sharing this valuable information. I also want to learn SQL. I was learning coding on my own last year and decided to just start with the basics in IT support and work my way up while studying more. Anyway, your inspiring thanks!
Hello Tina ! I'm from Argentina and I'm learning English (I have a self-taught initial basic level) I've also just finished a manual Testing QA course and I want to delve deeper into SQL and learn Python. Your videos are very motivating and super useful!! 💪😊
Hi Tina! I just wanted to say “THANK YOU SO MUCH” because your video has taught me how to incorporate speed learning into what I am currently studying, all aspects of website development for a job position( I don’t know what company yet). You truly rock in this video, and honestly, claps to your content! I wish you the best at everything you achieve!
I just started “chatting” with ChatGPT, and after watching your video, I know how to actually use it for learning. Thank you! I’m going to start with Korean. Gumaapsamida!
Exactly what I was thinking on last night. In this day and age if we want to stay competetive and capable we have to implement rapid learning and prequalification.
Great video Tina where you explained how to give prompts to chatGPT to help with learning anything. I am a data engineer, currently learning DS & Algorithms...and planning to learn ML/Computer Vision next.
Amazing. I am using you prompts to make a study plan for me and will use it for my students as well. This is amazing and so helpful. I linked your video in our study group as well, so that my fellow teachers and students can use your prompts. This is absolutely the best video I have found to help me get things done and know where to start while learning and teaching. Thank you so much. You are have a new subscriber.
Awesome. Thank you for sharing your expertise and showing us your ChatGpt prompts. You’re the best. Currently I am taking Nursing prerequisite courses.
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 📚 Self-study is valuable for learning effectively, even in challenging situations. 01:09 🧠 The first step in learning quickly is "meta learning," which involves creating a study plan tailored to your goals and resources. 05:14 🔄 The "zoom in and zoom out" framework helps break down complex goals into manageable components, allowing for focused learning. 08:31 🧠 AI tools like ChatGPT can generate study plans and provide resources based on your specific goals and needs. 10:50 📚 Strategies for improving retention include self-testing with flashcards, using the Feynman technique to simplify explanations, and applying the Socratic method to question assumptions. 15:53 🤖 Experimentation is key to advancing your learning when you hit a plateau, and AI tools can suggest alternative methods and resources. 16:35 👥 While AI can assist in learning, involving other people, like native speakers or study groups, is essential for motivation and overcoming challenges in the learning journey. Made with HARPA AI
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 🚀 Self-studying saved the speaker in difficult situations and became a passion for learning various skills. 01:09 🤖 ChatGPT is a powerful tool for comprehensive and personalized learning, aggregating resources and adapting to individual goals and learning styles. 03:17 📚 Meta learning is the foundation for efficient learning. It involves creating a detailed study plan with resources, timelines, and strategies for learning. 08:04 🔍 The zoom in and zoom out framework involves breaking down goals into manageable components, analyzing weaknesses, and using AI to optimize learning. 13:49 📝 Effective retention and understanding methods include self-testing with flashcards, using the Feynman technique to simplify explanations, and applying the Socratic method for deeper understanding. Made with HARPA AI
Thank you so much for this. The best part of this video is that it is congruent with our needs unlike other study videos that do not include the help of AI. I really like it!
Thanks for this awesome video ! I am currently learning Hindi, improving my coding in Python & starting to learn ML as well, before my master starts. I often get demotivated as I don't exactly know where to start, and I believe using chatGPT the way you show it here and doing projects for coding (which I wasn't doing until now) is going to make a huge difference.
Dear Tina, Any language you want to learn, at first you focus on how to read it. If you understand how to read it, you start to pickup details of how it’s pronounced. The Japanese language uses alphabet as well as pictograms inherited from China and shared also with Korea. The pictograms take some time to learn, I think they are called kanji, the alphabet are called katakana. There is a learners dictionary that teaches you to learn the kanji. It’s an uphill struggle, Because you have to learn the arrangement of lines, And depending on the difficulty, some have many many lines (strokes), others have minimal strokes, so the way you learn them is that you use the dictionary which arranges them based on the number of strokes. You complete the easy ones, then gradually you move towards the harder ones. It’s a life long journey, you really don’t need that. If you can read the alphabet, that should get you started. You can embark on the pictograms learning at a later date, and it’s the kind of a relaxing ZEN activity that takes your mind off whatever is bothering you. That being said, Annnny language gets learned by learning words. There is no wordless languages. Unless you are talking about body language. Even then there is something to say and read. Any language gives you the ability to read its newspaper if you learn 2000 words. You can read a Japanese news paper if you learn 2000 words. You will be like an average Japanese if you learn 5k words, you will be like a Japanese intellectual or professor if you learn 10k words. (Stu jay raj [a famous polyglot])learns 2000 words in 2 days. It’s common to say that people learn a language in 6 months. That is anti an average of 10 words a day. You can learn 2000 Japanese words in 20 days at an average of 100 words a day. You can also learn the 2000 words in one day at the rate of one word every 4 minutes 50 seconds for 16 hours in one hard focus day. It takes allot less than that to intake a word. Try to write each word and it’s meaning 10 times using a note book and a pen. That will establish establish exposure. You don’t have to memorise the words yet. Just write them down. Familiarity will build neural networks and pathways. Eventually the words will be memorised without you saying them repetitively, and if you say them repetitively that’s even better. It gets your mind used to the word. My favorite word is the word arbus it means water melon in Russian, also Фаберже it’s the phabergè jeweller that used to make egg jewelry. The name sands really glamorous, and the circle with a line through it is F and the X with a line through it is G but pronounced in a dragged way that creates traction. Me likie them details. Anywho I know some Japanese words, yameteh means stop, some times pronounced yameh. Niko means cat, inu means dog. As in Shiba Inu. I like the process of learning a language because it teaches a person the process of learning other things such as maths and physics. The process is the same, you collect the data, turn it into information, knowledge and wisdom. If you want to kearn Japanese grammar, you can learn it at a later date, but basically the words initiate a person to a language faster. Also songs help They teach you to be familiar with the tongue twisters of a particular language. Being a data scientist language learning is probably fun to you. Just be careful, language learning is a fool’s errand. It gets your mind busy for no reason, it highjacks your cognitive resources, you don’t reach proficiency fast, and it’s a waist of time better spent on things of high priority, such as making your first billion. On the other hand, language learning is vital in a low priority area of our lives, which is socialisation. If you know a person’s religion and language, you understand them better, and they appreciate that, they would have felt misunderstood and now that you know their language and creed, you happen to be one of the few people who understand them. It’s something dale carnegie would have recommended in his book win friends and influence people. Fun fact, Arabic is an easy to learn language, 1. Learn the 28 letters, and diacritics (they are probably 5 or 6) 2. Learn how to read the first chapter of the Quran in Arabic 🤯🫠 It will be mind blowing and you will melt the hearts of a third of the world’s population, 2 billion Muslims. The RUclips algorithms will not be able to have enough of you. Just sayin
@@JasonTubeOffical gradual exposure does wonders. Everyone has their own approach. But the ultimate aim is immersion. Wether you use the language, watch movies without subtitles, or even spend some time in the country where the language is spoken.
