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True i sensed that too me I may have went ahead and just shut down and been like bye mf lol but it's important to also see ppl working through obvious frustration on both ends really lol it's hard being a teacher
@@jade1655 Then u can't be a teacher her questions were valid to understand the process otherwise it's the same he teaches on utube what's the difference, she asked the that's why it's more clear video
@@AD-hs9su Mr Rene used "annoying Justin" in a positive way, like a kid would pester you with questions. It does get annoying at some point but asking questions is good.
A very informative and in-depth video, Justin! It goes in depth in not only the thought process but the mechanics behind mind mapping! I loved the questions that you asked the student as well. They were tailored to whatever they were saying, which made the solutions even more meaningful.
@@JustinSung mind I ask, like on th way to learning more and more concepts, and then grouping and chunking along the way, like this feels like it is building lower level details up to higher level in contrast to what u said, so say I start with the highest, broad topic on the subject, build a chunk and now moving to lower levels, how do I connect them level to level wise? I can understand if theres like I think its can be called connector/shared concepts between levels, but what if theres none, and I dont really believe that an purely intuitive connection but hard to explain it can allow these connections to the bigger picture
@@JustinSung You are revolutionary, Doc Justin ! I recently joined the ICS program and I realized that Doc Justin and his team are re-wiring human brains, producing brilliant and open minded students across the globe. If computer experts are building AI, Doc Justin are building brilliant minds with good character building, increasing the chance of humans in competing with AI! Thank you so much for building the step-by-step system and processes, Doc Justin! You are truly a GENIUS!
@@hackerbrinelam5381 Hi, I’m not Justin but I’ll try to answer your question. If you experienced Justin’s method and still feel like your method is more effective then use the one that works best for you. About connecting concepts, there are certain things that doesn’t have relationships to each other, in that case, I would just do 2 separate mindmaps or put some of the information into flashcards.
@@Yeeeeeehaw Justin Sung just speaks a lot of bullshit unfortunately. He doesn't say anything really valuable. A lot of crap. He has zero ability to go straight to the point! He starts talking in circles, keeps on rambling and going off topic. It's just overwhelming to listen to a lot of crap without any valuable content. Just a real let-down and a waste of time. Just waffling and waffling!! It seems like an endless shaggy-dog story.
This is exactly where I'm at!! I'm constantly getting overwhelmed because I try to get too much into detail because I think it will help me understand more, but then it just keeps going on and on and then I give up. I also feel like I can't group concepts into words that sum it up correctly. This video was so helpful!!!
this girl being a good, challenging student for Justin 😂 most of the world is this confused, so im glad we tackled this issue of fear/imagination in order to study a completely different way than we ever had before. this is a true breakthrough case, yall! this is how you use logic to tackle something youve never done before, and therefore to tackle these fears.
The points on becoming overwhelmed by uncertainty for new information was great idea for life. Don't put off experimentation by trying to find more methods or material to help you, once you get a jist for how something works, try it out knowing you very well may fail but will learn because of it.
Her "interruption" was a cue for Justin to know he needed to reframe or clarify his points. This is completely normal and it's better than listening quietly when you stopped understanding half way through.
She wasn't purposely interrupting. She was excited to learn about improving her learning ability. Also most video calls have delay, but either way if all you got out of the video was that, then you definitely were not paying attention.
obviously. you cant purposfully interrupt unless your being an asshole, but you can control your excitement until the teacher finished their explanation
@danielxd3804 what's your point? Keep you're low level iq questions to yourself. Curiosity is the main driver of learning, something that shouldn't be snubbed out by an arrogant individual like yourself. Go pick up a book and educate yourself instead.
I love these types of videos. I'm a struggling college student and no matter how much I put time into studying, I don't get any result for my efforts to show. But watching these interview type videos, I think I'm starting to get it. These videos help me a lot with understanding what I do wrong. Please do more of these!
This clarified the mind mapping concept and getting overwhelmed. Don’t focus on the details in the first nor second reading. Grouping related processes and ideas together when you start to feel overwhelmed with information by SIMPLIFYING. Thank you Justin for this video example.
I find English speaking people are extremely sensitive when being interrupted and often take it personally. There are many cultures out there are perfectly fine about being interrupted in a good faith manner. I think this girl was very keen to learn, and also quick to digest and provide feedback by asking more questions. She was not rude or loud or taking irrelevant things. That's how you SHOULD learn, instead just quietly follow without critical thinking. Remembering there is a thing called fleeting thoughts, if you wait for someone to finish, you might have forgotten about the thought by then which you can never get back.
I wouldn't say it's cultural, we are just too exposed to native English speakers online so it gives the illusion of a pattern. I don't think Justin found it bad, you can notice how he tries to reframe and clarify when she "interrupts" him, he is paying attention and he has the experience to know what needs to be clarified without wasting time hearing her.
It is a difficult process to understand and she wanted to clarify the point Justin was making before moving forward. All she wanted was to be sure she understood Justin’s explanations.
Because being interrupted is rude. In the same way, pushing in front of a queue is rude. We take turns. It's basic etiquette that you clearly have identified as a cultural pattern. Rather than adopt it, is it easier to challenge or disregard the rule?
You are revolutionary, Doc Justin ! I recently joined the ICS program and I realized that Doc Justin and his team are re-wiring human brains, producing brilliant and open minded students across the globe. If computer experts are building AI, Doc Justin are building brilliant minds with good character building, increasing the chance of humans in competing with AI! Thank you so much for building the step-by-step system and processes, Doc Justin! You are truly a GENIUS!
I really loved this content. She asked great questions I’m sure a lot of people could relate. You could literally see her fear building up when she had to explain the steps, because of her self doubt if she was doing it right. I can totally relate. I would definitely love to watch more content like this.
this was a really great episode. i will rewatch it. my biggest issue is fear/anxiety and while i'm aware of my maladaptive coping mechanisms, i struggle to move forward and think in the solution and do trial and error.
Excellent video, I felt very identified with her in so many questions and emotions, but Justin knew how to listen and properly guided her through the conversation switching from the structure of a well map making to the psychology of learning and self evaluation, they were both great.
I found it helpful to group and simplify with a purpose. When I encode with an application in mind, it helps me center the mindmap around something that's relevant to me. Happy studying everyone!
Please do more of these videos with your students, they're so helpful because their struggles are often mine too and even if they're not I can still learn things
By "YouSum Live" 00:00:00 Effective learning requires simplification and grouping 00:05:17 Overloading occurs when concepts are not grouped 00:08:07 Collect keywords, then simplify for clarity 00:09:04 Pause to simplify before moving on 00:09:16 Group information actively to reduce overwhelm 00:09:39 Study broad topics before diving into details 00:14:00 Repetition is necessary for effective retention 00:17:05 Group and simplify to enhance memory 00:18:34 Simplifying and grouping information enhances understanding 00:19:45 Avoid overwhelming yourself; pause and process regularly 00:20:48 High-level understanding reduces need for extensive revision 00:22:01 Focus on keywords to improve study efficiency 00:27:02 Experimentation is key to overcoming uncertainty 00:28:05 Improved methods lead to better study outcomes By "YouSum Live"
i feel so lucky youtube algo landed me here, i needed this video more then anything right now, thankyou sir you solved my biggest problem and i was so surprised the way solved her problem and actively listening to her and pointed her mistakes and more over you are doing it for free, wow you are a gem sir, May god bless you with success and happiness.
