Join my Learning Drops weekly newsletter here: bit.ly/4e6gX6j Every week, I distil what really works for improving results, memory, depth of understanding, and knowledge application from over a decade of coaching into bite-sized emails.
First method: What I tried for retrieving information from chatgdp; 1. I ask gdp to generate 10+ questions for the specific chapter from a textbook or the entire textbook. Then it generates. 2. I use an app with infinite canvas to answer those questions that gdp gave me. 3. Then I ask chatgdp to generate answers to the questions with context. 4. I compare and correct errors based on what I answered and the information that I gained from reading the text book. I GIVE TWO MORE METHODS IN REPLY OF MY OWN COMMENT, I wanted to share my way of using chatgdp for retrieval, I want to know what you think and what I should do differently, or if it gave u new ideas for retrieval practices etc
The second method: 1. If I have written an essay, own thoughts and reflection on a subject etc, then I copy and paste this into Chatgdp and ask it to generate an analysis based on what I have written. 2. Then I ask it to generate further questions on the topic from the analysis, and ofcourse I answer those questions freely with effective methods for retrieval. 3. I repeat this process as a discussion with chatgdp "this will require practice on how to write promts for discussion".
The third method should be the first 😂: 1. have relevant research papers, textbooks etc to acquire and properly encode the information. 2. After we are done with reading, then we use chatgdp for discussing the topics.
@@d1btd3265 you can basically copypasta a textbook into chatgpt and ask it to summarize it. (although I'm not sure how accurate it will be) or you can read the book and ask for the topics in the book.
I've been using it for studying, for writing my own syllabi and lesson plans. Not for having it give me all off the information as it gives wrong information sometimes. I do use it to explore subjects before deciding if I'm interested in them. Although you can get caught up in making it perfect. Sometimes you just have to accept what you get and move on.
Self-regulated learning: monitor your learning and make adjustments. Processing information: relationships, what is more and or less important, how it could be importantin real world, creating analogies for different groups of information, ask it examples then use own brain to (higher order:)evaluate if thats right. then ability to retrieve and use the knowledge. To specific questions make it hard for gpt to be correct. Ask it in what order is best to learn things, like a syllabus, take control of your order. You can give it different relationships in a network of info and ask it if there are other relationships that might be missing, to look for those areas. Let it facilitate parts of your higher order learning
I LOVE this! This is exactly what I've found, too. The chat bot has been awesome to "bounce ideas off of" and form connections. I've discovered that I can even tell it what I'm reaching for, and it will sometimes fill in the gaps for me. It seems a bit "closed minded" sometimes, but that's to be expected to some extent. It has really been helpful to me, even just as a debate buddy.
7:28 An analogy for information networks and pattern recognition that I use is a set of interconnecting hexagons analogous to the Giant's Causeway. The main idea is placed in the center, while the basic ideas are sprung from the short range of hexagons, and the more complicated, sophisticated, or specific ideas are sprung from the furthest edges.
That sounds like a mindmap and also like the octagonal interface of an ASK hypermedia system known as "ASK Michael" that Richard E. Osgood showcased in his 1994 dissertation, "The Conceptual Indexing of Conversational Hypertext". "ASK Michael" segmented the content of Michael Porter's book "The Competitive Advantage of Nations" into single pointed "stories" surrounded by eight categories of question lists generated from the story at the center. The eight categories were: Warnings, Opportunities, Analogies, Alternatives, Context, Specifics, Causes and Results. The online "Engines for Education" hyperbook by Roger Schank and Chip Cleary is an excellent example of this kind of hypermedia that make long videos like this one more accessible. ASK hypermedia systems (mid 1990's) "Engines for Education" online hyperbook by Roger Schank and Chip Cleary ASK Systems www.engines4ed.org/hyperbook/nodes/NODE-358-pg.html
Small correction wrt GPT versions. GPT-3 has been out for a long time (since 2020). ChatGPT (released in November 2022) uses GPT-3.5, which is substantially better than GPT-3, and fueled its astronomic growth. GPT-4 was released about a month ago and is now also availabe to ChatGPT users, as well as through API's allowing you to build applications on top of it
I prefer Bing Open AI as it provides links. I use both. What I like about it is, after getting a response. I can then pick specific elements from the first response and ask for more information and examples. It definately is a great tool. I used to finding information online, so it definately has it's limitations, but it is a great edition for searching for information and for learning. I find it helpful for when I am not even motivated to do research on my own (it is very fast). Its a good crutch as I am often tired, especially in the morning, so if I want to get better understanding (especially of math, stats and other quantitative based topics, it helps me great my brain in gear for the day). I am more of a night person, so it can be hard when I work from home to ramp up my brain in the morning before work when I need to jump and start doing research, analysis, etc.
