Paper towns and why learning is awesome | John Green

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  • Опубліковано 28 лип 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,8 тис.

  • @LaceyJuk
    @LaceyJuk 8 років тому +3064

    Thank you John for making crash course. It is my learning community.

  • @RianKashfi
    @RianKashfi 8 років тому +1820

    That moment at which you expect him to begin with "Good morning, Hank."

  • @sumtourist9406
    @sumtourist9406 8 років тому +1883

    Life goal is to have someone mention me in a TED Talk as their high school crush.

    • @SbotTV
      @SbotTV 8 років тому +260

      Why not get up on a TED stage and mention one of your own crushes? You don't have to be a supporting character in an important person's life and nothing more. Find something significant to you and work towards it. Some of the worst decisions I have made stemmed from the belief that I didn't have what it took to go down the harder path.

    • @isabellagold4114
      @isabellagold4114 4 роки тому +69

      @@SbotTV damn

    • @fool4343
      @fool4343 4 роки тому +47

      @@SolaceEasy sounds like projecting

    • @lunasea4309
      @lunasea4309 3 роки тому +5

      @@SbotTV ❤️

    • @MsTen999
      @MsTen999 3 роки тому +18

      @@SolaceEasy Who hurt you?

  • @dreamingstar2374
    @dreamingstar2374 8 років тому +5912

    It's really sad because I loved learning. In primary school, I was the "smart", "nerdy" kid who would borrow 20 books from the library every week and read them all. Learning about maths and English was fun and fascinating. Then I got to high school and learning was ruined for me. Everything was more of a competition and it made me miserable. Learning was no longer fun but pressurising, forceful and stressful by the school system, rules and teachers. Now that I've graduated, I'm actually going to start learning again :)

    • @FatmaYousuf
      @FatmaYousuf 8 років тому +99

      +carrotsticks I think you're talking about "studying" here, not learning. Learning and studying are two completely different words.

    • @phoenixvaughn5995
      @phoenixvaughn5995 8 років тому +85

      +iGFXDesigner school however does have a way of telling you you are learning something when really you are just revising a concept that you were told about when you 12

    • @jessicaziegler5531
      @jessicaziegler5531 8 років тому +87

      It was the same for me. I loved learning until I got into high school. I would read all the time and I just loved to do school and to learn! It has now become difficult and I don't feel I can remember anything and it just feels like too much pressure now. I feel that I am slowly gaining back my interest in learning again. I think I need to get excited about
      Learning again and this is just might be the start of it all.

    • @tesslynfrancis9322
      @tesslynfrancis9322 8 років тому +22

      +carrotsticks I had a similar experience, but the opposite way around. My primary school was stifling while my high school was something akin to a sisterhood. It was just an environment of support and love and I had great teachers who cared about teaching, not just passing students. I realise how lucky I am to have had such an enriching high experience. Without it, I don't think I ever would have developed a love of learning

    • @d.a.hansen9142
      @d.a.hansen9142 8 років тому +14

      +carrotsticks I have had a very similar experience, but instead of continuing with brick-and-mortar school I transitioned to online schooling and it was probably the best decision that I have ever made.

  • @joelverkaik
    @joelverkaik 9 років тому +1040

    "I learned what iambic pentameter is,
    And why it sounds to good to human ears."

  • @Butterworthy
    @Butterworthy 9 років тому +6902

    I really, really like John Green.

    • @rshepherd80
      @rshepherd80 9 років тому +15

      Ok I liked this vid not bad John not bad.

    • @TheBillymybob
      @TheBillymybob 9 років тому +36

      Butterworthy You should check out Crash Course and/or Vlogbrothers then :D

    • @Butterworthy
      @Butterworthy 9 років тому +7

      TheBillymybob Definitely will do. I like the stuff he does on Mental Floss also.

    • @dreamingrightnow1174
      @dreamingrightnow1174 9 років тому +1

      TheBillymybob Thanks, I will.

    • @89nekkoinu
      @89nekkoinu 9 років тому +6

      Yeah, after years doing vlogbrother its his new heights in his careers

  • @mitchlloyd6456
    @mitchlloyd6456 Рік тому +133

    This is why I love John Green. He's my inspiration for being part of this learning community.

  • @asliuf
    @asliuf 8 років тому +796

    "i learned what iambic pentameter is, **and WHY it SOUNDS so GOOD to HUman EARS**
    THAT LAST PART *IS* IAMBIC PENTAMETER

  • @MrChillder
    @MrChillder 9 років тому +3180

    When the video started playing he sounded a few tones short of homer simpson

    • @kelleydungan3301
      @kelleydungan3301 9 років тому +28

      I was thinking the same thing hahaha

    • @Toastmaster_5000
      @Toastmaster_5000 9 років тому +27

      Christopher Hilder If he sounded more "dopey" he'd sound a lot like homer

    • @16hakisan
      @16hakisan 9 років тому +26

      I didn't realize until you just said it

    • @myragm
      @myragm 9 років тому +13

      Lol you took the words right out of my mouth haha

    • @quantumvex6679
      @quantumvex6679 8 років тому +2

      +Christopher Hilder That's the best thing I've read all day, haha.

  • @dandeliondot
    @dandeliondot 9 років тому +1478

    It is impossible to calculate how many lives Green brothers have changed during those years. Thank you for making me understand that learning is not a privilege.

    • @dreamingrightnow1174
      @dreamingrightnow1174 9 років тому +24

      Mari Israelyan Not supposed to be, but it's damned expensive and exclusive and should be free. Even UA-cam and TED is not fully accessible, unless you have a computer or a smart phone and can get a wifi connection.

    • @erinnicole2556
      @erinnicole2556 9 років тому +20

      Robin Gray Almost all local libraries have computers available for free public use, and lord knows they have books. That's neither expensive nor exclusive. Get yourself there and you can learn to your heart's content.