Thanks for sharing, it clarified some of my own doubts, I can definitely relate to her own experiences with this technique. These live sessions I think add that extra dimension that many of your videos are missing, which is having someone in almost the same position to ours and seeing how you would work through and hopefully solve these issues in real time. This is very valuable and I hope you'll keep putting these live sessions up! 😉
00:00 Upgrade your note-taking 00:49 The problem the student is facing 03:33 Mind mapping in segments 06:32 Managing your mental effort 09:39 Working in layers 13:00 How to deal with overwhelmingness 16:26 The importance of grouping and simplifying 19:50 The relationship between the number of revisions and initial encoding 20:49 How to scope a topic 24:35 How to deal with the uncertainty of trying new things
One thing I haven't heard Justin talk about is the scope of mind maps. For example, I have a 300 page economics textbook. Should I have a top level mind map that links the most fundamental relationships, then separate mind maps for more granular concepts? Or would the goal really be to have one mind map for the whole book, with the ancillary relationships just a lot smaller in size and emphasis?
@@joaofrancisconogueira7755From what I've gleaned since, he talks about layers, broad first, then you progress down the layers into detail. So the way this is working for me is: go through whole book, scan tocs: get the most general concepts. (I just flicked through each section taking keywords from the section, chapter and the main headings within each chapter. He says to make a keyword list and then group, but on my infinite canvas I found it easier to just jot down a tree of the relationships (and anything interesting thoughts I happen to have). Larger writing for sections subsections, smaller for chapters, smaller for headings, all laid out in space, separate trees. So broadest level first, take the keywords of the sections, group them into just a small number of groups, then attempt a simple mind map relation between them. If all makes sense (which it may not necessarily) then you have completed the broadest layer. From there I would grab and group the subsections and chapter name keywords, try and group, and now you are trying to add them into the broad level mind map, which forces you not just to relate these new groups to each other, but to the more broader concepts. No doubt reshuffling of groups may be needed until all the relationships make sense again with this added detail. And on to the more granular keywords. At each stage you find you have to rework groups, but it should always be from broadest downward. In terms of content, from whole book perspective, to section and downward. And depending on the subject /book,, yes it could well be one mind map. The point is ( and I've found this already), that as you go down through each layer you already have a model of where any new thing you read fits in.
Mind map with easier content first. So you get used to it. If the mapping is a heavy lift and the content is a heavy lift. That’s two heavy lifts. Fine for some people but not for most. It’s a skill that mirrors synapses that requires a certain amount of synapses (different amount per person) first.
23:55 & 26:46 actually is the best resource on internet right now. bro you are good like i can't even say any words for it... I'm in construction management before and this is how i explain it to my team mates and for many times they can't understand or even don't care about what i just explain. In my public impromptu speaking I'm not going to present a meeting Not until i have that certain "Keyword" on the certain topic that i will present to my listeners. The way to explain this method is just totally makes sense. This ALL goes literally to everything and in any discipline that has something to do with LEARNING. Thank you.
Very interesting advice....I was trying to help a student at 'first contact' with a journal article (peer-reviewed research article)...they were struggling understanding it and was trying MM. Your advice might suggest that an article like this is too focused to get that broad sweep ....but perhaps it can seed a broader understanding? Also, your advice might suggest it useful - in this case at least - that the student read the whole article first and THEN start drawing, refine, expand, simplify, and iterate. I think what they are describing is trying to draw from reading the introduction and then just adding stuff until he finishes the conclusion, trying to make the connections on the page as they read. This seems to stop them grouping (and also seems to be taking them a lot longer than they want)
Me gusta la explicacion de tomat las palabras vlave de lo que estemos estudiando y agrupatlas para que tengan sentido. Y no tomar mas de 20 palabras clave para no sobrecargarnos. Con estas palabras construimos un mapa de relaciones. Esto aplica para principiantes
Thanks for putting this stuff out there. I'm not an academic, but I've been interested in applying this way of thinking and notetaking to my art studies and hobbies such as D&D, making mind maps for adventures and designs. I've also been thinking of how I can apply the principles of non-linear thinking to how I approach my drawing method (scoping, mapping out the keys of the composition, and constatnly stepping back to look at the whole of the drawing as I draw out each element). I don't think I quite understand what I'm doing yet, just faking it till I make it. Still. I find all this pretty exciting to explore, and appreciate videos like this that show examples. I think I'd like to see videos where each node and connection is explained out. Thanks!
Well then, i was gonna join your course eventully when i could afford it. Now as i am grateful for you putting out alot clearer how to do these things I will Definitly save up and join :)
from watching roughly the 3rd time, i reckon her problem , is basically , understanding the following : 1) the mind map isnt a [ fixed, be done with it ] , its constantly required to be changed and re-arranged, hence the map of mind there will always be variables 2) the need for [ labels ] and questions, the psychological aspect of it will then become : im writng, therefore everything is important [ which is true, if its something new or to recall later on, but we actually, shortcut later on naturally ] it may be beneficial for folks like her, even myself, to use a zettel system or smaller different pages for [ sub-mind map] e.g if the main topic of the main mind map is [ building muscles ] then under there, to be on different ppt / digital mind map/ html file etc, that becomes. [ sub-cat of Building Muscles] --> [ protein levels and nitrogen relation ] from there, using our own Default Mode Network later on, to just briefly write questions , which is brought up by justin, e.g [ Summary of this, what can it be recalled and chunk ? ] write it next to the sub-cat mind map, and leave it open, and force a later on , a [ spaced re-summery and query free recall ] , via the Task Positive Network, which is our concious. by swinging between rest, pause, questions, and. then [ try, effort] --> to recall the each and every sub-mind map 3) Lastly , for keywords, is to jot ALL down, first then ask, in generally, can it be simplified into a few words ? make it as a game, akin to a AI-GPT summary, to quick sum up lengthy irrelvant words out from online courses or news [ as a reader, they're filler words to have a flow of the story, and to provide facts and opinions ] that, in a way, if people can try and treat their own brain, as a AI-GPT like summerising machine, to free recall from the concepts and then down to the very sub details, it will basically be leading to what Justin Sung's ideal Mind Map Chunking, using pictures or relation flow, there will be a flow, just not as easy [ which is good thing for brain to work out and retain ] to develop, and once you have those chunking / grouping/ labelling/ summery / etc down, almost any situation or topic or idea or knowledge can be learned importantly, i guess she is still uncomfortable with the unknown, which we are all, in regards to relaying on such [ simple yet harsh and brutally enlightening way of learning ]
By writing down all the keywords, do you mean those of the whole subject to be studied or would it be better to first write down the most general ones of the subject and then go deeper and deeper?
