Take my Learning System Diagnostic for free here: bit.ly/4c1BE18. You'll get a personalised report on how the way you learn compares to top learners and recommendations on how to improve.
Can we look at learning thru the lens of mind mapping as an optimization, more specifically, an optimal packing problem? So, we're trying to minimize mean path length between networks of ideas?
I need to say thank you Dr. Justin! Because of your tips about how to learn effectively and efficiently, I passed my board exam and was fortunate enough to be a topnotcher! Because of you, I am finally a chemical engineer 🙏 ❤️
Quite an uplifting comment, I share a similar sentiment finding this channel and getting to know the problems with rote memorization and how encoding is useful and important. Wish u best for the future 🍀
Priming - Any technique you use before a main learning event. Encoding - Techniques that will allow your brain to organise and process the information effectively. For example grouping, Simplifying, analogies, intuitive, etc Reference - Taking information and putting them somewhere else to revisit later on. For example flash cards, Obsidian, notes Retrieval - test your ability to use your knowledge and strengthen memory and deepen understanding Interleaving - Approaching a topic from various angles or perspectives.Test yourself in multiple ways overlearning - Going deeper into a topic to achieve a higher standard of mastery. 1. repetition 2. Practice papers 3. flashcards 4. revising
About a decade ago I had a course with a big name in memory research, and he instructed us to not take notes during the class, but in the break, take notes with as much as we could remember of the class material as possible, said "effortful retrieval is the best way to form memories" on repeat.
Gonna sound super dumb if I mixed him up with somebody else, but I remember him mentioning he's already writing one. // edit, now that I think about it, it would've been in the video about using ChatGPT to study, so now I'm fairly certain that was him 😁
@@hasanabbadi3252 Justin don't dislike linear taking, linear form is the best way to store large amounts of information, details and be transferrable. The only bad thing is that it usually don't make it easy to see relationships.
I see how hard you are working these days to improve the quality, back then i used to watch all of your videos to collect what i need, now it's all organised and very understandable ... Keep it up man!
By YouSum Live 00:00:00 Learning efficiency through the PERRIO system. 00:00:51 Understanding learning as a series of processes. 00:04:01 Importance of priming for effective learning. 00:05:00 Encoding: organizing information for memory retention. 00:06:06 Reference: noting details for later review. 00:07:05 Retrieval: testing and applying knowledge for retention. 00:07:33 Interleaving: approaching topics from multiple angles. 00:08:19 Overlearning: deepening knowledge through repetition. By YouSum Live
It's incredible to see how the videos has evolved since the begining of this channel !! The message is getting clearer and makes more sense the more we advance. Those who were at the begining of this channel like me, surely understand what I feel! Can't wait to be part of the programm once I am able to afford it! But for now, the content are already very valuable and so much thanks to you Dr. Justin !! May God keep blessing you 🤲 ! This is really my number 1 channel, my learning has seeen a huge evolution ! I can only keep cheering up for its growth 🤩 I really pray that it reaches more viewer wordly, I am already sharing it with my surroundings !!
Great system, thanks!! Just an idea, but I think a super useful video, for me anyway, would be just a study along session with you where you choose a new subject and go through this process and show how you would do priming, encoding etc.
This is almost my exact system for language learning. Which makes sense given that we are just human, and the brain follows the same principles for learning with slight variations depending on the content or skill
Honestly, I have been looking for a channel such as this... i love to learn a lot but realize im loosing the quick assimilation resulting to frustration while try to cover many areas needed. But with this channel, i seem to believe this is my answer.
Some thing i can relate, all my medical school i was with mindset, i am a student and if i "read/study" i will become a doctor, after completing graduation i was blank, why did i do all these years. But after i started "working as a doctor" i could understand many concepts much better, concepts started making some sense. Something now i realise if i had mindset i am a doctor at the start of my medical school i could have understood and enjoyed concepts even more better.