    • @tuckersabath4984
      @tuckersabath4984 9 років тому +8

      Robin Gray kinda right, more accurate to point out that for the people who are out to dominate others, it is only a piece of paper, and paying a lot of money is bragging rights, and cheating has no moral importance to them.
      And there are enough of those people to take up a lot of room at the top.

    • @RachelReiss
      @RachelReiss 9 років тому +7

      Erin Long Don't get me wrong, I love the public libraries and owe them more than I can say...but the NYPL, at least, has WAY fewer books than they used to. Our local branch has laptops to use in the library, and ebooks to borrow (if you have an ereader), but while there are still books, there are more totally empty shelves than full, and lots of the "full" shelves are full of DVDs and CDs and books on hold--and when I was a child they were ALL full of books.
      It's sad.

    • @tuckersabath4984
      @tuckersabath4984 9 років тому +4

      Rachel Reiss also you might notice a lot of technical and historical content on the curb, to make space for contemporary paperback gangster books.... unless your local branch has already stripped it's shelves of knowledge in favor of entertainment that glorifies hood life.... which by the way, in NYC at least, the safest big city in the country, romantic portraits of the ghettos is a way to control peoples's expectations of life, there by controlling them.
      I don't think Plato is that wonderful. But it might be helpful for a young intercity kid to see that the old white guy on the ten dollar bill was a Caribbean immigrant who advocated for the abolition of slavery... so the library is under attack from budget, and the contemporary commerce of "blacksploitation"....
      Do we have knowledge available? Do we encourage curiosity beyond commercialism?

  • @SuperNerd707
    @SuperNerd707 8 років тому +790

    The library and the internet, life would suck without them!

    • @Cra3ture
      @Cra3ture 8 років тому +5

      true

    • @Keepedia99
      @Keepedia99 7 років тому +6

      PhantomRanger it's what you make of it

    • @AyeshaKhan-uh2gz
      @AyeshaKhan-uh2gz 7 років тому

      PhantomRanger true

    • @samiaahmad8705
      @samiaahmad8705 6 років тому +8

      True, but where i live they don't have any public libraries. So i have to read on the internet.
      No wonder i got glasses. -_-

    • @ShubhamBa
      @ShubhamBa 5 років тому

      true man

  • @ZactarZero
    @ZactarZero 7 років тому +979

    OMG John Green from youtube is the same John Green author of those books. HOW DID I NEVER REALIZE THAT?

  • @lt80355
    @lt80355 9 років тому +2259

    A great part of being a nerdfighter is the endless pride you feel. Loved it.

    • @Jontman42
      @Jontman42 9 років тому +2

      Lenda Thompson Pride of what?

    • @raghada9123
      @raghada9123 9 років тому +64

      Pride of the community, of the progress, of the journey, of the accomplishments, of the learning, and of course, pride of hank and john.

    • @Soldier842
      @Soldier842 9 років тому +17

      Raghad A Just make sure your pride does not make you act as if you're superior to the less educated who are less interested in sciences.
      Pride can be quite the weakness.

    • @unvergebeneid
      @unvergebeneid 9 років тому +5

      Victor G Pride ... or let's call it community spirit can also make you blind. On no other channel do I get attacked as viciously and irrationally for pointing out mistakes or inaccuracies as on SciShow. That community feels pretty poisonous to me to be honest. More like a cult :/

    • @raghada9123
      @raghada9123 9 років тому +12

      Yes of course no sense of superiority should stem from this pride at all, and accept my apologies on behalf of Nerdfighteria if ever you felt shunned or unfairly criticized; it definitely isn't right.

  • @JennieKerfuffle
    @JennieKerfuffle 9 років тому +8225

    I am absolutely devastated that the audience did not laugh at more of John's jokes. It took them a whole minute and fifty seconds to catch on to his humor, lol.

    • @Miranox2
      @Miranox2 9 років тому +162

      Jennie Kerfuffle TIL scientists and academics have a slow sense of humor.

    • @TheGryffindorable
      @TheGryffindorable 9 років тому +97

      there is this thing that people have to like you before they laugh at your jokes so maybe that's an issue here

    • @shway1
      @shway1 9 років тому +45

      Jennie Kerfuffle There was nothing really worth laughing out loud at until then.

    • @SlimThrull
      @SlimThrull 9 років тому +140

      Jennie Kerfuffle Its not so much that the didn't find John funny; Its that they thought
      it might not be okay to laugh during a serious discussion.
      Humor is a difficult thing for these types of lectures. Most people going to a lecture expect to be lectured with minimal -- if any -- humor. With this expectation in mind, people who would normally laugh or at least giggle tend to refrain from doing so until they're sure its socially acceptable to do so. Even then it tends to be rather quiet and reserved laughter.

    • @ratherrandombella
      @ratherrandombella 9 років тому +13

      Jennie Kerfuffle I thought that too, maybe it just didn't pick up on his mike?

  • @gabrieloconitrillo4141
    @gabrieloconitrillo4141 8 років тому +1900

    Never thought someone as smart as John Green would be bad at school, seems like school as a system sucks for learning. Learning happens when you're passionate about whatever topic and put all your energy into it and/or start finding correlations between things

    • @viniciusbernardo5569
      @viniciusbernardo5569 5 років тому +66

      sitting on a chair listening to your teacher for hours straight without room for imagination is not a good method of learning

    • @DerMessiasderSatire
      @DerMessiasderSatire 5 років тому +34

      @@viniciusbernardo5569 It's a good method for remembering things and literally shoving things into students' brain. That's why it's used, sadly.