@@valeriasanchez93i don't really know cuz i wasn't the one who write this text but i think the second one is the one he's talking about. Anyway, you could get an idea of what to do in the previous video (study with me with instructions) of this youtube channel in the first three fragments
@@valeriasanchez93 in my own understanding and not from Dr Justin's , what i can derived from : e.g learning a new language theres location, food etc within those, theres sub-categories, [ location --> Vietnam --> Hanoi --> Phu Ly ] etc if everything seems important, at least from my interpretation and from watching videos from Justin and other UA-camrs , its to ask, can all those keywords, be sorted accordingly ? and then group into one big Key word and summery ? for the above vietnam location, can it be grouped by Provicience or by Northern Vietnam Southern, and then branch off ? Which one makes more sense Keywords, are just a sort of mini-flash card for linking, what you have understood and learned, to trigger your memories , so as to recall effectively when revising, or for this video's example, the lady's over zeaously keywords addon, is to [ Konmari Kondo it ] and allot the subconcious brain to sort things out later on and yes, its ever changing, meaning, there will be ver1 to 999th, to ensure you, yourself, understand from a sheer glance of the mapping, what it means. Hence Justin's older videos makes alot of sense if you link it back and rewatch them Deep encoding is important as mentioned from Justin and others, but [ correct encoding and deeper understanding ] needs to be practise and with supervised proper if its new, however it can be also self tested, via [ Dr benjamin Keep and others ], free active recall , with pre-determined questions for later systematic recall, on the purpose of the map and why those keypoints are there to elaborate. someone else might be able †o further condense and simplify what im trying to say here, which taking effort , to condense something that can be expended when questioning or recalling, is the best way to ensure one understood the mapping and keyword chunking
@@Siniorus yup , its all linked Dr Justin Sung's Dr Benjamin Keeps' Ryan Doris Flow and other thought process iCanStudy recent back to process of uploading Jim kwik's study methods, Then theres Ultralearning as well. for anyone who find my comment, remember that mind mapping is almost one of the major pillars of learning, there are other factors as well regarding effective and understanding of different things. do not limit, but label and understand where the limitations are at the moment, and push further in processing your thoughts that i think, in response to what Justin and Benjamin keep and other online coaches does, is the reason why emotional, effortful, memoriable events and life/death/ flow moment can be always recalled in exact details
Just to reply back for most folks to see, what @TubodePVC2000 has mentioned, other channels, from iCanstudy to Dr Benjamin Keep, go through other channels like Jim kwik's , Ryan Dori's flow etc will provide even broad [ puzzle over view, scaffolding of a huge building ] above all, not to feel fear of failure, because as the brillance of a saying, we merely found out what 99 things that dont work. Accelerating learning and other aspect of your learning life p.s , giving Ultralearning a go, and a read is a must,
What tripped me up a bit was the list of keywords. As far as I understood it in the end, it's not a literal list you write, but words you collect directly in your mind map. And when you finished adding that level, you try to go deeper until it is too complicated or the mind map starts to get messy. Then you pause, rearrange the mind map, group items together and continue. I would be overwhelmed as well if I would just collect a list of words from a text and then afterwards would try to add them all at once to the mind map.
@@johnryan2319 At least that's how I understood it. Collect the keywords you understand, connect them to each other, try to understand more of the big picture and then one by one it's probably possible to extend the mind map with additional words.
I recommend people start with a topic they are very familiar with, and mind map that. So you can work on the skill of mind mapping and grouping. As opposed to to learning to mindmap, and knowledge acquisition of a subject. Learning two things at once can feel overwhelming, above and beyond the subject you are trying to learn.
Insights By "YouSum Live" 00:00:00 Effective learning requires simplification and grouping 00:05:17 Overloading occurs when concepts are not grouped 00:08:07 Collect keywords, then simplify for clarity 00:09:04 Pause to simplify before moving on 00:09:16 Group information actively to reduce overwhelm 00:09:39 Study broad topics before diving into details 00:14:00 Repetition is necessary for effective retention 00:17:05 Group and simplify to enhance memory 00:18:34 Simplifying and grouping information enhances understanding 00:19:45 Avoid overwhelming yourself; pause and process regularly 00:20:48 High-level understanding reduces need for extensive revision 00:22:01 Focus on keywords to improve study efficiency 00:27:02 Experimentation is key to overcoming uncertainty 00:28:05 Improved methods lead to better study outcomes Insights By "YouSum Live"
That last comment Justin made about "information over experimentation" is a pretty common thing in my AuDHD circle. I've always heard it described as "analysis paralysis."
I really appreciate this content, it is helping me a lot on learning how to mindmap, so thank you! I wanted to ask about dealing with the fear of forgetting the information inside the groups after simplifying, should you put them inside a flashcard (even though that would mean having a lot of flashcards) or just trust that i will remember the details inside the groups?
Interesting teaching. I think the only thing it lacked would be abstraction to concrete i.e. short topic example where all the abstract concepts are taken to pictures and therefore comes together.
Perhaps she would have benefited from her mental anchor points. Dental student- look at the whole mouth first, keywords- teeth, gums, tongue. Now group it.- teeth that tear, teeth that grind. Starting with the names of the teeth in order of placement. Now working to subtopics such as the way the tooth is structured. Thank you Justin! Helpful
Please make a video on how to collect important keywords, if we don't know anything about a topic because while scoping we don't read anything, we just look for keywords. Or should we read a little bit to know enough about the keyword?
Hey Justin, your work is fantastic! I just subscribed to a mind mapping/flowcharting software to help me learn a Platform to which I have a membership. It's a new business I have started in the digital marketing space. My challenge is learning how to use software applications to build a marketing business. The platform does not require coding; however, it requires a sound understanding of domains, subdomains, trigger workflows, AI plug-ins, creating content, dealing with Google ads and reviews, and so on...My Questions are: after you group the concepts, how do you think to simplify the idea. My motivation for the Mindmapping systems is specifically for me to learn about the platform as quick as possiable.
When you're forming a chunk (that's made out of smaller parts) like in 6:00, do you erase these smaller parts or do you just sort of circle them, write the more general concept on top and leave the details inside?