You can also ask it to explain it to you as if you were a 10 year old. While simultaneously asking it to relate the concept to the bigger picture (AKA make it teach you using the Whole, Part, Whole method).
You are getting better and better at explaining the concepts of higher order thinking with each video. Amazing, great work! I’m also having a structure for learning in my mind and I’m happy to see my observations (organization and prioritization) are correct.
3:23 - Fascinating. That B-roll clip is of a Cyrillic keyboard. I've watched probably 100 keyboard videos because I was obsessed with mechanical keyboards for a few years, and I never even saw one video with a Cyrillic keyboard. This is so interesting. (I actually bought Cyrillic stickers once to put on my keys when I was learning to type with that alphabet.)
3:35 people don't get what I say when I tell people you need social skills to use this. You have to have a dialogue with it. An understanding of linguistics is huge with this thing.
It's not suitable at all for novices that don't know the domain vocabulary or possible lines of inquiry they might be able to pursue if they knew the keywords and questions to ask.
Justin I've really bought into your philosophy over the past month, I've watched/listened to well over half of all videos you have - great stuff. Few things I've thought about recently, moving from university to the working life: 1.) As a junior, I'm already attending a lot of meetings where the topics discussed are often centered around a specific in-depth topic of our business. Other attendees are professionals with multi-year experience and thus they already have the connections in their brains, when the discussion topic changes they right away know what we're talking about, the relevant problems and challenges - I don't. This often leads to a situation that my focus drops, since I can't make sense out of things right away. The company is midsized, so internal documentation doesn't allow me to just "learn things" on my own. I'm wondering, how could I make the most sense out of these meetings? Can't ask too many questions, since we're often on a tight schedule. Feel like there's more value to be extracted in these meetings, if I knew how to parse the discussions better. 2.) What are your thoughts on the "10000 hour rule" framework? If we buy into that philosophy, but apply your core ideas -> How much could we reduce the requirement of 10000 hours, if most of the practise we conduct is higher order learning or in the higher tiers of Bloom's taxonomy? E.g., could we reduce the hours required to become an expert to 7000 hours? 3.) Will you ever create a product on your website, that would allow self-service learning? The coaching sounds great, but I'm not sure if I could make it work. I'd gladly buy some product off you that I could consume at my own pace though. Do you know of Healthygamer, something similar to Dr.K's Guide, it's a good product to sell and makes sense businesswise, scales better compared to coaching. Maybe in the future? Thank you
Icanstudy is a course that you can go through at your own pace. You'll have to ask for feedback to make things go smoother and not waste time making mistakes you aren't aware of, specially at the beginning, but you can ask it whenever you want.
the 10 000 hours rule is just an idea peddled by pop-science writer Malcolm Gladwell, who doesn't really have the actual academic rigor supporting his books thesis. He's a writer, not an academic. There's no hard rule that it *must* be 10 000 hours. And different skills would take different lengths to master. As well as the differing ability/capacity of individuals to achieve mastery. At most you can say you need to spend a long time to gain mastery, which is something everyone already knows intuitively anyway.
Well, if you know how to structure prompts do it with the framework of your subconscious mind (ua-cam.com/video/Solb9uA-tgQ/v-deo.html... The Power of Your Subconscious Mind (1963) by Joseph Murphy). I think this could help.