    • @LilianaKali
      @LilianaKali 4 роки тому +22

      @Jo Blow Yep. Schools were started to basically produce more workers for the workforce. Creativity and love of learning wasn't really a notion. It was more about making more cogs for the machine of industrialism. From my experience there are two types of people who go into teaching: those who want to share their success and those who want to hide their failures. Whichever of these two categories they start as they then often get pushed by the system or by their Boards and School Districts into teaching subjects they aren't qualified for or not passionate about. That's why you might sometimes notice that your teacher seems to have just crammed in the subject matter a few hours or days before they taught it to you. Oh, you like Biology but hate Chemistry? Too bad. We need a Science teacher so good luck cramming the chemistry curriculum into your brain in a few days/weeks! Or oh you're an Art teacher? Could you also teach History/Geography/Social Sciences this year? Or the very real situation where the job market for teachers doesn't include the subjects they are qualified for but they also need to pay a mortgage and feed their family so they just fake it.

    • @ismirdochegal4804
      @ismirdochegal4804 4 роки тому +9

      There are different schools and different teachers. Not everything is bad, but there are concepts that are better then others. There are a few things everyone should know about the world or at least heard of. Beyond that we need teachers that show us doors with various topics on them and the freedom to decide ourself when and if we want to look in there at all. Or like a named place on a map - someone might just want to go there.

    • @LuisOrtiz-px4yy
      @LuisOrtiz-px4yy 4 роки тому +3

      Yeh. The system of education is fatal at educating ironically.

  • @TheMajsinka
    @TheMajsinka 2 роки тому +118

    I believe what John and Hank's biggest skill is, is not teaching you some new facts but a way with words that reminds you of what you already knew deep inside

  • @heyheychels
    @heyheychels 9 років тому +1849

    This was great. It made me want to go learn something.

    • @terminallyg33k
      @terminallyg33k 9 років тому +7

      heyheychels me too. I'm going to go learn new songs on my ukulele now.

    • @tanpadia1664
      @tanpadia1664 9 років тому +1

      heyheychels Follow this step To Watch Paper Towns FULL MOVIE : *
      plus.google.com/114248654881070965661/posts/EQYegvcX4j9

    • @rehmsmeyer
      @rehmsmeyer 9 років тому +2

      heyheychels DON'T! I'm serious! Do. Not. Do it.
      IGNORANCE IS BLISS

    • @hughbartlett9253
      @hughbartlett9253 8 років тому

      +Chelsea Cassady I feel that! Such a great video!

    • @FingerThatO
      @FingerThatO 8 років тому +2

      +Chelsea Cassady so what new did you learn in the last 8 months since you saw this video?

  • @gabriellesew
    @gabriellesew 9 років тому +238

    John Green can do everything - UA-camr, author, producer and inspirational speaker. He's truly awesome.

  • @Cra3ture
    @Cra3ture 8 років тому +279

    this man makes me take learning *seriously*

  • @jubsology
    @jubsology 8 років тому +821

    I always watch "Crash Course"....Out of my wildest dreams, I never thought "this" John Green is the famous author of "The fault in our stars" ...I am astonished at my ignorance...
    Love you John Green ..:)

    • @LittleHippieBigCity
      @LittleHippieBigCity 8 років тому +20

      +Jubayer Aahmed There you go! You learned something on UA-cam! Sweet!

    • @phoenixvaughn5995
      @phoenixvaughn5995 8 років тому +5

      +Jubayer Aahmed don't judge a book by its cover :D

    • @bryanavila3082
      @bryanavila3082 8 років тому +16

      +Info Sushy I had no idea as well and now I'm just shocked

    • @kallmekrissarchivetiktoks8012
      @kallmekrissarchivetiktoks8012 8 років тому +17

      +Bryan Avila When I found out the same thing I was also shocked AF

    • @EvieHeffner
      @EvieHeffner 8 років тому +33

      +great one I found out in sixth grade and I'd been watching his videos for like three years and my friend had "The Fault in Our Stars" and I was flipping through it WHILE WE WERE WATCHING CRASH COURSE IN HISTORY and I remember jumping up and making my teacher pause the video so that I could tell everyone in my class. I am now known as the girls who loves John Green and I'm in ninth grade now. I guess it's fitting considering I do a victory dance every time we get to watch Crash Course.

  • @yellow5350
    @yellow5350 9 років тому +403

    Self education is the best way to increase the quality of life, seeking to become more intellectual is a pleasure that can rarely be found in other things.
    I agree with John Green learning is so important and fulfilling throughout life.

    • @yellow5350
      @yellow5350 3 роки тому +2

      @Dori Beverlee why would you copy my comment

    • @hemsharma1833
      @hemsharma1833 Рік тому

      "Seeking to become more intellectual is a pleasure that can rarely be found in other things".
      It's a powerful statement only few people can understand.

  • @smarties22222
    @smarties22222 9 років тому +110

    That "world sandwich" sounds the most awesome thing ever.

    • @samtheflutegirl1373
      @samtheflutegirl1373 4 роки тому +3

      It bothers me that it was people holding bread instead of setting it on the ground.

    • @missseaweed2462
      @missseaweed2462 4 роки тому +1

      @@samtheflutegirl1373 Air is an essential part of the world so I'm glad they included it.

  • @sgracesful
    @sgracesful 7 років тому +91

    I am sometimes mocked for my enthusiasm for UA-cam. I'm an internet nerd through and through, however. I didn't have the best education, so the Internet is the best resource available to me, and to anyone with a network connection. Love my community of fellow learners.

  • @rafaelpun
    @rafaelpun 8 років тому +176

    It would have been awesome to all my profesor and teacher to teach like John Green. He makes you learn without you knowing.