I just tried out the diagnostic tool. Seems to have some validity and gave me some interesting insights. I dont have money tho for the program, even though I profit alot from your teachings. I will support you with likes and comments my man
Thank you, Dr Justin! Seeing all my mistakes and problems of my study system flesh out in front of me is just so unique. Like, no one has ever done this for me before. Huge fan of your content and your ideas 🤩🤩
Yk all of these I have been doing naturally before and was helping me get good grades in school until I encountered people in high school with binders of notes or printables and while initially thought it was a waste of time when i tested it, I still felt pressured that I must have been doing something wrong or my studying not enough. Now during lectures I rarely take notes and just absorb all the information. Usually I only take notes if I have further questions that I am to google later. As soon as I get home, I take a break, get a breather, get outside to walk or do anything physical or try to spend time with family and then I study by going over the module a little bit purely through reading or skimming then answering questions, searching over the internet if I didn't understand something. Most of my hours are spent on assignments.
I was the same back in high school! I've never taken notes, until university where supports wouldn't be available and like Dr. Justin keeps mentioning, the level in University is totally different and the skills they wish you to reach is a level higher than it was in High school, they will ask you to be able to do level 4-5 of the bloom taxonomy. Then I keep wondering what systems should I have to be able to keep up with the current of information. I thought I needed to do like others, linear note taking, summarizing etc.. I am really glad and lucky to have found this channel!! It has saved my life thank God
The “system” approach makes so much sense! 🤯I used to ask fellow students how they learn and their answer often was „flashcards.“ That was not the answer I was looking for, but rather “what do you do before to understand everything? How do you decide what goes onto a card? If you put everything on cards, when do you have time left to actually study them?”. Having this system in place answers most of them!
Hi Thank you for the great video. I enjoyed the overview of the topic. I am somewhat of a filming geek and even though it is only my theoretical knowledge I wanted to share it with you to improve your video quality. General composition rule: When composing an image, the eye is naturally drawn to the parts of the picture with the highest contrast. So if the goal of your shot is to have the eyes of the viewer fixated on your head, create some contrast around it. There are several techniques like creating a dark background, and then giving your hair a rim light from above. This seperates your head from the background. (This might be a bit studio-like). The reason why I want to tell you, are the light in the background. If they reflect off of surfaces they have very high contrast and can distract the eye. So there must be a tradeoff between creating depth and reflection. I hope you find this information useful or at least interesting :D
One of my major summer projects was creating a learning system for myself. I had all the tools (thanks to your videos) but, I had yet to figure out how they all fit together. Before I could even begin, this video dropped from the heavens lol Justin, you just saved me 7 years of trial and error and I couldn't be more grateful!! This video took all the concepts from previous videos and integrated them into an easy-to-follow system. Peak quality content. Thank you for another useful quiz!
Awesome video, encapsulated and synthesised your whole learning system and philosophy. I watched most of your videos and this sums it up extremely well.
You’re amazing Dr. Justin! Thank you for this video it was very succinct and helpful. Are you able to go more into depth about the “reference” part of PERRIO? Thank you
Edit: I appreciate this precise sort of video that groups and shows the exact relationship of your older stuff one idea/tool relative to another. Also grats on the new office!
Hi dr justin ...I absolutely love ur videos and feel myself becoming a better version of myself everytime I watch u giving tips on leraning.I just had a request if u could make a video about how to represent answers when writing a subjective exam and fetch more marks in subjective exams
I got 63% overall, got zero in Reference. I think I now know why I'd been very confused about the very complex things I study. Ever since I started making mind maps, I thought something was missing. This was it, I was writing everything I could remember rather than prioritising the things which I would forget versus the ones I wouldn't. Now I know that I absolutely don't need to 'blurt' everything, be it in the form of a mind map, and I just need to test myself more to see what I need to pay attention to. Also, I'll work on making mind maps instantaneously during class in order to save time for revision and quiz afterwards. A really great video that I'm grateful for. I've been learning quantum mechanics and JavaScript which weren't going well together. Now they will.💕
As someone trying to learn programming, I tend to use the "brute force" approach to solving every problem as my first approach. Perhaps this is also why "Overlearning" was one of my weaknesses in your diagnostic test?
It is indeed a great system to learn how to learn, I particularly like the part where he emphasized retrieval and interleaving, in my opinion rest all steps are so basic that by the time we reach high school, we very much know about them. Although the video sounds very convincing but I am still sure that these would not be the best factors influencing a learning scale and I think overlearning is a stage that can be implemented in each stage. Hopefully, I may get what it really takes to learn something in future.
Wow what a great video man and I also have realized that I need systems for learning rather than technqiue as usual your learning tips are always 100× time better than usual ytbers videos I have seen. And thanks for making test!