Any language can be learned in the natural way, as newborn babies do: by observation and immersion. Reading and writing can be "acquired" later, for deepening your knowledge
@@KyraMoonspell Learning the way babies learn is random, and babies don’t learn conversational language, they learn baby language with limited vocabulary. The first concept about language is the ability to understand. Comprehension. Comes from understanding how translation works. a translation works by having a middle common ground. a for example Let’s say I speak language A and you totally don’t understand my language. And you speak language B and I totally don’t understand your language, but both of us meet in the middle in elements of vocabulary , let’s call them B, or we meet in the middle through a translator, or a dictionary. So that middle ground which we both have as a common factor helps us understand each other. a once we understand each other, then we can work on understanding each other even more. The Rosetta Stone which was an ancient stone with 3 languages written on it, one being Greek , the other being ancient Egyptian, and the third was a language I don’t remember now. This created the ability to decipher and understand the hieroglyphic ancient Egyptian language. without the Rosetta Stone, it wouldn’t have been possible to decipher that language. Infact it took powerful decipher and understanding skills to understand it. language learning requires that ability to capture the accurate meaning of a word. lets assume you are using a dictionary, And your comprehension level is 90%. That is great. The next thing you need is to memorise the words. 2000 words is a good number to memorise. It’s ok to memorise 1999 also. It doesn’t have to be exactly 2000 words. As you get closer to the words of a language, let’s say Japanese. For the first time in your life, a language that was distant from you, now it’s there on the table infront of you. As you play with it, explore it, tackle it, write each word 10 times, memorise the words. Your brain cells are working. They are making neural network connections. They are like the roots of a plant, once you plant the seed, the seed starts to grow. How long does it take to grow? Let’s say that at the beginning when you start memorising the words, you are using borrowed resources. It’s like writing on sand. It fades away. Not necessarily fast, it’s there with you. But you must use it or lose it. So assuming that you are working with it. In 20 years you will have new brain cells dedicated to that language. That way you are a professional in that language. And you are processing that language in a more effective and efficient way. It is said that when we are born we have 2 billion brain cells, by the time we are in our 30s we have only one billion, we lost half of our brain cells, partially because we don’t use them, and partially because we specialise in fields so, we stick to our specialisations satisfied with our lives, and the rest of the brain cells pack their bags and go. It is said that building new brain cells is next to impossible, it’s one of the hardest thing to do and many people hope it can be done, but majority of experts agree that lost brain cells don’t return. Some people started talking about neuro genesis, which is meant to be about building brain cells. Word has it that taxi drivers who were being trained to drive London cabs endedup showing signs of a brain that has grown. Because they are made to memorise large detailed maps of London. Something about utilising your brain resources is to do with putting the information you learn into your sub conscience. Forget about building new brain cells. Your mind will find ways to store the information you learned into your long term memory if 1. Let’s say you have 100 peices of info, 100 words basically. You have memorised each (probably by writing each 10 times). 2. You waited for 2 weeks, and tested your self on those words which you memorised. a you will notice that 33% you can recall. And 66% you forgot it. That’s good. You don’t want a brain that memorises everything, you will overload your brain with junk. It’s good that it chooses a core amount to memorise. So the fact that you revised what you memorised after 2 weeks, is a verification method to make sure that the pure 33% you have is there. The 66% is gone. What’s the difference? 33% was not located in your conscience mind short term memory, It’s mobilised and sent to your subconscinece long term memory. And that one lasts very very long. You will still need to refresh it. But it lasts. The only one that is supper permanent is your brain neurones. Those stay for good. They are hardware solid substance. And it takes 2 years to build those. But once you test your self on what has gone into your sub conscience, and you know it’s in the sub-conscience because it lasted over two weeks , because when you stored it, you stored it right (for example, if a person tells you their name or telephone number very fast, and you didn’t even hear it well, you can’t remember that. So making sure that you memorise it well , with full clarity. gets you to remember it longer [besides, same way there is a recipe to how to cook, memorising has its own method, you need to learn how to memorise if you want to get stronger, but repaying something a few time that does that job]) Once you memorise, and it stayed for 20 days. Then few months later you revise it, and it will stay for a very very very long time. So everyday you memorise 100 things , you revise them 2 weeks later. 3. Let’s say you have 500 words to memorise, So day 1 is Monday , you memorise from 0 to 100, and you revise that on day 14. You notice 60% was lost, so you take that 60% memorise it again. Going back in time, on the calendar day 2 is Tuesday you memorise the words from 100 to 200. And you revise them on day 15. And what you lost, you work on capturing it later. Day 3 is Wednesday , the third day, you memorise from 200 to 300. And you revise it on day 16. And like that, your objective is to put the words into your long term memory. The sub conscience. You are basically planting the seeds. Those seeds will grow roots, and in 2 years, as you watch lots and lots of Naruto. One day you will tell your self what kianu reeves told him self in the matrix when he was playing neo “l KNOW KUNGFU!”. When people learn a language, they never know which day they felt like now they know it. There was a brother here who said that he learned English from watching mine craft. So that experience just planted seeds, and before he knew it, he was communicating in English and expressing him self. Personally I wouldn’t advise people to learn languages, if they have the English language that’s more than enough, it’s good for knowledge and international communication, I would advise people to learn business, programming languages, science. Language learning is good because it teaches you knowledge acquisition. But you can cut the middle man and go straight into knowledge acquisition it’s self, just learn the things you need to learn. Languages are only good for socialising, public relations, diplomacy, and charming people. If you are in the hospitality industry that is great, but otherwise socialisation stops you from focusing on becoming the next elone musk.