  • @tadshackles
    @tadshackles 9 років тому +66

    Not finding John and his brother until I was in my late twenties made me sad. Had I had them in my life when I was in junior high school I wouldn't have felt like an outcast for being smart and having straight A's (I once lied and told my friends I failed a couple classes so I had to go to summer school when I was just trying to get ahead for next year. I loved school but was ashamed of my love as I worried what others would think). I would have been proud of my nerdy friends and I wouldn't have tried so god. damned. hard to be a cool kid and hang out with the pot heads and jocks...
    John Green is a precious national resource and I am so thankful for him.

  • @viktoriyakovalchuk6472
    @viktoriyakovalchuk6472 9 років тому +431

    This is refreshing. I think a lot of kids are pressured by adults and society in general to go out and "find a stable job, earn some money, raise a family", a cookie-cutter path for life that will somehow lead to ultimate happiness. But I think life and people are more complicated than that, and I think everybody has his or her own place in the world, and whether that be a well-known and successful cardiac surgeon or a skillful tattoo artist, everybody must seek out his or her true passions in life and do what they love, if they want to achieve even the slightest bit of happiness.

    • @ChroniclesofAJ
      @ChroniclesofAJ 9 років тому

      Viktoriya Kovalchuk Well Said

    • @kristinabennett9017
      @kristinabennett9017 9 років тому +19

      I couldn't agree more. Studies have shown that the happiest people are those that feel like they are reaching their potential and finding fulfillment out of life. People often forget that different people find fulfillment from different things from life.

    • @AnimalAce
      @AnimalAce 6 років тому +2

      Or you could go the Mike Rowe rought. Find something that no one else is doing. Find a way to do it then learn how to love it.

    • @ila_1910
      @ila_1910 6 років тому

      Yeah in this world of so much diversity we all can be strong in basics and Masters in our chosen professions .... A faster progress and happiness

    • @MrJonnyPepper
      @MrJonnyPepper 6 років тому +2

      Talk about a first world problem

  • @Foxfool228
    @Foxfool228 8 років тому +568

    This is one of the greatest TED talks I've ever watched. I feel so much more engaged in the UA-cam learning community than I ever have with high school or, presently, with college. I don't feel like I'm wasting my time when I watch UA-cam videos instead of working on a semester long research project that's due in less than two hours. I learn and appreciate life in a way that the current mainstream educational system just does not provide. On UA-cam, you can tailor your learning experience to the topics you're interested in. You can ask meaningful questions and be exposed to questions you didn't even realize existed. Most of all, the people who create this content care. They care in ways that a professor simply does not have to.
    I know that I often act as if school doesn't matter to me. But it doesn't really, you know, beyond job security. I appreciate John Green's cartography metaphor. Learning is about exploration and curiosity, not meaningless regurgitation or arbitrary examination. I wish universities truly were places of education rather than the expected stepping stone to a traditional career. I'm making do with what I have available to me, but I know that a college degree does not really prove anything beyond perseverance. It isn't a college degree I'm even seeking, only doorways. Doorways that will allow me to continue to learn and experience this world we live in. Anyway, I just wanted to ramble and procrastinate for a little bit. Maybe a little insight into my thought process will stimulate you to think about your own :)

    • @Arinaretina
      @Arinaretina 6 років тому +4

      Preaccchhhhh

    • @jamescarmody4713
      @jamescarmody4713 6 років тому +6

      Unless you pay entirely for your education, through savings or scholarships, you have an obligation to get a job with your degree. You rely on people working every day of your life; society depends on our contributions; there are people starving and thirsty who need development.
      Knowledge is great, but leave it unapplied and you've wasted your time. You were blessed to have 12 years of public schooling or loving parents who provided a tutor for you. It's time to make good on that investment and make a difference.

    • @xena8_8
      @xena8_8 3 роки тому +8

      James Carmody The one obligation we have during life is to be true to yourselves. And there are only two things we really have to do in life, and that is being born and die. The first one is already down. Whatever we do before the other is up to yourselves only. We should not lose ourselves in the illusion that we should live life for someone else, may it be our family or the government, because they are living their lives for us. They are responsible for themselves and we are responsible for ourselves. Everything we do is our choice. Even choosing to live life according to someone else, which will only bring misery to ourselves. It may sound egoistical but we actually need to put ourselves first - it is good. Only so we can become free and then create real value for others. There is a reason why in planes they always tell you to put the oxygen mask on yourself first before you help others. Given the freedom and time to develop properly, every human will contribute something unique to this world

    • @Kas_Styles
      @Kas_Styles 2 роки тому

      This!

    • @LanceWillMakeIt
      @LanceWillMakeIt Рік тому +1

      @@jamescarmody4713 " you have an obligation to get a job with your degree." Hm, never heard of that law. I think you have an obligation to make your life a life worth living. Getting a job with your degree might not be in the trajectory of making your life worth it

  • @Nguyennertofudinner
    @Nguyennertofudinner 8 років тому +410

    He talks a lot slower when he doesn't have a time limit

    • @osemudiame123
      @osemudiame123 8 років тому +9

      Ted talks do have time limits

    • @Nguyennertofudinner
      @Nguyennertofudinner 8 років тому +37

      +osemudiame123 I was referring to the four minute time limit on vlogbrothers videos...

    • @osemudiame123
      @osemudiame123 8 років тому +1

      +sciencenerd1123 ah I see makes sense

  • @ashleyok4230
    @ashleyok4230 9 років тому +39

    At the end of his talk, when John started saying thank you, I thought he was going to say "Thanks for watching. I'll see you next week."

  • @hunterjohnson1022
    @hunterjohnson1022 9 років тому +74

    Now THIS is the intellectual stuff i enjoy seeing from TED

  • @EdgyDumbass
    @EdgyDumbass 5 років тому +130

    The audience was so unfair to John! He made so many great jokes and they only laughed at one of them!