Thank you, Justin. Encoding looks to be the basis of learning: Grouping, simplifying, analogies, connections, making it simpler and more intuitive to understand. This active part of learning requires a lot of mental effort and thinking. God bless you for sharing your hard-earned insights from research and experience.
Now, before I forget 😅, congratulations on the new haircut, so good with background... it is! Ehm, the test is so eye-opening, till next time doc, peace
Been trying to study as per your videos and really when I slow down to create relationships between the concepts after making the chunk, it's really hard, I feel like I'm thinking a lot and it's uncomfortable 😅 But I think it works😊 Thank you Justin sung
Hey justin. Recently discovered your channel and everything is so great and practical but a small suggestion!! Could u pls try explaining with simpler words or summarisjng it at the end... It would make such a difference so that i could implement it in real life... Ad u say a lot of info if u sumnarisr it would be really helpful thankyou ❤
If your methods were taught in school, many more students would be passing their classes or get better scores, not to mention that their motivation and joy in studying would be so much higher. Now that I think about it, I don't remember ever having classes or workshops that teach you HOW to study, or at least it was very minimal. Students are just supposed to figure it out themselves, which is why so many students have terrible methods. You would think that since school expects you to learn and study, that they would also teach you HOW to do it. They set up expectations but don't give you the necessary tools to meet those expectations.
ua-cam.com/video/eZWP-eA-lCg/v-deo.htmlsi=6ELifePCmP4OhsXZ This is a short video by him. ua-cam.com/video/tkkey3ADfCI/v-deo.htmlsi=yF-KoL6fAS_Y1Ab3 This one is a longer one by him. ua-cam.com/video/Wg4K2Np1ybk/v-deo.htmlsi=P_tw-94aYDEJ_-NS This is by one of his top students.
Understand it like scaffolding. Look a the contents, titles, main topics, subtopics, you can then proceed to write them on a notebook like a mini mindmap or a rough one key is to not go for details, then do a 1st reading and write your basic 1 line understandings for the topics or not, but a good approach is to make more intuitive relationships after the readings that make sense according to you. Target should be around 15 to 30 mins. Can be more or less depending on your time availability. The more you do the more it becomes a detailed and main study type activity. Goal is to create big picture relevancy in your mind filter, not a detailed indepth mapping. So it can be for a chapter or an entire book. Later on you can use the above data while doing the main study. Then develop further on making necessary adjustments. These are based on my understandings which are limited, where necessary do forgive & add feedback. Godspeed.
@@UyenNguyen-m1m It doesn't really. Someone who's incredibly eager to learn but spends hours and hours cramming information in their heads without a good plan will quickly become unmotivated. Even if they kept on pushing and pushing with discipline, they will just burn out.
By "YouSum Live" 00:00:05 Pero system boosts learning efficiency by 60% 00:00:37 Learning requires systems, not just techniques 00:01:34 Information filtering is crucial for memory retention 00:04:01 Priming prepares the brain for effective learning 00:05:00 Encoding organizes information for better memory 00:06:06 Reference helps manage detailed information overload 00:07:05 Retrieval strengthens memory through self-testing 00:07:33 Interleaving enhances understanding from multiple perspectives 00:08:19 Overlearning improves recall and fluency in knowledge 00:09:24 Quiz evaluates and improves personal learning systems By "YouSum Live"
@2:01 you mention organizing information into our memory in some structure or model that makes sense for us and is easy for our memory to hold on to and is relevant for our brain Are there any videos that cover different types of structures or models?
Ok, after procrastinating to watch this video knowing i have a load ton of work to due next week, I did the test and got 0%. Used to be good(gifted) in school, now i have no system for undergrad. So, since my score over all is 0%with a mak of 14% on retrival/interleaving, which video and what should i impliment/try as a first step to get a better system for the long run ?
Take my Learning System Diagnostic for free here: bit.ly/4c1BE18.
You'll get a personalised report on how the way you learn compares to top learners and recommendations on how to improve.
Can we look at learning thru the lens of mind mapping as an optimization, more specifically, an optimal packing problem? So, we're trying to minimize mean path length between networks of ideas?
Man you should write a book about learning.
@@JustinSung Can you use this learning method to learn forex trading and teach us?