One question I have is on what to make the mind-map on when faced with large topics that has several sub-topics. E.g. I have a class on Property Law and I need to learn the whole topic. But within Property Law there are many sub-topics, e.g. leases vs ownership, chattels vs land. The book will naturally include all of these spread out over the 500 pages. When starting out, would you create a mind-map of Property Law with branches going into each sub-topic (covering all 500 pages) but without detail, or would you create a mind-map of one sub-topic (e.g. 100 pages on ownership). I would guess doing a mind-map of the entire topic first, then delve deeper into each branch by making a separate mind-map on the sub-topics. But I must admit starting with skimming the entire 500 page book, trying to group and link without actually reading the whole 500 book is hard.
same question mam, i am thinking how to do it in one cartolina… i watched atty diokno, he said by finals he made sure that the whole topic in one subject was in 1 cartolina….
Please justin make à vidéo about how to start learn a New topic and talk what happening in your mind and your steps when you learn à New topic and how you collect the keywords and how you think about them when you wanna to make relation and talk how mind map make it easier and make clear about the role of it
I sort of relate to her mental blocker. I’m a bit confused on how we reintroduce the details (just started briefing for context). As we group and simplify our mind map continually, we refine our big picture understanding. The act of simplifying reinforces the keywords “lost” in the process. Are the details captured again when we do revision?
Hi Justing,can you give me steps to be good at study,academic processes.I mean,what should I start with?learning how to memorize or how to focus .......,you have lots of vides,give me adequate sequences of watching your vides.I think you got me
Hello Justin! I hope you're doing well. There's something I don't quite understand in the study method you recently taught. In the evaluation stage, you suggest using the question: "How does this relate to other concepts?" to learn and then fit it into the big picture. My question is: Do I have to reason and try to find the answer using my own material, or can I use ChatGPT? I'm not sure if reasoning it on my own is better :/.
Thanks for sharing. How can i not go into details right away when textbooks are designed that way? Do i read the paragraph twice? The first time i decide what's a detail so what's to ignore and when i have understood the basics from other paragraphs i go back for those details?
First and foremost I am a complete beginner to this. I’ve tried to mind map during lectures but it feels… very unorganized. For lecture notes, should I go into it with more structure then fill in the gaps? Open to advice from the those with more experience!
Hey, make sure to pre-study before the lecture to make the entire learning process easier and more effective for yourself. That should help you feel more organised while learning during the lecture.
@@JustinSungso we study the material that we will get before we get it? Also what should I do after my teacher gives us a chunk of a lesson and I am studying it for the first time?do I do the same strategy?
i understand that being able to limit information to its gist is important, but how do you progress from there? sometimes you’re just required to retrieve incredibly detailed information, how would you account for that if you always group together concepts in order to make it less complex even if it is that complex?
Thank you for your great content been watching and studying how to leearn, as a Karp What application are you using for the mind maps? which is best? I'm very new to the concept Thanks a bunch G
do mind maps work for programming or coding concepts??i dont understand how mind maps might be useful for problem solving/coding since the more coding questions you solve the better you get at coding.
I think its the idea of it where you can mind map it. I still sometimes use mind maps in mathematics(if possible). I recommended just use mind map if you can but if not just go with Feynman technique and more that works for you.
should i allow for various "colored glasses" of mindmaps- in my psych class about learning,motivation and behavior i could group by internal vs external processes, or based on time: born with ,learned, intentioned and future goals or based on brain correlates vs theories or even proactive vs reactive
I hope Dr.Sung can answer this. I try to make mind maps for most subjects, and I find them to be useful in history,English , and all the science subjects except physics;however, I find mind maps to be not much of a use for math and physics typically because both subjects are application based there aren’t a lot of concepts in math and physics compared to biology or chemistry.So I can’t map really map things out. I treat both subjects differently with different learning methods, but both methods are lower order they both rely on linear note-taking. How can I improve my method of studying math?
Hi leon. I could help you. Im a physicist but i still like to repeat my studies again cause not everything stayed in my mind. For last 4 years i tried to develope a technique how to do it until i found Justin Sung. He gave my a boost to my ideas of how to think about math an physics in according of mindmaps. but to complicated to explain it here
Hi Justin, thanks for the amazingly helpful videos. Quick Question: In general, would you say a person's system of learning is efficient if they can read and mindmap and retain most of the important points they read in the first go ? (Given that there was no way to review the summary of the content before first reading). Or is it normal to go through some content 2-3 times to have fully connected and highly retained content in your brain? Also, is it recommended to go through the spaced repetition or would it be beneficial to go through the content twice in first go ?
Can the mental mapping method be used to learn languages? Would you be able to give me an example of how this might work? sorry if I have mistakes in the sentence, I don't speak English
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I love how she didn't get shy of annoying Justin and asked questions again and again until she understood it.
True i sensed that too me I may have went ahead and just shut down and been like bye mf lol but it's important to also see ppl working through obvious frustration on both ends really lol it's hard being a teacher
@@jade1655 Then u can't be a teacher her questions were valid to understand the process otherwise it's the same he teaches on utube what's the difference, she asked the that's why it's more clear video
It wasn't at all annoying, she made it more clearer to understand for us also
@@AD-hs9su Mr Rene used "annoying Justin" in a positive way, like a kid would pester you with questions. It does get annoying at some point but asking questions is good.
@@oz_jones why are you saying that to me i literally said it is good that she's asking questions are you crazy
A very informative and in-depth video, Justin!
It goes in depth in not only the thought process but the mechanics behind mind mapping! I loved the questions that you asked the student as well. They were tailored to whatever they were saying, which made the solutions even more meaningful.
Can you do a video on how to study anatomy
Stop stealing shit from him then
@@warriordx5520 💀💀💀
@@warriordx5520 dude it's not like he created mind mapping or something lol
Justin literally changed my acedemic life forever...
Thank you man
You are the only person that can change your academic life!
And that is by taking action!
@@JustinSung mind I ask, like on th way to learning more and more concepts, and then grouping and chunking along the way, like this feels like it is building lower level details up to higher level in contrast to what u said, so say I start with the highest, broad topic on the subject, build a chunk and now moving to lower levels, how do I connect them level to level wise? I can understand if theres like I think its can be called connector/shared concepts between levels, but what if theres none, and I dont really believe that an purely intuitive connection but hard to explain it can allow these connections to the bigger picture
@@JustinSung You are revolutionary, Doc Justin ! I recently joined the ICS program and I realized that Doc Justin and his team are re-wiring human brains, producing brilliant and open minded students across the globe.
If computer experts are building AI, Doc Justin are building brilliant minds with good character building, increasing the chance of humans in competing with AI!
Thank you so much for building the step-by-step system and processes, Doc Justin! You are truly a GENIUS!
@@hackerbrinelam5381 Hi, I’m not Justin but I’ll try to answer your question. If you experienced Justin’s method and still feel like your method is more effective then use the one that works best for you. About connecting concepts, there are certain things that doesn’t have relationships to each other, in that case, I would just do 2 separate mindmaps or put some of the information into flashcards.
