I’m so glad I found your channel. You have helped me with so many lab exams. Most videos I watch are hard to sit through because of their voices, but yours is so relaxing ❤
All of your videos are saving me in anatomy!! You make everything so clear and easy to memorize. I especially love all of your histology videos. Most A&P videos are fast paced and overwhelming with music and colors, but you go slowly and have such a calm voice. It’s perfect!! Thank you.
Thank you so much Anatomy Hero! Your videos are amazing and straight forward and concise. After learning each chapter I come to your channel to reinforce all the materials I learned. 💕! I’m so surprised you don’t have more followers, you definitely deserve more followers ✨
LOVED THIS! I’m taking college A and P for the first time and your video really helped me learn more about the skull bones and get a sense of how much I already know. Thank you so much!
ruclips.net/video/eqHkuhoMeOQ/видео.html this video was a presentation I did for students at my school with tips for how to study bony landmarks (and in it I define a lot of important bone vocabulary) However, I don't think I included how to do chunking which is an extremely important technique that you can use for all anatomy.... So I'll explain that: The basic principle of "chunking" is that your short-term memory can only hold 5 to 8 new words/pieces of information, and if you continue to look at more terms without starting to commit those first five to eight words to your long-term memory, you're just going to push them right out of your brain. So break your terms into groups of five to eight. If your professor didn't organize the list by location (ie, all the landmarks on the temporal bone, then all the landmarks on the frontal bone) then you'll want to organize it like that. Before you learn the specific landmarks on each bone, Make sure you learn the bones first. So once you have You're organized list, You're going to start learning them in groups of five to eight... Read the word, look at the location of it, and IMMEDIATELY repeat the word to yourself without looking. Do this for the whole group of five to eight... And then without looking at the words, point to the 5 to 8 things and say the name (many people do better if they write it instead of just saying it) Then do the same thing for your next group of five to eight, But when you finish... Do it again with the first group of five to eight WITHOUT LOOKING AT THE WORDS. It's okay if you don't remember everything, just make a note of which terms you're having trouble with. You'll remember them eventually. Keep doing this but every time you go forward, go back. You will learn about how long you can do this for before you're not being productive... Everyone's different. If you're feeling tired, take a break, listen to some music, come back. If you're still making lots of mistakes, just stop for the day. The next day you should sit with a blank piece of paper and write down as many terms as you remember. Then look back at what you learned and see what you missed. You MUST review the next day or you will lose the memories. At some point, You're going to want someone to point to things and ask you what they are in a random order. This helps keep your brain flexible... Because if you only ever study by yourself you get used to the order you do things And when it's in a random order on your test it can make your brain go blank. Also, Make sure you know the definitions of all important bony landmark vocabulary...foramen, fossa, condyle.... If you see a word multiple times you should know what it means. Understanding why they named it a certain way will make it easier to remember.
Here's my entire bone playlist if you need it! Also, ifyou look towards the bottom there is a video with study tips! Skeletal system: ruclips.net/p/PLBM7jL93Kc2QJa_kN6fP_le3qUJ1E4iHM
I’m so glad I found your channel. You have helped me with so many lab exams. Most videos I watch are hard to sit through because of their voices, but yours is so relaxing ❤
All of your videos are saving me in anatomy!! You make everything so clear and easy to memorize. I especially love all of your histology videos. Most A&P videos are fast paced and overwhelming with music and colors, but you go slowly and have such a calm voice. It’s perfect!! Thank you.
Your quiz videos are incredibly helpful, and well-paced! Very thoughtful to put answer bank in description, it greatly assisted my studies. Thank you!
Thank you so much Anatomy Hero! Your videos are amazing and straight forward and concise. After learning each chapter I come to your channel to reinforce all the materials I learned. 💕! I’m so surprised you don’t have more followers, you definitely deserve more followers ✨
Thank you so much for taking the time to make these for us. You are so awesome. Keep up the good work!!
You're so welcome! Good luck on your exam!
LOVED THIS! I’m taking college A and P for the first time and your video really helped me learn more about the skull bones and get a sense of how much I already know. Thank you so much!
I'm so glad!
Your videos are extremely knowledgeable, thanks a lot.
No problem! I'm glad people are using them!
It was massively helpful! Keep going.
Glad to hear it! At the end of this playlist I have similar ones for other bones.. ruclips.net/p/PLBM7jL93Kc2QJa_kN6fP_le3qUJ1E4iHM
@@AnatomyHerothey are, for sure, on my watch list.
Thank u for making this video to help me understand better ! And May I ask what the tips on remember all this name and landmarks and theirs location ?
ruclips.net/video/eqHkuhoMeOQ/видео.html this video was a presentation I did for students at my school with tips for how to study bony landmarks (and in it I define a lot of important bone vocabulary)
However, I don't think I included how to do chunking which is an extremely important technique that you can use for all anatomy.... So I'll explain that:
The basic principle of "chunking" is that your short-term memory can only hold 5 to 8 new words/pieces of information, and if you continue to look at more terms without starting to commit those first five to eight words to your long-term memory, you're just going to push them right out of your brain.
So break your terms into groups of five to eight. If your professor didn't organize the list by location (ie, all the landmarks on the temporal bone, then all the landmarks on the frontal bone) then you'll want to organize it like that. Before you learn the specific landmarks on each bone, Make sure you learn the bones first.
So once you have You're organized list, You're going to start learning them in groups of five to eight... Read the word, look at the location of it, and IMMEDIATELY repeat the word to yourself without looking. Do this for the whole group of five to eight... And then without looking at the words, point to the 5 to 8 things and say the name (many people do better if they write it instead of just saying it)
Then do the same thing for your next group of five to eight, But when you finish... Do it again with the first group of five to eight WITHOUT LOOKING AT THE WORDS. It's okay if you don't remember everything, just make a note of which terms you're having trouble with. You'll remember them eventually.
Keep doing this but every time you go forward, go back. You will learn about how long you can do this for before you're not being productive... Everyone's different. If you're feeling tired, take a break, listen to some music, come back. If you're still making lots of mistakes, just stop for the day.
The next day you should sit with a blank piece of paper and write down as many terms as you remember. Then look back at what you learned and see what you missed. You MUST review the next day or you will lose the memories.
At some point, You're going to want someone to point to things and ask you what they are in a random order. This helps keep your brain flexible... Because if you only ever study by yourself you get used to the order you do things And when it's in a random order on your test it can make your brain go blank.
Also, Make sure you know the definitions of all important bony landmark vocabulary...foramen, fossa, condyle.... If you see a word multiple times you should know what it means. Understanding why they named it a certain way will make it easier to remember.
ruclips.net/p/PLBM7jL93Kc2QJa_kN6fP_le3qUJ1E4iHM
And this is my full skeletal playlist in case you need it.
So helpful🙏🏼 Thank you!
Learnt styloid process… thanks
Thank you so much 😊
You are the best!
ty
Got to study
Here's my entire bone playlist if you need it! Also, ifyou look towards the bottom there is a video with study tips!
Skeletal system: ruclips.net/p/PLBM7jL93Kc2QJa_kN6fP_le3qUJ1E4iHM
@@AnatomyHero thanks I’m sending to my study group chat
Thank you ma
Glad you are finding these helpful! Good luck in your studies!!
The way of pronunciation the word is very sensible I mean .................