I need to say thank you Dr. Justin! Because of your tips about how to learn effectively and efficiently, I passed my board exam and was fortunate enough to be a topnotcher! Because of you, I am finally a chemical engineer 🙏 ❤️
Congratulations
Yeah, that’s awesome
@@Steven_DunbarSL thanks! It’s really a big help in discovering Justin’s channel 👍
Quite an uplifting comment, I share a similar sentiment finding this channel and getting to know the problems with rote memorization and how encoding is useful and important. Wish u best for the future 🍀
W achievement
Priming - Any technique you use before a main learning event.
Encoding - Techniques that will allow your brain to organise and process the information effectively. For example grouping, Simplifying, analogies, intuitive, etc
Reference - Taking information and putting them somewhere else to revisit later on. For example flash cards, Obsidian, notes
Retrieval - test your ability to use your knowledge and strengthen memory and deepen understanding
Interleaving - Approaching a topic from various angles or perspectives.Test yourself in multiple ways
overlearning - Going deeper into a topic to achieve a higher standard of mastery.
1. repetition
2. Practice papers
3. flashcards
4. revising
@@georgeshalvashvili6270 thanks for resuming, watching the hole video was a pain 🙏
@@Emma-hv7kx Zooner brainrot attention span
About a decade ago I had a course with a big name in memory research, and he instructed us to not take notes during the class, but in the break, take notes with as much as we could remember of the class material as possible, said "effortful retrieval is the best way to form memories" on repeat.
then what happend if you dont retrieved enough data as desired , repeat maybe?
This seems like great advice, I will start using it, thank you !
Yeah i do this and it works like a charm
You should really write a book. It's the best way to spread what you learned all these years to more people.
Are you asking him to write linearly, you're playing with fire
@@hasanabbadi3252 I want him to create a book where it's just one huge piece of paper and everything is within one large mind map lol
Gonna sound super dumb if I mixed him up with somebody else, but I remember him mentioning he's already writing one.
// edit, now that I think about it, it would've been in the video about using ChatGPT to study, so now I'm fairly certain that was him 😁
@@hasanabbadi3252 HAHA
@@hasanabbadi3252 Justin don't dislike linear taking, linear form is the best way to store large amounts of information, details and be transferrable. The only bad thing is that it usually don't make it easy to see relationships.
I see how hard you are working these days to improve the quality, back then i used to watch all of your videos to collect what i need, now it's all organised and very understandable ... Keep it up man!
By YouSum Live
00:00:00 Learning efficiency through the PERRIO system.
00:00:51 Understanding learning as a series of processes.
00:04:01 Importance of priming for effective learning.
00:05:00 Encoding: organizing information for memory retention.
00:06:06 Reference: noting details for later review.
00:07:05 Retrieval: testing and applying knowledge for retention.
00:07:33 Interleaving: approaching topics from multiple angles.
00:08:19 Overlearning: deepening knowledge through repetition.
By YouSum Live
It's incredible to see how the videos has evolved since the begining of this channel !! The message is getting clearer and makes more sense the more we advance. Those who were at the begining of this channel like me, surely understand what I feel! Can't wait to be part of the programm once I am able to afford it! But for now, the content are already very valuable and so much thanks to you Dr. Justin !! May God keep blessing you 🤲 ! This is really my number 1 channel, my learning has seeen a huge evolution ! I can only keep cheering up for its growth 🤩 I really pray that it reaches more viewer wordly, I am already sharing it with my surroundings !!
Now THIS is the learning system that I need.
Great system, thanks!! Just an idea, but I think a super useful video, for me anyway, would be just a study along session with you where you choose a new subject and go through this process and show how you would do priming, encoding etc.
I second this
he did a video like this a while ago
@@abir6700 greetings, which video
@@abir6700 please give us A link showing him going in depth like that please.
@@allsmazing56875 ua-cam.com/video/5JJnBuTQahs/v-deo.html i found this one but it was years ago...
My college gpa skyrocketed coz of this guy…thanks man …mad respect
This is almost my exact system for language learning. Which makes sense given that we are just human, and the brain follows the same principles for learning with slight variations depending on the content or skill
Honestly, I have been looking for a channel such as this... i love to learn a lot but realize im loosing the quick assimilation resulting to frustration while try to cover many areas needed. But with this channel, i seem to believe this is my answer.