Hi Tina, amazing video! Thank you for all your tips and help! I just found about you yesterday, found one of your videos and just watching the rest of your videos. And you have a new subscriber! I finished the Code in Place course by Stanford, learned the basic how to program in python, and I like it so much, that I want to learn more. I was also looking into computer science courses, I'm interesting in programing, data science and cybersecurity. So slowly figuring out how to learn and apply it. Please keep posting great infos!
Thank you for the amazing tips and ideas. I am learning Quality Assurance fundamentals and I am planning to start learning Playwright program for automation testing.
Wow!, thanks I didnt think of using chatgpt in this way. Trying to crawl across the last stack of my boot camp for datasceince is really stressing me out. Trying to figure out how to fill in all the holes in my education.
Hello Tina, More than anything, I want to learn everything. I wish to learn different languages and how to incorporate and utilize those skills in business and my personal life. More than anything, I would like to learn how to code. I am amazed at my little nephew. He is coding. Learning how to create video games differs from what I want to use it for, but it would be suitable for my nephew to know how to do coding. It is incredible
Amazing video, thank you ! I love how structured it is as well as examples provided and how you made self learning seems so easy ! I'm gonna make a good use of it for sure !
You sound like you are an INFP. :) You have so many quirks that my daughter has and once she figured out why her INFP personality guides her thinking the way it does, she understands how to live her life without worrying about the things that bog down or trigger her thought process. "Squirrel!" She still worries and gets lost in thought, but now she understands why she does it. ;)
Im currently using chat gpt for for my report n thesis and also for creating pie chart,c-chart and graphs through the codes.. i assure you it's really helpful
Just like me!!! I want and enjoy learning something new every single time. Which forces me to learn fast cause of the short attention spam I have. Difference being that I love reading and I learn by reading
I love Ultralearning and how Scott Young wrote it, one of the first "self-care" books that stuck. I actually subconsciously ultralearned learning how to code for a few months even though I hadn't known any of the fundamentals and why things work, perhaps why it interests me so much. I have been thinking for a while if I could develop a workflow to follow the "best practices" to start an ultralearning project. ChatGPT may be sufficient in most cases but I'm curious if it would be beneficial for a knowledge base powered by AI that helps with specific information and studying. Things like feedback and testing your knowledge can be automated and created with the project's content using AI. It would almost be a form of note-taking but with embeddings and context to what you're actually learning. It could even check if notes are accurate/up to-date by using chains and verify with scrapping websites. I would appreciate feedback and if that would be something useful or if ChatGPT would simply be suffice. Thanks!
Hey Tina- always like the information you share! ( from a fellow data scientist) Just one feedback- if you can reduce your rate of speech in the videos that will help drive the message more clearly without any cognitive fatigue.
I’m definitely going to try this, on my Open University Degree in Software Engineering. I have dyslexia so I wonder if this will help, as I struggle so much with Planning and Retaining Study material
I’m learning groovy. I can learn the concepts - arrays, lists.. great. But translating that to use in Workflow Designer in Collibra is tricky. Any ideas on chatgpt would be super!
I find it so weird I prepared for my interview and at the end they just took me without any technical questions, and I stayed up all night almost doing the exact same process, although it's a students position. I just had projects from university & a little bit more life experience. As well as the company is very good, the same goes for a friend in Germany here also, yet he's extremely good at what he does, me not so much. Networking is super powerful.
Funny how I got the notification to this just when I started thinking of how to learn something new I picked up recently....I have to say, you're really pretty lol.
How do you manage putting all your focus into learning new things, working really hard, and trying to find a long term partner? I feel I will never find one if I have to focus really hard on my goals
As a native English speaker who learned to speak Mandarin to a level where I functioned often for work as a translator, I'm not sure that I buy that you can learn Japanese to the level where you can watch Japanese movies and read Manga solely from a study plan, even if that study plan is as "optimized" as modern computer technology can make it. Movies and books are cultural products and to understand them, you are going to need to understand the culture at a very intuitive level. To understand the culture at a very intuitive level, you will have to go live in Japan and speak only Japanese for a while, probably at least a year or two. So, pick up your channel and go learn Japanese! (I have no doubt that a computer program -- ChatGPT, that is -- can give you some useful pointers on how to learn the Japanese lessons you can find in textbooks in a very efficient way. However, textbook Japanese is not necessarily the same as the Japanese used, with lots of cultural cues which change on an annual/monthly/daily basis, in movies or books.)