  • @zlatanjakic7717
    @zlatanjakic7717 7 років тому +150

    I acctualy got an A in biology by watching crash course today.

  • @dedcalmxo
    @dedcalmxo 7 років тому +48

    I like learning when the speaker is entertaining and a little funny. John Green is definitely a good speaker.

  • @confusedpotato6566
    @confusedpotato6566 3 роки тому +15

    John Green has the ability to move something inside me every time he talks. You can tell he finds importance in the subjects he analyses and oh my god he transmits his enthusiasm so well! John Green is one of those people that give me hope that words can in fact move people. That words can in fact change the world.

    • @Laura-kl7vi
      @Laura-kl7vi Рік тому +2

      He's profound in how he expresses what he perceives in the world,and how he expresses his feelings-he moves me too. I've not encountered that before in such a concentrated way.

  • @Innowah
    @Innowah 8 років тому +49

    I wish my school would let us learn like John Green.

  • @davea.9927
    @davea.9927 8 років тому +587

    John Green for Pres

    • @itz_aidan-ru7xr
      @itz_aidan-ru7xr 8 років тому +7

      yesssssss

    • @Keepedia99
      @Keepedia99 7 років тому +33

      too many meetings

    • @stevemsteven6103
      @stevemsteven6103 7 років тому +1

      John Green actually sounds remotely like Donald Trump.

    • @bbens999
      @bbens999 4 роки тому +1

      StevemStevenson: haha yeah not at all. In like, every way.

    • @user-lh2hx5xf4e
      @user-lh2hx5xf4e 4 роки тому

      @@stevemsteven6103 pfft is this a joke?🤣🤣🤣

  • @RiniKiwi
    @RiniKiwi 4 роки тому +18

    I don't think John will ever read this but I just wanted to say I first watched this when I was really struggling with finishing high school because I had just lost all the motivation to "learn" (memorize things). But after high school, I'm so glad I found myself inspired again. My uni classes were so engaging and the professors were amazing. It was like I could feel my brain grow everyday! I'm happy to say I was able to turn things around for myself and get excited about learning again. Also, having a degree is a nice bonus. Watching this video now, I'm very grateful to you, John. Learning is awesome!

  • @marshwitched
    @marshwitched 4 місяці тому +3

    I come back and watch this every time I get especially disillusioned with learning. I did it in high school, and all these years later I’m watching it as I’m about to finish graduate school. It reminds me that learning and knowledge are valuable in themselves - even if I never “use it” for anything. In a very real way, John has helped me all the way from my high school diploma to my master’s degree. Feeling really grateful for that today.

  • @stephenmealing6366
    @stephenmealing6366 8 років тому +49

    "Choking you self with ties is stupid"
    ...
    "Honey where is my tie"

  • @GhostInTheShell29
    @GhostInTheShell29 7 років тому +17

    One thing I found amazing at work the other day, was a group of people getting into a debate about Multiverse Theory.. I mean our job is to unload a truck, no one went to college, many didn't graduate highschool, but because of youtube, and Dragon Ball Z abridged in particular, even though I had a much better grasp then anyone else, at least people could be part of the conversation because they at least understood some basic properties.
    Where as if I just tried to teach Multiverse theory to a group of people working on a truck, why would they care? why would they be interested if they couldn't participate? Having a basic understanding allowed for a natural conversation that was very informative as those who knew less learned from those who knew more just talking about it.

  • @missmolly7112
    @missmolly7112 7 років тому +13

    He reminds me of a friend that I no longer have, which makes me sad. But at the same time, I love the way he talks, which makes me happy. Just a couple of conflicting feelings to share.

    • @parmeetsingh1655
      @parmeetsingh1655 7 років тому +2

      It's good to share your thoughts and feelings, hope you're doing well

  • @ExtraordinaryDreamer
    @ExtraordinaryDreamer 9 років тому +69

    Beautifully said as always, John.

  • @angiewagner9232
    @angiewagner9232 6 років тому +31

    Sometimes I just come back to this video when I’m feeling less than motivated to do my homework.

  • @quiqueg13
    @quiqueg13 Рік тому +9

    Learning without judgement to keep yourself visible in the narrative is so mid level menager. Love it, Hank.

  • @kathrynhemmings6378
    @kathrynhemmings6378 8 років тому +27

    He's so intelligent & i love the way he explains things

  • @SMFortissimo
    @SMFortissimo 9 років тому +4

    The older I get, the more I realize that I don't know anything. I am very grateful for the communities of learners online who've helped me realize this and have given me a thirst for exploring more. I don't think you're ever too old to start learning something new even just for the sake of it.
    I help teach English in Japan, and consistently one of the hardest questions for me to answer is "What is important to you?" I could write, and indeed have written, volumes of diaries and blog posts exploring that very question, but when you talk to ESL students you are forced to condense your answers into one or two easy sentences. So I told them "Learning is important to me. I want to learn something new every day." And I have UA-cam to thank for making that possible.

  • @sarahgr17
    @sarahgr17 2 роки тому +2

    When I was in 5th grade I had already become disappointed and disheartened by the education system and how it taught so I started watching Be Smart, Crash Course, and many others. It taught me how to love learning and knowledge. Thank u education UA-cam!

  • @Ultrevolous
    @Ultrevolous 3 роки тому +10

    I admire John so much for his ability to find his community online. That's just never worked for me, but I love the idea of finding a community.