@@Yeeeeeehaw Justin Sung just speaks a lot of bullshit unfortunately. He doesn't say anything really valuable. A lot of crap. He has zero ability to go straight to the point! He starts talking in circles, keeps on rambling and going off topic. It's just overwhelming to listen to a lot of crap without any valuable content. Just a real let-down and a waste of time. Just waffling and waffling!! It seems like an endless shaggy-dog story.
This is exactly where I'm at!! I'm constantly getting overwhelmed because I try to get too much into detail because I think it will help me understand more, but then it just keeps going on and on and then I give up. I also feel like I can't group concepts into words that sum it up correctly. This video was so helpful!!!
I’m exactly the same.. doing cybersecurity and the concepts and theory.. it’s a lot and feels like I’m wasting time when reading.
this girl being a good, challenging student for Justin 😂 most of the world is this confused, so im glad we tackled this issue of fear/imagination in order to study a completely different way than we ever had before. this is a true breakthrough case, yall! this is how you use logic to tackle something youve never done before, and therefore to tackle these fears.
ok
The points on becoming overwhelmed by uncertainty for new information was great idea for life. Don't put off experimentation by trying to find more methods or material to help you, once you get a jist for how something works, try it out knowing you very well may fail but will learn because of it.
Her "interruption" was a cue for Justin to know he needed to reframe or clarify his points. This is completely normal and it's better than listening quietly when you stopped understanding half way through.
She wasn't purposely interrupting. She was excited to learn about improving her learning ability. Also most video calls have delay, but either way if all you got out of the video was that, then you definitely were not paying attention.
obviously. you cant purposfully interrupt unless your being an asshole, but you can control your excitement until the teacher finished their explanation
@danielxd3804 what's your point? Keep you're low level iq questions to yourself. Curiosity is the main driver of learning, something that shouldn't be snubbed out by an arrogant individual like yourself. Go pick up a book and educate yourself instead.
I love these types of videos. I'm a struggling college student and no matter how much I put time into studying, I don't get any result for my efforts to show. But watching these interview type videos, I think I'm starting to get it. These videos help me a lot with understanding what I do wrong. Please do more of these!
2 more videos coming in the next few weeks my friend, stay tuned!
This clarified the mind mapping concept and getting overwhelmed. Don’t focus on the details in the first nor second reading. Grouping related processes and ideas together when you start to feel overwhelmed with information by SIMPLIFYING. Thank you Justin for this video example.
I find English speaking people are extremely sensitive when being interrupted and often take it personally. There are many cultures out there are perfectly fine about being interrupted in a good faith manner. I think this girl was very keen to learn, and also quick to digest and provide feedback by asking more questions. She was not rude or loud or taking irrelevant things. That's how you SHOULD learn, instead just quietly follow without critical thinking. Remembering there is a thing called fleeting thoughts, if you wait for someone to finish, you might have forgotten about the thought by then which you can never get back.
It is the culture behind some speakers hehehe.
@@Applecitylightkiwiain’t no way bro
I wouldn't say it's cultural, we are just too exposed to native English speakers online so it gives the illusion of a pattern. I don't think Justin found it bad, you can notice how he tries to reframe and clarify when she "interrupts" him, he is paying attention and he has the experience to know what needs to be clarified without wasting time hearing her.
It is a difficult process to understand and she wanted to clarify the point Justin was making before moving forward. All she wanted was to be sure she understood Justin’s explanations.
Because being interrupted is rude. In the same way, pushing in front of a queue is rude. We take turns. It's basic etiquette that you clearly have identified as a cultural pattern. Rather than adopt it, is it easier to challenge or disregard the rule?
You are revolutionary, Doc Justin ! I recently joined the ICS program and I realized that Doc Justin and his team are re-wiring human brains, producing brilliant and open minded students across the globe.
If computer experts are building AI, Doc Justin are building brilliant minds with good character building, increasing the chance of humans in competing with AI!
Thank you so much for building the step-by-step system and processes, Doc Justin! You are truly a GENIUS!
I love your normal/scripted videos and these live sessions I love even more. Your content was a game changer for me.
I really loved this content. She asked great questions I’m sure a lot of people could relate. You could literally see her fear building up when she had to explain the steps, because of her self doubt if she was doing it right. I can totally relate. I would definitely love to watch more content like this.
this was a really great episode. i will rewatch it. my biggest issue is fear/anxiety and while i'm aware of my maladaptive coping mechanisms, i struggle to move forward and think in the solution and do trial and error.
Excellent video, I felt very identified with her in so many questions and emotions, but Justin knew how to listen and properly guided her through the conversation switching from the structure of a well map making to the psychology of learning and self evaluation, they were both great.
I found it helpful to group and simplify with a purpose. When I encode with an application in mind, it helps me center the mindmap around something that's relevant to me. Happy studying everyone!
Please do more of these videos with your students, they're so helpful because their struggles are often mine too and even if they're not I can still learn things
By "YouSum Live"
00:00:00 Effective learning requires simplification and grouping
00:05:17 Overloading occurs when concepts are not grouped
00:08:07 Collect keywords, then simplify for clarity
00:09:04 Pause to simplify before moving on
00:09:16 Group information actively to reduce overwhelm
00:09:39 Study broad topics before diving into details
00:14:00 Repetition is necessary for effective retention
00:17:05 Group and simplify to enhance memory
00:18:34 Simplifying and grouping information enhances understanding
00:19:45 Avoid overwhelming yourself; pause and process regularly
00:20:48 High-level understanding reduces need for extensive revision
00:22:01 Focus on keywords to improve study efficiency
00:27:02 Experimentation is key to overcoming uncertainty
00:28:05 Improved methods lead to better study outcomes
By "YouSum Live"
My all-time favourite UA-camr!
Thanks for the kind comment my friend!!
i feel so lucky youtube algo landed me here, i needed this video more then anything right now, thankyou sir you solved my biggest problem and i was so surprised the way solved her problem and actively listening to her and pointed her mistakes and more over you are doing it for free, wow you are a gem sir, May god bless you with success and happiness.
Thanks for sharing, it clarified some of my own doubts, I can definitely relate to her own experiences with this technique. These live sessions I think add that extra dimension that many of your videos are missing, which is having someone in almost the same position to ours and seeing how you would work through and hopefully solve these issues in real time. This is very valuable and I hope you'll keep putting these live sessions up! 😉
I think this is one of your best UA-cam videos, Dr Justin - and you have a lot of very good ones.
You are a blessing to the academic community, thank you Dr. Sung!🙏
I am also having the issue of being overwhelmed. But this video helps me understand how to create a better and simple mind map.
00:00 Upgrade your note-taking
00:49 The problem the student is facing
03:33 Mind mapping in segments
06:32 Managing your mental effort
09:39 Working in layers
13:00 How to deal with overwhelmingness
16:26 The importance of grouping and simplifying
19:50 The relationship between the number of revisions and initial encoding
20:49 How to scope a topic
24:35 How to deal with the uncertainty of trying new things
Just recently joined the program! Thank you so much, Justin! You are an inspiration to everyone!