Hey tina i am know learning cs in my own i leaned python and c i am kind of person that want to know deeper like asymbly and how cpu work networking etc i am lost i don't know how to manage my hunger that don't match with my ability to learn like i am doing math and programming and am realy stuck at problem solving i wanna take path to compatative programming but i do not know if i can
If using ChatGPT for problem solving and following logic = good, if using ChatGPT and copy paste code not fully understanding = bad, this is how I categorized it for myself
Thank you for making such a useful video, but I want to point out that the stickers in your video are not in Japanese but in Chinese, which is an ancient script🙂My English is not good, hope you understand what I mean
I know it isn't really specific but I am trying to learn to be a better programmer. I am looking for ideas or examples, I have programmed in over 10 languages but need more advanced topics. I am technically still a beginner even though I have over 4 years of programming,
To get access to IonQ systems for your company and work directly with IonQ’s applications team to prepare your business for quantum computing, head to bit.ly/3DueO39. Thanks to IonQ for sponsoring today’s video.
Get the prompts here: forms.gle/rWvw11TFsyi1dP9G9
What do you want to learn?? 🤗
im learning unreal engine 5 and blueprints to become a skilled game dev ...so i have 1 year but still wathing tutorials ...this mean im so bad at learning ? :))))))) and i want c++ too but that tryed once and seems so complicated with no visual result like unreal :))))
@@MaxStudioCG2023I’m basically similar to you. I’m learning how to make a 2d indie game on unity.
@@psych_shock4370 great .good luck to you too :)
@@MaxStudioCG2023 Bro don’t let yourself down. Everybody has a learning curve and for most people I’ve noticed that usually when they think they’re slower and falling behind it’s actually everyone is kinda falling behind. All in all, as long as you put in the effort you will be fine :)z.
Edit: also to be exact I’m gonna make a Celeste copy but I’m gonna remake it in my own way. Celeste is one of my favorite indie games.
Tina gived Hearts ,thank you Tina!
ChatGPT Is a powerful tool to learn. But sometimes the excessive use of it don't make you retain the information you prompt on it to generate the information you want to learn
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:00 📚 The speaker shares their struggles with traditional learning and how self-study became a valuable skill for them.
01:09 🧠 ChatGPT is introduced as a powerful tool to aggregate learning resources and provide personalized learning experiences.
02:07 🗺️ Meta learning is essential for effective learning; creating a study plan with resources and detailed timelines is crucial.
05:28 🔍 The Zoom In and Zoom Out framework is explained as breaking down the overall goal into smaller components and iterative improvement.
09:42 📝 Retrieval and retention techniques like flashcards, Feynman technique, and Socratic method enhance learning comprehension and memory.
14:48 🧪 Experimentation involves trying new learning methods and resources to overcome learning plateaus and discover effective approaches.
16:23 👥 The importance of incorporating interactions with other people, like language exchange or coding buddies, is emphasized for motivation and growth in learning.
Made with HARPA AI
damn
amazeballz
Hi there, do you need GPT-4 to get access to realtime data like recent youtube vids ?
@@awakenwithoutcoffee with HARPA you don't, GPT-3 is enough.
Thank you so much!!! Very useful!!!
Summary and chapter points:
1) Asking to assemble resources and to generate a time limited personalized training course for a specific learning goal. 2:30 min:sec.
2) Generate questions likely to be asked in a techincal job interview. 8:30.
3) Generate an interactive role playing job interview. 9:50.
4) Generating flashcards for fact memorization review. 11:45.
5) Generating an interactive Fenyman Technique question and answer session to guage your level of comprehension. 12:45.
6) Generating an intetactice Socratic Method question and answer session to guage your level of comprehension. 13:30, 13:45.
7) Apply the Experimentation Method for capstone learning and to break sticking points. 15:00, 15:25.
8) Ask for alternative methods of learning. 15:55.
9) Incorporating other people into your human-based learning process. 16:40.
The learning techniques were extracted from Young, "Ultralearning" (2019), but are implemented here by Huang in ChatGPT. books.google.com/books?id=jyV2DwAAQBAJ
Thanks! Did you do it with chatGPt?
Wow! That was great… I am retired and taking music production courses at Berklee college of music online… pro tools certification and my first certificate program that I will roll into a BA degree at a later time. I want to learned Arabic and Spanish. My community is very diverse I am starting to relearn high school and college level mathematics also and not to mention my side hobby is Physics, Astro physics, and quantum mechanics…my brain is hungry for knowledge. Maybe I have too many interest actually.
this just blew my mind!!! I'm learning Korean, time management, coding and other small things. I always struggled to create plans that i could stick to; but this.... I can now add more things to learn and do! thank you for this awesome content!
Woah you are very driven and efficient, admirable. I'm learning Japanese, Korean, and investing. I'm a fast and "organic" learner so a bit all over the place at the moment. I've never had a specific plan but maybe I should make one to finally improve more efficiently.
You are absolutely a great youtuber. I am always impressed by the presentation you come up with. Please keep up with good work.
One of your best videos. I got a lot of insight out of this one. I'm a 77-year-old retired teacher who has been watching learning videos avidly for a decade. Yours are some of the most helpful ones out there for me.
it makes me so happy to hear this - thank you ❤️
@@TinaHuang1 I am a 72 old person viewing this excellent video from Chennai, South India!