  • @nervykane
    @nervykane 9 років тому +143

    Learning is very fun for me and I dont get how people grow old being content with willful ignorance. Knowledge is the ultimate power. Money is power if your narrow minded and believe that being able to harness a lot of objects and influence people through manipulation rather than education is the way to live, which I believe its actually a path towards a dystopia in the long run to try to manipulate people to gain self interests or even for a broader interests than your self. People cant be manipulated because it sets their brain to function backwards, they believe that what they are doing is set in stone in the history books as correct, when in reality they are just acting on the short term to serve the greater purpose of the powerful. Where as education tends to be quite the opposite and it enlightens the individual and the masses.

    • @Candyliz2003
      @Candyliz2003 9 років тому +5

      ***** I agree somewhat - it's the current method of "schooling" that needs a make-over. Personally, I think the old style of apprenticeship --> artisan would be better. Whether you're talking about a craft, trade, or field of study. Today's education system may give people a more well-rounded experience but should be an enhancement, or extra-curricular, NOT the primary focus. What a waste of youth to force history, algebra, and sentence diagramming onto those who don't make a living in the fields they are necessary to! (Now don't get all excited - I'm not saying they aren't important or that they are unnecessary - just that they should be cursory rather than a major part of one's daily endeavors. Yes, algebra CAN be important - but what I wouldn't give to have back all those hours of frustration!)

    • @dreamingrightnow1174
      @dreamingrightnow1174 9 років тому

      ***** Did you notice how Candy ended her post? I think you're saying the same thing.

    • @dreamingrightnow1174
      @dreamingrightnow1174 9 років тому +2

      ***** I agree, but oftentimes wonder: Is testing important? It may be one of the biggest problems. Learning, in it's natural habitat, isn't linear and is almost impossible to quantify, but good teachers, when they aren't flooded with ridiculous class loads, know when their student(s) are learning. Teaching is an art; everyone can't do it. The travisty of No Child Left Behind is a good example.

    • @ktjrktjtjrjej4581
      @ktjrktjtjrjej4581 9 років тому

      Dude you're actually illiterate lmao

    • @dreamingrightnow1174
      @dreamingrightnow1174 9 років тому

      Mr aaaaaaa

  • @amandashirley358
    @amandashirley358 8 років тому +21

    I love this! it's all so true. John Green has a certain eloquence with words that expresses things I'd like to express but can never seem to find the words.

  • @fernandomelgar892
    @fernandomelgar892 Рік тому +2

    My learning community came after I had to go to a continuation school instead of a regular high school. At the new school I found that people who were "at risk" tended to have hyper inactive attention to singular learning tasks. At this school the structure of how the school was run, had less restrictions, kids were free to have more breaks, to go to the gym, talk with friends, stroll around campus. Much like a college campus. The thing is that when It came time to go in classroom, students were much more attentive. The point is that there was a certain balance I saw lacking in other schools. There is a hand-holding and rigid method of schooling that does not behoove children, but only makes them want to break free.

  • @adrianzermeno7858
    @adrianzermeno7858 8 років тому +12

    All these educational channels shine a bright light for the future generations to come.

  • @colonelmustard9405
    @colonelmustard9405 5 років тому +20

    You don't understand how much I admire this guy.

  • @SuicideBunny6
    @SuicideBunny6 6 років тому +22

    And here I am in a learning community learning about learning about a learning community ...

  • @Lady_Jay
    @Lady_Jay 5 років тому +14

    i'm I the only one that could listen to John all day and learn from what he saying with ease?

  • @irisobrien3618
    @irisobrien3618 5 років тому +8

    Watched this during my homework break and now I actually want to do it. Bless you, John.

  • @_juicebandit
    @_juicebandit 9 років тому +8

    As a teacher, it is of utmost importance to inspire a love for learning. Usually this is most successful through adaptation: what does this particular person need in order to find meaning in learning? I also very much appreciate and support a learning community; for me, learning is great when coupled with creativity, and a community can offer support and challenge. Great video, John. Thanks.

  • @Monoctis
    @Monoctis 9 років тому +17

    At the end of the day, learning makes you a better person.

    • @mariannebaez8662
      @mariannebaez8662 3 роки тому

      Learning makes life so much more interesting and makes junk fall away.

  • @yang9935
    @yang9935 7 років тому +4

    I have learned so much from this guy, he is a gift to this world.

  • @cynnimini2650
    @cynnimini2650 5 років тому +3

    I've learned so much from the internet and its communities. From braiding my hair and embroidering to biotechnology and Spanish, honestly i think that I've acquired about 20% of my skills online.

  • @animefan4058
    @animefan4058 7 років тому +209

    I am a simple potato, I see John Green, I scream, I fangirl, then I click.

    • @classicdope2952
      @classicdope2952 7 років тому +7

      Anime Fan Anime and John Green! We have some common things!!

    • @ronnie3235
      @ronnie3235 6 років тому +9

      Anime Fan this is the most cringey thing I’ve seen today

    • @tariqkhanPathanKabuliwala
      @tariqkhanPathanKabuliwala 5 років тому +5

      Except mongols 🤣🤣

  • @cloudsandmoon7975
    @cloudsandmoon7975 3 роки тому +10

    This talk really inspired me to start learning again! I have always loved to learn and I remember that I was always curious and wonderstruck to know about things I never knew of before. But somewhere along the line it just faded away to fit into classroom settings where grades matter more than understanding and the joy of discovering new things and wanting to fit into the peer group where learning was not really "cool". I am really thankful to John and also I am loving crash course a lot! It's wonderfully engaging and interesting! I'm so very grateful for this talk.. thank you so much!!!

  • @Vibranium603
    @Vibranium603 3 роки тому +4

    I want to meet John and Hank Green some day!

  • @sangayzambaengstudiescohor4341
    @sangayzambaengstudiescohor4341 3 роки тому +1

    I loved his perspective especially the part when he said that we are a part of something great which can be a part of achievements that are equivalent to the discussion of the Parisons from the Enlightenment Era. We are constantly creating and living a part of the upcoming History! Hurray to Mr. Green!