Finally, found why i get stuck every time I study Mathematics. Especially in encoding part i need to work on, thankyou so much 🔥💯🙏💯✅.
Now i see, learning is just the same like sports. It needs mental discipline, and memory is the foundation of knowledge.
Man. Nicee
Some thing i can relate, all my medical school i was with mindset, i am a student and if i "read/study" i will become a doctor, after completing graduation i was blank, why did i do all these years. But after i started "working as a doctor" i could understand many concepts much better, concepts started making some sense. Something now i realise if i had mindset i am a doctor at the start of my medical school i could have understood and enjoyed concepts even more better.
I just tried out the diagnostic tool. Seems to have some validity and gave me some interesting insights. I dont have money tho for the program, even though I profit alot from your teachings. I will support you with likes and comments my man
After seeing some of your videos , I came to the conclusion that you have the most inteligent and useful youtube channel I ever saw :)
Thank you, Dr Justin! Seeing all my mistakes and problems of my study system flesh out in front of me is just so unique. Like, no one has ever done this for me before. Huge fan of your content and your ideas 🤩🤩
Yk all of these I have been doing naturally before and was helping me get good grades in school until I encountered people in high school with binders of notes or printables and while initially thought it was a waste of time when i tested it, I still felt pressured that I must have been doing something wrong or my studying not enough. Now during lectures I rarely take notes and just absorb all the information. Usually I only take notes if I have further questions that I am to google later. As soon as I get home, I take a break, get a breather, get outside to walk or do anything physical or try to spend time with family and then I study by going over the module a little bit purely through reading or skimming then answering questions, searching over the internet if I didn't understand something. Most of my hours are spent on assignments.
I was the same back in high school! I've never taken notes, until university where supports wouldn't be available and like Dr. Justin keeps mentioning, the level in University is totally different and the skills they wish you to reach is a level higher than it was in High school, they will ask you to be able to do level 4-5 of the bloom taxonomy. Then I keep wondering what systems should I have to be able to keep up with the current of information. I thought I needed to do like others, linear note taking, summarizing etc.. I am really glad and lucky to have found this channel!! It has saved my life thank God
Understanding and optimizing each phase-priming through overlearning-can significantly enhance both the retention and application of knowledge. 🔑
The “system” approach makes so much sense! 🤯I used to ask fellow students how they learn and their answer often was „flashcards.“ That was not the answer I was looking for, but rather “what do you do before to understand everything? How do you decide what goes onto a card? If you put everything on cards, when do you have time left to actually study them?”. Having this system in place answers most of them!
really thank u, mindmapping helped me a lot i learned more than 5 lessions in 3 days, i really apreciate you
Hi
Thank you for the great video. I enjoyed the overview of the topic.
I am somewhat of a filming geek and even though it is only my theoretical knowledge I wanted to share it with you to improve your video quality. General composition rule: When composing an image, the eye is naturally drawn to the parts of the picture with the highest contrast. So if the goal of your shot is to have the eyes of the viewer fixated on your head, create some contrast around it. There are several techniques like creating a dark background, and then giving your hair a rim light from above. This seperates your head from the background. (This might be a bit studio-like). The reason why I want to tell you, are the light in the background. If they reflect off of surfaces they have very high contrast and can distract the eye. So there must be a tradeoff between creating depth and reflection. I hope you find this information useful or at least interesting :D
One of my major summer projects was creating a learning system for myself. I had all the tools (thanks to your videos) but, I had yet to figure out how they all fit together.
Before I could even begin, this video dropped from the heavens lol
Justin, you just saved me 7 years of trial and error and I couldn't be more grateful!!
This video took all the concepts from previous videos and integrated them into an easy-to-follow system. Peak quality content.
Thank you for another useful quiz!
Gem of a educational content ❤️🙏🏻. My favorite study channel 👍🙏🏻
I was in need of this and he uploaded at the RIGHT time!!
Awesome video, encapsulated and synthesised your whole learning system and philosophy. I watched most of your videos and this sums it up extremely well.
This is why many great comedians are really smart. They are constantly looking for relevant concepts.
Justin for heaven's sake, why are you so good. Your advice is practical, useful and relatively easy to implement. Thank you!
Great video! I love the transition to applicational videos. Very helpful!