I'm using chatGPT to explain technical concepts that I need more help with like networking, subnetting and cybersecurity. I didn't know I could ask even more specific questions. I feel like I have one up on my class because I use it so frequently. I have always done better when learning at my own pace. I've studied chemistry on my own, but failed in the classroom. Thank you sharing this valuable information. I also want to learn SQL. I was learning coding on my own last year and decided to just start with the basics in IT support and work my way up while studying more. Anyway, your inspiring thanks!
Hello Tina ! I'm from Argentina and I'm learning English (I have a self-taught initial basic level) I've also just finished a manual Testing QA course and I want to delve deeper into SQL and learn Python. Your videos are very motivating and super useful!! 💪😊
Hi Tina! I just wanted to say “THANK YOU SO MUCH” because your video has taught me how to incorporate speed learning into what I am currently studying, all aspects of website development for a job position( I don’t know what company yet). You truly rock in this video, and honestly, claps to your content! I wish you the best at everything you achieve!
I just started “chatting” with ChatGPT, and after watching your video, I know how to actually use it for learning. Thank you! I’m going to start with Korean. Gumaapsamida!
Very useful information. Keep up the great work. Impressive sponsor. Dan
thank you so much for supporting me
You're welcome. Your work is valuable and actionable. Bravo. Onward and upward. @@TinaHuang1
Exactly what I was thinking on last night. In this day and age if we want to stay competetive and capable we have to implement rapid learning and prequalification.
Awesome video!!! Definitely shared this one! Keep 'em coming!!! 💯
Yes, ChatGPT has been super helpful in helping me learn Japanese.
Love the take that learning seemingly unrelated skills are actually related!! Learning to learn is a core skill everyone needs to master
Great video Tina where you explained how to give prompts to chatGPT to help with learning anything. I am a data engineer, currently learning DS & Algorithms...and planning to learn ML/Computer Vision next.
Amazing. I am using you prompts to make a study plan for me and will use it for my students as well. This is amazing and so helpful. I linked your video in our study group as well, so that my fellow teachers and students can use your prompts. This is absolutely the best video I have found to help me get things done and know where to start while learning and teaching. Thank you so much. You are have a new subscriber.
Oh wow I’m so glad it’s helpful!! 💜
Awesome. Thank you for sharing your expertise and showing us your ChatGpt prompts. You’re the best. Currently I am taking Nursing prerequisite courses.
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:00 📚 Self-study is valuable for learning effectively, even in challenging situations.
01:09 🧠 The first step in learning quickly is "meta learning," which involves creating a study plan tailored to your goals and resources.
05:14 🔄 The "zoom in and zoom out" framework helps break down complex goals into manageable components, allowing for focused learning.
08:31 🧠 AI tools like ChatGPT can generate study plans and provide resources based on your specific goals and needs.
10:50 📚 Strategies for improving retention include self-testing with flashcards, using the Feynman technique to simplify explanations, and applying the Socratic method to question assumptions.
15:53 🤖 Experimentation is key to advancing your learning when you hit a plateau, and AI tools can suggest alternative methods and resources.
16:35 👥 While AI can assist in learning, involving other people, like native speakers or study groups, is essential for motivation and overcoming challenges in the learning journey.
Made with HARPA AI
Excellent video. It'll definitely help me study for the CCNA exam.
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:00 🚀 Self-studying saved the speaker in difficult situations and became a passion for learning various skills.
01:09 🤖 ChatGPT is a powerful tool for comprehensive and personalized learning, aggregating resources and adapting to individual goals and learning styles.
03:17 📚 Meta learning is the foundation for efficient learning. It involves creating a detailed study plan with resources, timelines, and strategies for learning.
08:04 🔍 The zoom in and zoom out framework involves breaking down goals into manageable components, analyzing weaknesses, and using AI to optimize learning.
13:49 📝 Effective retention and understanding methods include self-testing with flashcards, using the Feynman technique to simplify explanations, and applying the Socratic method for deeper understanding.
Made with HARPA AI
Thank you so much!!!
I am learning bioinformatics right now.
I have never thought of using chatgpt. Now I wanna give it a try
thank you for the video
Thank you so much for this. The best part of this video is that it is congruent with our needs unlike other study videos that do not include the help of AI. I really like it!
Hi tina I'm Daniel I'm from Brazil, you open my eyes, for learned Ingles and the program. thanks
This is really cool and helpful. THANK YOU!!! seriously all the details you provide are unbelievably helpful. Thank you so much!!
this is the best video ive seen all year.
i loved watching everything here. Thank you.
Yep, I too use ChatGPT to help me understand new concepts. It really is a great tutor.
Wow thank s Tina you already helped me with so much keep it up❤
The speed of your speech is amazing!!
Thanks for this awesome video ! I am currently learning Hindi, improving my coding in Python & starting to learn ML as well, before my master starts. I often get demotivated as I don't exactly know where to start, and I believe using chatGPT the way you show it here and doing projects for coding (which I wasn't doing until now) is going to make a huge difference.
Dear Tina,
Any language you want to learn, at first you focus on how to read it.
If you understand how to read it, you start to pickup details of how it’s pronounced.
The Japanese language uses alphabet as well as pictograms inherited from China and shared also with Korea.
The pictograms take some time to learn, I think they are called kanji, the alphabet are called katakana.
There is a learners dictionary that teaches you to learn the kanji.
It’s an uphill struggle,
Because you have to learn the arrangement of lines,
And depending on the difficulty, some have many many lines (strokes), others have minimal strokes, so the way you learn them is that you use the dictionary which arranges them based on the number of strokes. You complete the easy ones, then gradually you move towards the harder ones.
It’s a life long journey, you really don’t need that.
If you can read the alphabet, that should get you started.