Really appreciate this kind of content! So insightful. Thank you for this weekly gifts
You're so welcome!
Please sir keep these coming. Really appreciate it.
2 more on their way
One thing I haven't heard Justin talk about is the scope of mind maps.
For example, I have a 300 page economics textbook.
Should I have a top level mind map that links the most fundamental relationships, then separate mind maps for more granular concepts?
Or would the goal really be to have one mind map for the whole book, with the ancillary relationships just a lot smaller in size and emphasis?
Clarification on this would be great.
@@joaofrancisconogueira7755From what I've gleaned since, he talks about layers, broad first, then you progress down the layers into detail.
So the way this is working for me is: go through whole book, scan tocs: get the most general concepts. (I just flicked through each section taking keywords from the section, chapter and the main headings within each chapter.
He says to make a keyword list and then group, but on my infinite canvas I found it easier to just jot down a tree of the relationships (and anything interesting thoughts I happen to have). Larger writing for sections subsections, smaller for chapters, smaller for headings, all laid out in space, separate trees.
So broadest level first, take the keywords of the sections, group them into just a small number of groups, then attempt a simple mind map relation between them. If all makes sense (which it may not necessarily) then you have completed the broadest layer.
From there I would grab and group the subsections and chapter name keywords, try and group, and now you are trying to add them into the broad level mind map, which forces you not just to relate these new groups to each other, but to the more broader concepts. No doubt reshuffling of groups may be needed until all the relationships make sense again with this added detail.
And on to the more granular keywords.
At each stage you find you have to rework groups, but it should always be from broadest downward. In terms of content, from whole book perspective, to section and downward. And depending on the subject /book,, yes it could well be one mind map. The point is ( and I've found this already), that as you go down through each layer you already have a model of where any new thing you read fits in.
I think both can be very helpful
great explanation by Dr Justin and kudos to Ada for being honest enough to keep asking questions. helped the rest of the world too through this video
Limited key words
Group/chunking
Zoom in and zoom out
Mind map with easier content first. So you get used to it. If the mapping is a heavy lift and the content is a heavy lift. That’s two heavy lifts. Fine for some people but not for most. It’s a skill that mirrors synapses that requires a certain amount of synapses (different amount per person) first.
23:55 & 26:46 actually is the best resource on internet right now. bro you are good like i can't even say any words for it... I'm in construction management before and this is how i explain it to my team mates and for many times they can't understand or even don't care about what i just explain. In my public impromptu speaking I'm not going to present a meeting Not until i have that certain "Keyword" on the certain topic that i will present to my listeners. The way to explain this method is just totally makes sense. This ALL goes literally to everything and in any discipline that has something to do with LEARNING. Thank you.
Thank you so much, Justin! Great video. And thank you, Ada, for asking all the right questions 😊
Many thanks for sharing your powerful insights Justin. Every video helps me to develop the guidance I can give to my students.
Very interesting advice....I was trying to help a student at 'first contact' with a journal article (peer-reviewed research article)...they were struggling understanding it and was trying MM.
Your advice might suggest that an article like this is too focused to get that broad sweep ....but perhaps it can seed a broader understanding?
Also, your advice might suggest it useful - in this case at least - that the student read the whole article first and THEN start drawing, refine, expand, simplify, and iterate. I think what they are describing is trying to draw from reading the introduction and then just adding stuff until he finishes the conclusion, trying to make the connections on the page as they read. This seems to stop them grouping (and also seems to be taking them a lot longer than they want)
Me gusta la explicacion de tomat las palabras vlave de lo que estemos estudiando y agrupatlas para que tengan sentido. Y no tomar mas de 20 palabras clave para no sobrecargarnos. Con estas palabras construimos un mapa de relaciones. Esto aplica para principiantes
Thanks for putting this stuff out there. I'm not an academic, but I've been interested in applying this way of thinking and notetaking to my art studies and hobbies such as D&D, making mind maps for adventures and designs. I've also been thinking of how I can apply the principles of non-linear thinking to how I approach my drawing method (scoping, mapping out the keys of the composition, and constatnly stepping back to look at the whole of the drawing as I draw out each element). I don't think I quite understand what I'm doing yet, just faking it till I make it. Still. I find all this pretty exciting to explore, and appreciate videos like this that show examples. I think I'd like to see videos where each node and connection is explained out. Thanks!
Well then, i was gonna join your course eventully when i could afford it. Now as i am grateful for you putting out alot clearer how to do these things I will Definitly save up and join :)
from watching roughly the 3rd time,
i reckon her problem , is basically , understanding the following :
1) the mind map isnt a [ fixed, be done with it ] , its constantly required to be changed and re-arranged, hence the map of mind there will always be variables
2) the need for [ labels ] and questions,
the psychological aspect of it will then become : im writng, therefore everything is important [ which is true, if its something new or to recall later on, but we actually, shortcut later on naturally ]
it may be beneficial for folks like her, even myself, to use a zettel system or smaller different pages for [ sub-mind map]
e.g if the main topic of the main mind map is [ building muscles ]
then under there, to be on different ppt / digital mind map/ html file etc, that becomes. [ sub-cat of Building Muscles] --> [ protein levels and nitrogen relation ]
from there,
using our own Default Mode Network later on, to just briefly write questions , which is brought up by justin, e.g [ Summary of this, what can it be recalled and chunk ? ]
write it next to the sub-cat mind map, and leave it open, and force a later on , a [ spaced re-summery and query free recall ] , via the Task Positive Network, which is our concious.
by swinging between rest, pause, questions, and. then [ try, effort] --> to recall the each and every sub-mind map
3) Lastly , for keywords, is to jot ALL down, first then ask, in generally, can it be simplified into a few words ?
make it as a game, akin to a AI-GPT summary, to quick sum up lengthy irrelvant words out from online courses or news [ as a reader, they're filler words to have a flow of the story, and to provide facts and opinions ]
that, in a way, if people can try and treat their own brain, as a AI-GPT like summerising machine, to free recall from the concepts and then down to the very sub details, it will basically be leading to what Justin Sung's ideal Mind Map Chunking, using pictures or relation flow,
there will be a flow, just not as easy [ which is good thing for brain to work out and retain ] to develop, and once you have those chunking / grouping/ labelling/ summery / etc down,
almost any situation or topic or idea or knowledge can be learned
importantly, i guess she is still uncomfortable with the unknown, which we are all, in regards to relaying on such [ simple yet harsh and brutally enlightening way of learning ]
By writing down all the keywords, do you mean those of the whole subject to be studied or would it be better to first write down the most general ones of the subject and then go deeper and deeper?