You’re amazing Dr. Justin! Thank you for this video it was very succinct and helpful. Are you able to go more into depth about the “reference” part of PERRIO? Thank you
Justin, You are very convincing.
Thank you for all your time, grateful. Jenny
Ur techniques and ai has helped me to decrease cognitive load resulting in superb learning retention
Edit: I appreciate this precise sort of video that groups and shows the exact relationship of your older stuff one idea/tool relative to another. Also grats on the new office!
Hi dr justin ...I absolutely love ur videos and feel myself becoming a better version of myself everytime I watch u giving tips on leraning.I just had a request if u could make a video about how to represent
answers when writing a subjective exam and fetch more marks in subjective exams
I got 95 percent I was a little bit weak at retrieval but I will soon improve it thanks ❤
I got 63% overall, got zero in Reference. I think I now know why I'd been very confused about the very complex things I study.
Ever since I started making mind maps, I thought something was missing. This was it, I was writing everything I could remember rather than prioritising the things which I would forget versus the ones I wouldn't. Now I know that I absolutely don't need to 'blurt' everything, be it in the form of a mind map, and I just need to test myself more to see what I need to pay attention to. Also, I'll work on making mind maps instantaneously during class in order to save time for revision and quiz afterwards.
A really great video that I'm grateful for. I've been learning quantum mechanics and JavaScript which weren't going well together. Now they will.💕
Thank you for the Diagnostic Justin! We really appreciate it
As someone trying to learn programming, I tend to use the "brute force" approach to solving every problem as my first approach. Perhaps this is also why "Overlearning" was one of my weaknesses in your diagnostic test?
taking this test made me realize some serious mistakes at interleaving.. thx justin
thanks for being there for us you are the one who gave me solution of my problem and help me because I was getting bad studies ❤
It is indeed a great system to learn how to learn, I particularly like the part where he emphasized retrieval and interleaving, in my opinion rest all steps are so basic that by the time we reach high school, we very much know about them. Although the video sounds very convincing but I am still sure that these would not be the best factors influencing a learning scale and I think overlearning is a stage that can be implemented in each stage. Hopefully, I may get what it really takes to learn something in future.
I got a very low score, can't say I'm surprised. I'm hoping after taking this more seriously I could achieve more. Wish me luck!
I am READY to start classes this fall!
thank you for this, been using your advice for about 2 years now and it's really helping
Teaching what you’ve learned is powerful, as well.
Great video justin💎 new office looks cool 🤙
I've got my system🎉, thanks ❤
I would never say you don't do anything for me. 😁 Your content is extremely useful and valuable for everyone. 😎🤖
Day 1 of asking Justin Sung to make a video about math and recommend another method rather than practising hundreds of questions in math
Great video. So much actionable information in 10 minutes.
I was waiting for this moment my whole life ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
The videos keep getting better! ❤️
Wow what a great video man and I also have realized that I need systems for learning rather than technqiue as usual your learning tips are always 100× time better than usual ytbers videos I have seen.
And thanks for making test!
Thank you, Justin. Encoding looks to be the basis of learning: Grouping, simplifying, analogies, connections, making it simpler and more intuitive to understand. This active part of learning requires a lot of mental effort and thinking. God bless you for sharing your hard-earned insights from research and experience.
This video was really cool! Thank you for putting this information out to the world.
Valuable insights!
Now, before I forget 😅, congratulations on the new haircut, so good with background... it is! Ehm, the test is so eye-opening, till next time doc, peace
Thanks Justin the video and evaluation has been awesome thanks
thank you for existing
I will start learning using this system!
i think we need more detailed content on priming
Can you tell us the systems before studying informations and after studying along with strategies throughout the studying
Been trying to study as per your videos and really when I slow down to create relationships between the concepts after making the chunk, it's really hard, I feel like I'm thinking a lot and it's uncomfortable 😅
But I think it works😊
Thank you Justin sung
I can relate. It's really difficult
Hey justin. Recently discovered your channel and everything is so great and practical but a small suggestion!! Could u pls try explaining with simpler words or summarisjng it at the end... It would make such a difference so that i could implement it in real life... Ad u say a lot of info if u sumnarisr it would be really helpful thankyou ❤
Really a game changer🥂
Thankyou Justin 🎉
If your methods were taught in school, many more students would be passing their classes or get better scores, not to mention that their motivation and joy in studying would be so much higher. Now that I think about it, I don't remember ever having classes or workshops that teach you HOW to study, or at least it was very minimal. Students are just supposed to figure it out themselves, which is why so many students have terrible methods. You would think that since school expects you to learn and study, that they would also teach you HOW to do it. They set up expectations but don't give you the necessary tools to meet those expectations.