You can embark on the pictograms learning at a later date, and it’s the kind of a relaxing ZEN activity that takes your mind off whatever is bothering you.
That being said,
Annnny language gets learned by learning words.
There is no wordless languages. Unless you are talking about body language. Even then there is something to say and read.
Any language gives you the ability to read its newspaper if you learn 2000 words.
You can read a Japanese news paper if you learn 2000 words.
You will be like an average Japanese if you learn 5k words, you will be like a Japanese intellectual or professor if you learn 10k words.
(Stu jay raj [a famous polyglot])learns 2000 words in 2 days.
It’s common to say that people learn a language in 6 months. That is anti an average of 10 words a day.
You can learn 2000 Japanese words in 20 days at an average of 100 words a day.
You can also learn the 2000 words in one day at the rate of one word every 4 minutes 50 seconds for 16 hours in one hard focus day.
It takes allot less than that to intake a word.
Try to write each word and it’s meaning 10 times using a note book and a pen. That will establish establish exposure.
You don’t have to memorise the words yet.
Just write them down. Familiarity will build neural networks and pathways.
Eventually the words will be memorised without you saying them repetitively, and if you say them repetitively that’s even better.
It gets your mind used to the word.
My favorite word is the word arbus it means water melon in Russian, also Фаберже it’s the phabergè jeweller that used to make egg jewelry. The name sands really glamorous, and the circle with a line through it is F and the X with a line through it is G but pronounced in a dragged way that creates traction. Me likie them details.
Anywho
I know some Japanese words, yameteh means stop, some times pronounced yameh.
Niko means cat, inu means dog. As in Shiba Inu.
I like the process of learning a language because it teaches a person the process of learning other things such as maths and physics. The process is the same, you collect the data, turn it into information, knowledge and wisdom.
If you want to kearn Japanese grammar, you can learn it at a later date, but basically the words initiate a person to a language faster.
Also songs help
They teach you to be familiar with the tongue twisters of a particular language.
Being a data scientist language learning is probably fun to you.
Just be careful, language learning is a fool’s errand.
It gets your mind busy for no reason, it highjacks your cognitive resources, you don’t reach proficiency fast, and it’s a waist of time better spent on things of high priority, such as making your first billion.
On the other hand, language learning is vital in a low priority area of our lives, which is socialisation.
If you know a person’s religion and language, you understand them better, and they appreciate that, they would have felt misunderstood and now that you know their language and creed, you happen to be one of the few people who understand them.
It’s something dale carnegie would have recommended in his book win friends and influence people.
Fun fact, Arabic is an easy to learn language,
1. Learn the 28 letters, and diacritics (they are probably 5 or 6)
2. Learn how to read the first chapter of the Quran in Arabic
🤯🫠
It will be mind blowing and you will melt the hearts of a third of the world’s population, 2 billion Muslims.
The RUclips algorithms will not be able to have enough of you.
Just sayin
I learned English by just watching Minecraft videos. Chill
@@JasonTubeOffical gradual exposure does wonders. Everyone has their own approach. But the ultimate aim is immersion. Wether you use the language, watch movies without subtitles, or even spend some time in the country where the language is spoken.
Any language can be learned in the natural way, as newborn babies do: by observation and immersion. Reading and writing can be "acquired" later, for deepening your knowledge
@@KyraMoonspell
Learning the way babies learn is random, and babies don’t learn conversational language, they learn baby language with limited vocabulary.
The first concept about language is the ability to understand. Comprehension.
Comes from understanding how translation works.
a translation works by having a middle common ground.
a for example
Let’s say I speak language A and you totally don’t understand my language. And you speak language B and I totally don’t understand your language, but both of us meet in the middle in elements of vocabulary , let’s call them B, or we meet in the middle through a translator, or a dictionary.
So that middle ground which we both have as a common factor helps us understand each other.
a once we understand each other, then we can work on understanding each other even more.
The Rosetta Stone which was an ancient stone with 3 languages written on it, one being Greek , the other being ancient Egyptian, and the third was a language I don’t remember now.
This created the ability to decipher and understand the hieroglyphic ancient Egyptian language.
without the Rosetta Stone, it wouldn’t have been possible to decipher that language. Infact it took powerful decipher and understanding skills to understand it.
language learning requires that ability to capture the accurate meaning of a word.
lets assume you are using a dictionary,
And your comprehension level is 90%. That is great.
The next thing you need is to memorise the words.
2000 words is a good number to memorise. It’s ok to memorise 1999 also. It doesn’t have to be exactly 2000 words.
As you get closer to the words of a language, let’s say Japanese.
For the first time in your life, a language that was distant from you, now it’s there on the table infront of you.
As you play with it, explore it, tackle it, write each word 10 times, memorise the words.
Your brain cells are working. They are making neural network connections.
They are like the roots of a plant, once you plant the seed, the seed starts to grow.
How long does it take to grow?
Let’s say that at the beginning when you start memorising the words, you are using borrowed resources.
It’s like writing on sand. It fades away.
Not necessarily fast, it’s there with you. But you must use it or lose it.
So assuming that you are working with it.
In 20 years you will have new brain cells dedicated to that language.
That way you are a professional in that language. And you are processing that language in a more effective and efficient way.
It is said that when we are born we have 2 billion brain cells, by the time we are in our 30s we have only one billion, we lost half of our brain cells, partially because we don’t use them, and partially because we specialise in fields so, we stick to our specialisations satisfied with our lives, and the rest of the brain cells pack their bags and go.
It is said that building new brain cells is next to impossible, it’s one of the hardest thing to do and many people hope it can be done, but majority of experts agree that lost brain cells don’t return.