  • @joshd029
    @joshd029 9 років тому +5

    John thank you for that brilliant light bulb. You have made me remember why I cherish some of my classes more than others. The communities in and outside a classroom environment greatly affect one's outlook on the class. I hope those watching this video that are still in school find the same types of communities that I enjoy, both on the internet and in person.

  • @ricardoestrada5837
    @ricardoestrada5837 3 роки тому +6

    I really enjoy reading and listening to John Green's ideas.

  • @MikleyL
    @MikleyL 8 років тому +13

    OMG this man's mind is AMAZING , love symbolism

  • @darrellcole6311
    @darrellcole6311 5 років тому +1

    I was great to see John Green on TED talk.He said that we can learn new things on You Tube. He is right on. I found the Yale School of Divinity. specifically Dr. Dale Martin. I listen and watch his class on the historical criticism of the New Testament. I learned more in that online class than i did in years at the Apostolic Institute in St Paul, Minn. We were not taught to read the Gospels horizontally. What a difference that made. So I wish to take this opportunity to thank You Tube for educating me. I wish to learn now, and until i die. Since I am 79, that may not be long, but I will press forward to learn all I can. Keep up the great work John that you and your team of experts do to bring knowledge to the masses.

  • @Lucas_Alpay
    @Lucas_Alpay 8 років тому +10

    Learning should always be fun, totally, absolutely agree. But never overestimate yourself just because you "self-learned", and never ever underestimate those who sat in those boring classes. Just stay humble.

    • @LittleHippieBigCity
      @LittleHippieBigCity 8 років тому +6

      +Eldie Summers Exactly! Learning comes in many forms, none better than the other.

  • @Vivi_dream123
    @Vivi_dream123 7 років тому +35

    Oh but these UA-cam videos ARE being watched in classrooms, I can assure you that! (the view count therefore also vastly under-estimates the real total, but that's another matter).

  • @martawatermanfitnesscoach
    @martawatermanfitnesscoach 3 роки тому +2

    Wow, he is so on point!!! I learn so much on UA-cam - French, Mandarin, anatomy, physics, and many more subjects. Whatever interests you, there's a wealth of info and things to learn here. I found John because I am reading Book 2 of the Carl books by his brother Hank (both those books are amazing), and then I found that John has written books too, and that they have a channel together. Then this Ted talk. Wonderful!

    • @YashMenghani
      @YashMenghani 3 роки тому +2

      I agree, youtube is an amazing place to learn new things.

  • @celestemariewilsonmusic
    @celestemariewilsonmusic 3 роки тому +1

    It’s amazing to think about how the communication and community around knowledge develops and changes to cater to the new generations. Every time a new form of storing knowledge appears there are those who are outspoken about the dangers. I wonder if there a a term for that psychological phenomenon. To me, it’s just some food for thought.

  • @megtell
    @megtell 9 років тому +13

    I sure wish that I could have attended a private boarding school. I would have gotten a whole different education, pursued my true interests. Glad to find some out at 47. You're a lucky man John!!

    • @juliahenriques210
      @juliahenriques210 9 років тому +1

      Megan Smetzer I'm really grateful for having attended a humanist public school. An excellence institution that was a microcosmos of the larger world, but with its own set of rules that allowed for the pursuit of individual academic interests. A big library, nice places to hang out with friends inside the school, free courses, student empowerment in pedagogical decisions. A school so good most students never realize how great it is until they finally leave and experience other institutions.
      I got lucky, though. I'm also grateful for having had a great research group in college, in a public university. Professors, undergraduates, and post-graduates, all attended the same weekly discussions, everybody had their own research project(s). Everybody got 2 hours to lecture the others about their projects once in a while, even the undergraduates. People threw their ideas into that weekly maelstrom of ruthless criticism knowing that if anything survived it would come out better in the end. References were exchanged freely and nobody ever stole someone else's credit for anything. Scholarships were plenty, and I got 2 years to develop my own research before graduation. When requested to provide advice about subjects I was specialised in, the group sent me, even being an undergraduate student.
      I would have never had these oportunities in private institutions. A lot of the vitality and breadth of life experiences brought by people of all kinds of backgrounds would have just been ruled out by the paywall. I myself would have never been able to pay for the kind of education I got for free, since most affordable private schools and colleges are actually subpar when it comes to academic research.

    • @NihongoWakannai
      @NihongoWakannai 9 років тому

      Nowadays the internet helps immensely, my schools havent been great, but i can go onto the internet and just learn what i want how i want

  • @rishikachutani2508
    @rishikachutani2508 7 років тому +5

    You make me believe in life. Thank you so much John! I love you and your videos and yours books!

  • @ericsallinger6549
    @ericsallinger6549 5 років тому +17

    This was amazingly inspirational. I love Green's metaphor of treating learning like a developing a map. I wonder if you could take this literally and draw out maps of knowledge in certain subjects. It might be a cool way to visualize understanding and expose gaps in knowledge.

  • @Jake_Indie
    @Jake_Indie 4 роки тому +1

    That is the reason why I love John Green because he was a normal teen who struggled like most students but found a way out to benefit others in ways he wished he got benefited in. To help others learn that learning is quite amazing, that things are new and it can bring people together. He inspired me to do the same and tutor others. Thank you John Green. You are my hero in everything you do from your books like looking for Alaska to fall in our hearts and to places on the internet like Crashcourse and Freemanpedia(which I think you made), you helped me get pumped and motivated to be a better learner and person, which I am helping others in spite that I wish I had someone that helped me as a kid.

  • @Carrie4y
    @Carrie4y 9 років тому +4

    The struggle you talk about- about being miserable because you weren't in a community of learning anymore... that's how I felt (and still kind of feel) after becoming a stay at home mom. And this really inspired me to figure out a way to make a community of learning with other stay at home moms. I don't know how yet, but I want to.