Could someone explain a good form of priming?
Thank you!!
ua-cam.com/video/eZWP-eA-lCg/v-deo.htmlsi=6ELifePCmP4OhsXZ
This is a short video by him.
ua-cam.com/video/tkkey3ADfCI/v-deo.htmlsi=yF-KoL6fAS_Y1Ab3
This one is a longer one by him.
ua-cam.com/video/Wg4K2Np1ybk/v-deo.htmlsi=P_tw-94aYDEJ_-NS
This is by one of his top students.
Understand it like scaffolding. Look a the contents, titles, main topics, subtopics, you can then proceed to write them on a notebook like a mini mindmap or a rough one key is to not go for details, then do a 1st reading and write your basic 1 line understandings for the topics or not, but a good approach is to make more intuitive relationships after the readings that make sense according to you.
Target should be around 15 to 30 mins. Can be more or less depending on your time availability.
The more you do the more it becomes a detailed and main study type activity.
Goal is to create big picture relevancy in your mind filter, not a detailed indepth mapping.
So it can be for a chapter or an entire book.
Later on you can use the above data while doing the main study. Then develop further on making necessary adjustments.
These are based on my understandings which are limited, where necessary do forgive & add feedback.
Godspeed.
Thank you Justin.
I really appreciate you spending so much time on research on this and helping all of us lazy shits to become a top student
I never comment on video’s but I have to say I am really digging that sweater
I love the diagnostics. Thanks
Heck yeah! Thanks, Justin
Got a pretty low score. Looking forward to implementing the tips.
All of these all come down to one thing: how eager are you to learn? How much effort do you want to put in?
@@UyenNguyen-m1m It doesn't really. Someone who's incredibly eager to learn but spends hours and hours cramming information in their heads without a good plan will quickly become unmotivated. Even if they kept on pushing and pushing with discipline, they will just burn out.
Thanks Dr J!
Awesome Stuff!! Do you have a video with more details or examples of how you create connections and relationships? Would love to see that
Thank you Justin!
By "YouSum Live"
00:00:05 Pero system boosts learning efficiency by 60%
00:00:37 Learning requires systems, not just techniques
00:01:34 Information filtering is crucial for memory retention
00:04:01 Priming prepares the brain for effective learning
00:05:00 Encoding organizes information for better memory
00:06:06 Reference helps manage detailed information overload
00:07:05 Retrieval strengthens memory through self-testing
00:07:33 Interleaving enhances understanding from multiple perspectives
00:08:19 Overlearning improves recall and fluency in knowledge
00:09:24 Quiz evaluates and improves personal learning systems
By "YouSum Live"
Great study tips and how to process information for students or learners
Hello Dr. Justin can you suggest any way to learn difficult biological names
A life saver ❤
ICS member comes
Wow thank you!!
How can you implement interleaving
If you can't think of the question from multiple perspectives, yourself to test yourself
Perfect🔥
@2:01 you mention organizing information into our memory in some structure or model that makes sense for us and is easy for our memory to hold on to and is relevant for our brain
Are there any videos that cover different types of structures or models?
69% on the diagnostic. lowest sections were over learning and reference
Ok, after procrastinating to watch this video knowing i have a load ton of work to due next week, I did the test and got 0%. Used to be good(gifted) in school, now i have no system for undergrad. So, since my score over all is 0%with a mak of 14% on retrival/interleaving, which video and what should i impliment/try as a first step to get a better system for the long run ?
Thank you
Love the videos, like always
How would you apply this for things like mathematics? Just asking for reference, great video!
Can I supplement it with the Feynman Technique? it seems that the PERRIO Technique is very effective with the Feynman Technique for me
Are there examples of Priming techniques?
Justin
A video on the late micro learning apps !
Can we trust this works- 30 seconds in your forgot the "I" in PERRIO.
Thank you jung
So what about doing different topics with almost no relation at the same time?