Some people started talking about neuro genesis, which is meant to be about building brain cells.
Word has it that taxi drivers who were being trained to drive London cabs endedup showing signs of a brain that has grown. Because they are made to memorise large detailed maps of London.
Something about utilising your brain resources is to do with putting the information you learn into your sub conscience.
Forget about building new brain cells.
Your mind will find ways to store the information you learned into your long term memory if
1. Let’s say you have 100 peices of info, 100 words basically. You have memorised each (probably by writing each 10 times).
2. You waited for 2 weeks, and tested your self on those words which you memorised.
a you will notice that 33% you can recall. And 66% you forgot it.
That’s good.
You don’t want a brain that memorises everything, you will overload your brain with junk. It’s good that it chooses a core amount to memorise.
So the fact that you revised what you memorised after 2 weeks, is a verification method to make sure that the pure 33% you have is there. The 66% is gone.
What’s the difference?
33% was not located in your conscience mind short term memory,
It’s mobilised and sent to your subconscinece long term memory. And that one lasts very very long.
You will still need to refresh it. But it lasts.
The only one that is supper permanent is your brain neurones. Those stay for good. They are hardware solid substance.
And it takes 2 years to build those.
But once you test your self on what has gone into your sub conscience, and you know it’s in the sub-conscience because it lasted over two weeks , because when you stored it, you stored it right (for example, if a person tells you their name or telephone number very fast, and you didn’t even hear it well, you can’t remember that. So making sure that you memorise it well , with full clarity. gets you to remember it longer [besides, same way there is a recipe to how to cook, memorising has its own method, you need to learn how to memorise if you want to get stronger, but repaying something a few time that does that job])
Once you memorise, and it stayed for 20 days. Then few months later you revise it, and it will stay for a very very very long time.
So everyday you memorise 100 things , you revise them 2 weeks later.
3. Let’s say you have 500 words to memorise,
So day 1 is Monday , you memorise from 0 to 100, and you revise that on day 14.
You notice 60% was lost, so you take that 60% memorise it again.
Going back in time, on the calendar day 2 is Tuesday you memorise the words from 100 to 200. And you revise them on day 15. And what you lost, you work on capturing it later.
Day 3 is Wednesday , the third day, you memorise from 200 to 300. And you revise it on day 16.
And like that, your objective is to put the words into your long term memory. The sub conscience. You are basically planting the seeds.
Those seeds will grow roots, and in 2 years, as you watch lots and lots of Naruto.
One day you will tell your self what kianu reeves told him self in the matrix when he was playing neo “l KNOW KUNGFU!”.
When people learn a language, they never know which day they felt like now they know it.
There was a brother here who said that he learned English from watching mine craft.
So that experience just planted seeds, and before he knew it, he was communicating in English and expressing him self.
Personally I wouldn’t advise people to learn languages, if they have the English language that’s more than enough, it’s good for knowledge and international communication,
I would advise people to learn business, programming languages, science.
Language learning is good because it teaches you knowledge acquisition.
But you can cut the middle man and go straight into knowledge acquisition it’s self, just learn the things you need to learn.
Languages are only good for socialising, public relations, diplomacy, and charming people.
If you are in the hospitality industry that is great, but otherwise socialisation stops you from focusing on becoming the next elone musk.
Hi Tina, amazing video! Thank you for all your tips and help! I just found about you yesterday, found one of your videos and just watching the rest of your videos. And you have a new subscriber! I finished the Code in Place course by Stanford, learned the basic how to program in python, and I like it so much, that I want to learn more. I was also looking into computer science courses, I'm interesting in programing, data science and cybersecurity. So slowly figuring out how to learn and apply it. Please keep posting great infos!
Thank you for the amazing tips and ideas. I am learning Quality Assurance fundamentals and I am planning to start learning Playwright program for automation testing.
Wow!, thanks I didnt think of using chatgpt in this way. Trying to crawl across the last stack of my boot camp for datasceince is really stressing me out. Trying to figure out how to fill in all the holes in my education.
I am, currently learning UI/UX. I didn't know that chatgpt could help. Educative video
Hello Tina, More than anything, I want to learn everything. I wish to learn different languages and how to incorporate and utilize those skills in business and my personal life. More than anything, I would like to learn how to code. I am amazed at my little nephew. He is coding. Learning how to create video games differs from what I want to use it for, but it would be suitable for my nephew to know how to do coding. It is incredible
so good lecture ! thanks a lot ! I did somehow a lot similarly for doing french communication, the hardest is to remember , though :)
Amazing video, thank you ! I love how structured it is as well as examples provided and how you made self learning seems so easy ! I'm gonna make a good use of it for sure !
thank you tina i rally needed this my exam timing became near
thank you
GOOD LUCK!!!
wishing you the best of luck for your Japanese studies!
Your videos teach so much thank you❤
Please do a video on how to learn SQL
Outstanding. Extremely helpful and beneficial content.
What a great educational video. Thanks so much
Such great framework and workflow!
This could turn in to a promising series where you talk about how to use chatgpt and various AI search engines to learn various topics!
Ps great video, the prompt construction is such a skill so this is v helpful!
This is great stuff, thank you!
Awesome Tina. I'm actually writing a book and will follow the detailed prompts.
You sound like you are an INFP. :) You have so many quirks that my daughter has and once she figured out why her INFP personality guides her thinking the way it does, she understands how to live her life without worrying about the things that bog down or trigger her thought process. "Squirrel!"
She still worries and gets lost in thought, but now she understands why she does it. ;)
Love this. Thank you
“It is doing it’s thing”😍😍😍 SO DAMN CUTE every time
Helpful and also inspirational. Thank you Tina.