@@valeriasanchez93i don't really know cuz i wasn't the one who write this text but i think the second one is the one he's talking about. Anyway, you could get an idea of what to do in the previous video (study with me with instructions) of this youtube channel in the first three fragments
@@valeriasanchez93
in my own understanding and not from Dr Justin's , what i can derived from :
e.g learning a new language
theres location, food etc
within those, theres sub-categories, [ location --> Vietnam --> Hanoi --> Phu Ly ] etc
if everything seems important, at least from my interpretation and from watching videos from Justin and other UA-camrs ,
its to ask, can all those keywords, be sorted accordingly ? and then group into one big Key word and summery ?
for the above vietnam location, can it be grouped by Provicience or by Northern Vietnam Southern, and then branch off ? Which one makes more sense
Keywords, are just a sort of mini-flash card for linking, what you have understood and learned, to trigger your memories , so as to recall effectively when revising, or for this video's example, the lady's over zeaously keywords addon, is to [ Konmari Kondo it ]
and allot the subconcious brain to sort things out later on
and yes, its ever changing, meaning, there will be ver1 to 999th, to ensure you, yourself, understand from a sheer glance of the mapping, what it means. Hence Justin's older videos makes alot of sense if you link it back and rewatch them
Deep encoding is important as mentioned from Justin and others, but [ correct encoding and deeper understanding ] needs to be practise and with supervised proper if its new,
however it can be also self tested, via [ Dr benjamin Keep and others ], free active recall , with pre-determined questions for later systematic recall, on the purpose of the map and why those keypoints are there to elaborate.
someone else might be able †o further condense and simplify what im trying to say here, which taking effort , to condense something that can be expended when questioning or recalling, is the best way to ensure one understood the mapping and keyword chunking
@@Siniorus yup , its all linked
Dr Justin Sung's
Dr Benjamin Keeps'
Ryan Doris Flow and other thought process
iCanStudy recent back to process of uploading
Jim kwik's study methods,
Then theres Ultralearning as well.
for anyone who find my comment, remember that mind mapping is almost one of the major pillars of learning, there are other factors as well regarding effective and understanding of different things.
do not limit, but label and understand where the limitations are at the moment, and push further in processing your thoughts
that i think, in response to what Justin and Benjamin keep and other online coaches does, is the reason why emotional, effortful, memoriable events and life/death/ flow moment can be always recalled in exact details
Just to reply back for most folks to see,
what @TubodePVC2000 has mentioned,
other channels,
from iCanstudy to Dr Benjamin Keep,
go through other channels like Jim kwik's , Ryan Dori's flow etc will provide even broad [ puzzle over view, scaffolding of a huge building ]
above all, not to feel fear of failure, because as the brillance of a saying, we merely found out what 99 things that dont work.
Accelerating learning and other aspect of your learning life
p.s , giving Ultralearning a go, and a read is a must,
Hi! You are my role model.
Thanks Justin for recording these sessions as they have been really helpful for me :)
What tripped me up a bit was the list of keywords.
As far as I understood it in the end, it's not a literal list you write, but words you collect directly in your mind map.
And when you finished adding that level, you try to go deeper until it is too complicated or the mind map starts to get messy.
Then you pause, rearrange the mind map, group items together and continue.
I would be overwhelmed as well if I would just collect a list of words from a text and then afterwards would try to add them all at once to the mind map.
Hi Andrea, so you are saying that we should collect just the keywords that make sense for us and gradually add more ? Thank you
@@johnryan2319 At least that's how I understood it. Collect the keywords you understand, connect them to each other, try to understand more of the big picture and then one by one it's probably possible to extend the mind map with additional words.
@@andreaszweili8593 this detail “words” vs “keywords” it is a very important detail .. thank you Andreea
Thanks for giving this for free Justin
Hi, love your vids, Would appreciate if you made your next vid on how to study maths
Totally agree!!
Thanks for the idea!
I recommend people start with a topic they are very familiar with, and mind map that. So you can work on the skill of mind mapping and grouping. As opposed to to learning to mindmap, and knowledge acquisition of a subject. Learning two things at once can feel overwhelming, above and beyond the subject you are trying to learn.
really like the coaching sessions. a lot of the questions i have seem to come up from the other learners, too
I noticed that I adapted to these techniques very fast , I don't know if I am smart or I did everything wrong , but everything is working perfectly
Insights By "YouSum Live"
00:00:00 Effective learning requires simplification and grouping
00:05:17 Overloading occurs when concepts are not grouped
00:08:07 Collect keywords, then simplify for clarity
00:09:04 Pause to simplify before moving on
00:09:16 Group information actively to reduce overwhelm
00:09:39 Study broad topics before diving into details
00:14:00 Repetition is necessary for effective retention
00:17:05 Group and simplify to enhance memory
00:18:34 Simplifying and grouping information enhances understanding
00:19:45 Avoid overwhelming yourself; pause and process regularly
00:20:48 High-level understanding reduces need for extensive revision
00:22:01 Focus on keywords to improve study efficiency
00:27:02 Experimentation is key to overcoming uncertainty
00:28:05 Improved methods lead to better study outcomes
Insights By "YouSum Live"
Bro 😢
That last comment Justin made about "information over experimentation" is a pretty common thing in my AuDHD circle. I've always heard it described as "analysis paralysis."
ahhh thank you so much i was struggling with the same things!
Give this man his well deserved views, UA-cam!
Thanks for the comment friend!
I really appreciate this content, it is helping me a lot on learning how to mindmap, so thank you! I wanted to ask about dealing with the fear of forgetting the information inside the groups after simplifying, should you put them inside a flashcard (even though that would mean having a lot of flashcards) or just trust that i will remember the details inside the groups?
Interesting teaching. I think the only thing it lacked would be abstraction to concrete i.e. short topic example where all the abstract concepts are taken to pictures and therefore comes together.
Thank for the free content
No worries thanks for the comment, there is a few more consultations coming on the channel in the coming weeks.
Can you do a serie of video where you do a mind map for each subject (History, Math, Physics,…) for having exemple of how you do mind map please?
More of this type of coaching please.
Perhaps she would have benefited from her mental anchor points. Dental student- look at the whole mouth first, keywords- teeth, gums, tongue. Now group it.- teeth that tear, teeth that grind. Starting with the names of the teeth in order of placement. Now working to subtopics such as the way the tooth is structured.
Thank you Justin! Helpful
18:00 but then many concepts will be missed if we are doing mm for a big topic
You can do it! ❤
Please make video on how to learn in layers.
I am your new subscriber... Love your content❤
Great vid as always!
Glad you enjoyed!
Please make a video on how to collect important keywords, if we don't know anything about a topic because while scoping we don't read anything, we just look for keywords. Or should we read a little bit to know enough about the keyword?