  • @bryangodinho1369
    @bryangodinho1369 7 років тому +10

    This message really struck home! This may be the best Ted Talk I have seen so far. Thanks John!

  • @daniellgrace8670
    @daniellgrace8670 4 роки тому +1

    I really wanna meet such awesome people....he literally touched peoples life and emotion to the place no one been before ....his books take you to a completely new sort of world and are difficult to forget

  • @genkim3355
    @genkim3355 3 роки тому +2

    Learning as cartography is a metaphor that makes so damn happy

  • @ClaíomhDClover
    @ClaíomhDClover 7 років тому +12

    Inspires me to ask more questions. Own and love all his books.

  • @89MSS
    @89MSS 9 років тому +6

    John! So proud to see him up there! I've been watching him for so many years, I knew he would become something really big :) Congratulations!

  • @vicwillis4295
    @vicwillis4295 3 роки тому +2

    this video is one of the main reasons I went to college. I just graduated a month ago and had to come back. time flies. it's the ultimate expense. opportunity cost. time.

  • @samanthaswift9668
    @samanthaswift9668 7 років тому +1

    John Green is one of my favorite people to listen to.

  • @tanvi4305
    @tanvi4305 9 років тому +7

    I love John, I'm so happy and proud that he got this opportunity!

  • @wintaweldemariam8325
    @wintaweldemariam8325 3 роки тому +3

    i usually just read the comments and like the ones that i can relate to, but i want to be apart of the community. so I'm commenting.

  • @getabiggerboat
    @getabiggerboat 7 років тому +1

    Thank you. Proud to be Springs '87 alum and to have grown up on the campus. Discere Vivendo . You're right that it's not just about learning, but about being a part of a community of learners.

  • @livivickers9363
    @livivickers9363 8 років тому +1

    I love John Green's books and videos so much. When I'm being a lump and just watching UA-cam videos, I find myself watching vlogbrothers, and I feel more aware of the world, and like I know enough about world issues to be able to form option of my own. Thank you, John and Hank, you've helped me a lot.

  • @lorenaenciso5518
    @lorenaenciso5518 8 років тому +527

    I've never heard him, talking so slow.

  • @AnimeshSharma1977
    @AnimeshSharma1977 9 років тому +4

    Gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "Mistaking the map for the territory" ;)

  • @maevemylene4910
    @maevemylene4910 5 років тому +1

    Thank you so much for crash course. The presence of this learning communities helped me get through a very toxic community called high school in Amsterdam...

  • @luckykoneko6981
    @luckykoneko6981 8 років тому +1

    Humans enjoy the process of comprehending what was once unknown. They do not enjoy sitting in suffocating rooms being lectured by condescending instructors who are only present for the paycheck.
    Of course not all teachers are apathetic, but finding a truly caring and inspiring teacher seems to be so difficult in high school. I'm really grateful for UA-cam for being the platform that users like John Green and PatrickJMT can utilize to promote education in an enlightening and riveting way.

  • @spacedragon8929
    @spacedragon8929 6 років тому +10

    Is it a bad thing that the biggest thing I took away from this deep, meaningful speech from this brilliant man who I idolize was the thought of whether the girl who was doodling the elephants got the phrase puppy-sized elephant from John and Hank or did John and Hank get puppy-sized elephant from that girl?

  • @momergil
    @momergil 9 років тому +335

    Where are the mongols? :)

    • @TheJuliodarian
      @TheJuliodarian 9 років тому +5

      LMFAO

    • @Garrytherocketboi
      @Garrytherocketboi 9 років тому +40

      Martin Bittencourt They're the exception to this. :3

    • @bitmln003_
      @bitmln003_ 9 років тому +3

      Martin Bittencourt Hahaha Is this a joke? Mongols had one of the largest empire in the world.

    • @Zhranzagul
      @Zhranzagul 9 років тому +17

      jbentio Yes it is a joke. John Green frequently refers to "the Mongols" as the "Exception" of everything, as they always avoid his distinctions of ordinary stuff. Search for "Unless you are the Mongols" and you will find a lot of videos of the same mongol montage that runs everytime this is mentioned in his videos.
      TL;DR: It's a nerdfighter meme of sorts.
      PS: I believe his question is aimed towards the surprising absense of a Mongol montage in regards to something with John Green.
      Cpt. Obvious awaaaay~!

    • @NothingTooSpiffy
      @NothingTooSpiffy 9 років тому +3

      Martin Bittencourt just wait for it!

  • @rachaelmann3724
    @rachaelmann3724 7 років тому

    This is one of my favorite TED Talks. I love how he uses maps as a through line for learning- brilliant

  • @sofiapandolfo4131
    @sofiapandolfo4131 8 років тому +1

    I feel this so much... I'm still in high school therefore i should have a learning community but people connect learning to high school so much that they don't like learning anymore. I'd just love so find some people that share my passion for knowledge so we can talk about it and share it and whatever

  • @stenbak88
    @stenbak88 8 років тому +3

    John Greene is my favorite person on UA-cam with Phillip Defranco by a long shot. John Greene thank you for all you do to make our world a better place to be

  • @whatdani
    @whatdani 9 років тому +6

    Always love listening to John

  • @dianefrancis8813
    @dianefrancis8813 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for talking about learning! Learning is way better than education! Education is so limited! As a teacher in a public school, I have to help my students navigate Education- BUT what I really want to teach them is the value of LEARNING!

  • @enigmatic474
    @enigmatic474 7 років тому +2

    This guy is fantastic. Heard about him because of the amazing Wimbledon AFC story, now can't get enough of his incalculable talents!