This was really helpful, thank you very much.
Im currently using chat gpt for for my report n thesis and also for creating pie chart,c-chart and graphs through the codes.. i assure you it's really helpful
Why is her face looking like plastic?
Just like me!!! I want and enjoy learning something new every single time. Which forces me to learn fast cause of the short attention spam I have. Difference being that I love reading and I learn by reading
Thank you so much !
I love Ultralearning and how Scott Young wrote it, one of the first "self-care" books that stuck. I actually subconsciously ultralearned learning how to code for a few months even though I hadn't known any of the fundamentals and why things work, perhaps why it interests me so much.
I have been thinking for a while if I could develop a workflow to follow the "best practices" to start an ultralearning project. ChatGPT may be sufficient in most cases but I'm curious if it would be beneficial for a knowledge base powered by AI that helps with specific information and studying. Things like feedback and testing your knowledge can be automated and created with the project's content using AI.
It would almost be a form of note-taking but with embeddings and context to what you're actually learning. It could even check if notes are accurate/up to-date by using chains and verify with scrapping websites.
I would appreciate feedback and if that would be something useful or if ChatGPT would simply be suffice. Thanks!
Hey Tina- always like the information you share! ( from a fellow data scientist)
Just one feedback- if you can reduce your rate of speech in the videos that will help drive the message more clearly without any cognitive fatigue.
I’m definitely going to try this, on my Open University Degree in Software Engineering. I have dyslexia so I wonder if this will help, as I struggle so much with Planning and Retaining Study material
Thank u Tina. I always find your videos enjoyable to watch. Would it be possible for you to include subtitles in your upcoming videos :)
Thank you! ❤
thank you for the all information.
I’m learning groovy. I can learn the concepts - arrays, lists.. great. But translating that to use in Workflow Designer in Collibra is tricky. Any ideas on chatgpt would be super!
Ok, thank you. IT IS a game changer.😊
Thank you, Tina
Make videos applying Computer Science!! We would love to see it! It would be great content! :D
I think this is the first time I want to know (even) more about the sponsor than about the actual video haha
hi Tina , can you recommend resources to learn about "swing trading" with a bot ? Thanks for your video . 😃
@TinaHuang1 how would you update with today's AI models (incl. ChatGPT 4o or Claude)?
Truly informational video....
Hello Tina, Thank you for sharing
I find it so weird I prepared for my interview and at the end they just took me without any technical questions, and I stayed up all night almost doing the exact same process, although it's a students position. I just had projects from university & a little bit more life experience.
As well as the company is very good, the same goes for a friend in Germany here also, yet he's extremely good at what he does, me not so much. Networking is super powerful.
Thank you for this helpful video. I don’t see the prompts, did I miss them?
huh does it not show up in the description? forms.gle/rWvw11TFsyi1dP9G9
I think this was my favorite video from you.
fantastic video. thank you.
Funny how I got the notification to this just when I started thinking of how to learn something new I picked up recently....I have to say, you're really pretty lol.
Tina would you use AI to read books more efficiently?
How do you manage putting all your focus into learning new things, working really hard, and trying to find a long term partner? I feel I will never find one if I have to focus really hard on my goals
Interesting Topic! I have the same microphone, what software and settings do you use for you audio editing?
At 4:52 it's still better at this point to have an excellent teacher help with this..
Awesome, thanks!
Does it maatter if i use gpt 3.5 or gpt 4?
What SQL Resources did you use to learn, because Window Functions are kicking my behind.
As a native English speaker who learned to speak Mandarin to a level where I functioned often for work as a translator, I'm not sure that I buy that you can learn Japanese to the level where you can watch Japanese movies and read Manga solely from a study plan, even if that study plan is as "optimized" as modern computer technology can make it. Movies and books are cultural products and to understand them, you are going to need to understand the culture at a very intuitive level. To understand the culture at a very intuitive level, you will have to go live in Japan and speak only Japanese for a while, probably at least a year or two. So, pick up your channel and go learn Japanese! (I have no doubt that a computer program -- ChatGPT, that is -- can give you some useful pointers on how to learn the Japanese lessons you can find in textbooks in a very efficient way. However, textbook Japanese is not necessarily the same as the Japanese used, with lots of cultural cues which change on an annual/monthly/daily basis, in movies or books.)
can you make another video doing a deeper dive on Anki and ChatGPT together. so many possibilities
I want to learn ds&a because I'm currently learning about it in college and I'm so behind in this current moment in time
Hey tina i am know learning cs in my own i leaned python and c i am kind of person that want to know deeper like asymbly and how cpu work networking etc i am lost i don't know how to manage my hunger that don't match with my ability to learn like i am doing math and programming and am realy stuck at problem solving i wanna take path to compatative programming but i do not know if i can
can't lie chat gpt is saving my ass in coding i produce loads more but not sure if am learning or not lol
If using ChatGPT for problem solving and following logic = good, if using ChatGPT and copy paste code not fully understanding = bad, this is how I categorized it for myself
What free apps are good to use?
Thank you for making such a useful video, but I want to point out that the stickers in your video are not in Japanese but in Chinese, which is an ancient script🙂My English is not good, hope you understand what I mean
Guess you're pretty much a Japanese expert by now. Great video
I know it isn't really specific but I am trying to learn to be a better programmer. I am looking for ideas or examples, I have programmed in over 10 languages but need more advanced topics. I am technically still a beginner even though I have over 4 years of programming,
Wait its been only 50sec and im here? Damnnn its a moracle
Also thanks for the video ❤
thank you!! ❤
I can so relate to you.
Tina you are so cute hhhh. Thanks for sharing your insight . This really enhances my study efficiency. A fan from China ❤