Hey Justin, your work is fantastic! I just subscribed to a mind mapping/flowcharting software to help me learn a Platform to which I have a membership. It's a new business I have started in the digital marketing space. My challenge is learning how to use software applications to build a marketing business. The platform does not require coding; however, it requires a sound understanding of domains, subdomains, trigger workflows, AI plug-ins, creating content, dealing with Google ads and reviews, and so on...My Questions are: after you group the concepts, how do you think to simplify the idea. My motivation for the Mindmapping systems is specifically for me to learn about the platform as quick as possiable.
At first I thought she was at Technique Training level or Briefing. I'm impressed she was at Fundamentals 1!
Me too
When you're forming a chunk (that's made out of smaller parts) like in 6:00, do you erase these smaller parts or do you just sort of circle them, write the more general concept on top and leave the details inside?
I'm also wondering this bec if you erase smaller parts they are literally gone
One question I have is on what to make the mind-map on when faced with large topics that has several sub-topics. E.g. I have a class on Property Law and I need to learn the whole topic. But within Property Law there are many sub-topics, e.g. leases vs ownership, chattels vs land. The book will naturally include all of these spread out over the 500 pages. When starting out, would you create a mind-map of Property Law with branches going into each sub-topic (covering all 500 pages) but without detail, or would you create a mind-map of one sub-topic (e.g. 100 pages on ownership).
I would guess doing a mind-map of the entire topic first, then delve deeper into each branch by making a separate mind-map on the sub-topics. But I must admit starting with skimming the entire 500 page book, trying to group and link without actually reading the whole 500 book is hard.
same question mam, i am thinking how to do it in one cartolina… i watched atty diokno, he said by finals he made sure that the whole topic in one subject was in 1 cartolina….
is this really free?!! THANK YOU, Justin.❤
Please justin make à vidéo about how to start learn a New topic and talk what happening in your mind and your steps when you learn à New topic and how you collect the keywords and how you think about them when you wanna to make relation and talk how mind map make it easier and make clear about the role of it
There's no imagery in these mindmaps. How does this help with memorizing deep and intricate concepts, and clincal reasoning skills?
I sort of relate to her mental blocker. I’m a bit confused on how we reintroduce the details (just started briefing for context). As we group and simplify our mind map continually, we refine our big picture understanding. The act of simplifying reinforces the keywords “lost” in the process. Are the details captured again when we do revision?
Yes it's annoying to delete details
@@thebgEntertainment1 Fear of forgetting is definitely one of the biggest mental blockers. Definitely would like to get some feedback on this
Hi Justing,can you give me steps to be good at study,academic processes.I mean,what should I start with?learning how to memorize or how to focus .......,you have lots of vides,give me adequate sequences of watching your vides.I think you got me
Hello Justin! I hope you're doing well. There's something I don't quite understand in the study method you recently taught. In the evaluation stage, you suggest using the question: "How does this relate to other concepts?" to learn and then fit it into the big picture. My question is: Do I have to reason and try to find the answer using my own material, or can I use ChatGPT? I'm not sure if reasoning it on my own is better :/.
Thanks for sharing. How can i not go into details right away when textbooks are designed that way? Do i read the paragraph twice? The first time i decide what's a detail so what's to ignore and when i have understood the basics from other paragraphs i go back for those details?
First and foremost I am a complete beginner to this. I’ve tried to mind map during lectures but it feels… very unorganized. For lecture notes, should I go into it with more structure then fill in the gaps? Open to advice from the those with more experience!
Hey, make sure to pre-study before the lecture to make the entire learning process easier and more effective for yourself.
That should help you feel more organised while learning during the lecture.
@@JustinSungso we study the material that we will get before we get it?
Also what should I do after my teacher gives us a chunk of a lesson and I am studying it for the first time?do I do the same strategy?
i understand that being able to limit information to its gist is important, but how do you progress from there? sometimes you’re just required to retrieve incredibly detailed information, how would you account for that if you always group together concepts in order to make it less complex even if it is that complex?
great video, we need more of these ;)
Its like eating. consume then digest ❤
Would love to see/hear how computer science students applying these skills? Great session ❤
Yeah, I would love to see that as well
Thank you big time, Justin! Could you please suggest any books for further understanding?
i love her questions, its the same as mine
Hi Justin! How can I improve my presentation? Like, how can I practice talking? Should I memorize the map ?
Hey.. ur videos are just amazing❤ and so helpful.. could u plz make videos on how to study political science
Does mapping it out means to find relationships among grpups and prioritizing that relationships among groups?? 23:47
What does simplifying here means?? 23:25
Thank you for your great content
been watching and studying how to leearn, as a Karp
What application are you using for the mind maps? which is best?
I'm very new to the concept
Thanks a bunch G
do mind maps work for programming or coding concepts??i dont understand how mind maps might be useful for problem solving/coding since the more coding questions you solve the better you get at coding.
I think its the idea of it where you can mind map it. I still sometimes use mind maps in mathematics(if possible).
I recommended just use mind map if you can but if not just go with Feynman technique and more that works for you.
can someone tell me how you group and simplify? @14:14 or 18:39
Anyone has any advice how to pick the first keywords ? Ty
should i allow for various "colored glasses" of mindmaps- in my psych class about learning,motivation and behavior i could group by internal vs external processes, or based on time: born with ,learned, intentioned and future goals or based on brain correlates vs theories or even proactive vs reactive
this video actually made sense for me
Can you please summarize it for me? 'Cause I didn't understand anything
I hope Dr.Sung can answer this. I try to make mind maps for most subjects, and I find them to be useful in history,English , and all the science subjects except physics;however, I find mind maps to be not much of a use for math and physics typically because both subjects are application based there aren’t a lot of concepts in math and physics compared to biology or chemistry.So I can’t map really map things out. I treat both subjects differently with different learning methods, but both methods are lower order they both rely on linear note-taking. How can I improve my method of studying math?
Hi leon. I could help you. Im a physicist but i still like to repeat my studies again cause not everything stayed in my mind. For last 4 years i tried to develope a technique how to do it until i found Justin Sung. He gave my a boost to my ideas of how to think about math an physics in according of mindmaps. but to complicated to explain it here
Hi, I'm studying physics as well and I am interested in hearing what ideas you came up with!
Hi Justin, thanks for the amazingly helpful videos.
Quick Question: In general, would you say a person's system of learning is efficient if they can read and mindmap and retain most of the important points they read in the first go ? (Given that there was no way to review the summary of the content before first reading). Or is it normal to go through some content 2-3 times to have fully connected and highly retained content in your brain?
Also, is it recommended to go through the spaced repetition or would it be beneficial to go through the content twice in first go ?
Does someone know what tablet he is using for his note taking?
Which iPad software is best for mind mapping?
It would have been helpful if he had her to do the steps with an actual document...Thank you for sharing .....
Can the mental mapping method be used to learn languages? Would you be able to give me an example of how this might work?
sorry if I have mistakes in the sentence, I don't speak English
Learning languages is best done by trying to utilize it as much as possible.