He's trying to get you to buy his courses thats why he's not giving you real ways to apply it. Or trying to force you to apply this 'higher level learning' on your own, by making you come up with your own ways to use the information from his videos =)
Buy his course as someone in Technique Training I think his course is amazing he teaches you how to experiment and expand your ideas and to test and hypothesize i researched and all of the things he says aligns
I'm still in high school and for the past year I have been using chatgpt for all my homework and even essays. I also cheat on tests, so I am a straight A's student. Recently, I started to feel bad about it, and started to do my homework by myself. Today, I got an essay to write, but I absolutely CAN NOT write. So, is it bad if I get chatgpt to write an essay, then I'll read it, just to get an idea what it should be about, and then I'll write the essay by myself based on what I read?
TAKEAWAYS - Build a SYSTEM around AI, so you don't need to change every time it upgrades. - Nowadays, what's valuable it's not ISOLATED (pre-structural) knowledge, but EXTENDED ABSTRACT knowledge - You need HIGH ORDER KNOWLEDGE. For that, you need to train your COGNITIVE LOAD tolarance. (SELF REGULATED) - 4 key process: 1) What to learn; 2) Finding appropriate information; 3) Processing information; 4) Retrieving information - DEEP PROCESSING is the vulgar equivalent of INTELLIGENCE. Some people has more of it, but it can bem infinitly trained. - Limitations of ChatGPT: 1) It doesn't know what is factually true information (for now); 2) It's limited by the quality of your inquiry; It struggles when you give it too many parameters or are too specific - You can use AI to assist you with ORDER CONTROL of your learning rather than using the textbook order - Use AI to theorise, generalise, hypothesise, reflect (HIGH ORDER LEARNING). You have to have ideais and ask AI foi other ideas for you to think. - AI it's not that good for retriveing (low order learning). Do it yourserlf.
Hey! I'm totally with you on the evolution of AI in business. It’s fascinating to see how collaborative AI can streamline operations and boost efficiency.
Thanks for all explanations. however quick suggestion, it would be really great, if you limit videos timings not more that 15-20 minutes. this is based on my personal experince. Keep insipiring and keep guiding.thanks.
Working on a bunch of large writing projects, 6 hours a day for like a month lol idk ama this shit is amazing I can speak to the limits and what it can do
Maybe make a technical video on storing chats in a vector database? I don't know many videos that have shown vector database retrieval in a custom chatGPT interface using the API key, but storing in vectors seems promising for the future in my opinion.
*purpose of memory retaining for the LLM model as the chat length memory is short, and search on chat documents can lend a hand to jog its memory although not perfect.
As a teacher, it's risky calling this the "future of learning." If you're a conscientious, studious person you'll probably make it work for you. If you're like the overwhelming majority of the rest people using ChatGPT as a "study aid" (and I use that term *very* loosely), you'll only end up setting yourself back even further.
@@joyalshaji2730 I'd disagree as someone who's a developer, who knows a couple of programming languages, but was forced to do something in an entirely different language. By using ChatGPT and reading up on the explanations (double-checking the documentation) I was able to write an application, that is somewhat failsafe and accomplishes what it was expected to.
Hey Justin, hope everything is fine . You didn't release a video this week. Is it possible u create a video using the latest version of chat gpt ? Thank you
haha i loved the part where you talked about bad habits and how they will catch up with you eventually. They caught me in university. The bad habits in question were doing absolutely fuck all. :D
I hate how useless chatGPT is at university maths. It cant answer basic questions from my course :( When I ask questions, I can never trust if the answer is correct
You ask the right questions to engage the evaluate and analyze steps of the Bloom's hierarchy to find relationships by contrasting and comparing. This is the step. How are concepts related.
Remember when airplanes and calculators became more mainstream? Human calculators adapt digital calculators into different jobs that solved problems beyond the low level stuff like memorizing sin/cosine tables and multiplication tables. Long distance travel by train and ship was lower in demand in exchange of the more convenient option to fly to a destination. AI isn't gonna eliminate higher-order problem solving, lower-order retrieval recall, or specialization; but it will remove mentoring jobs for workers who are generalists.
Thank you so much for this Dr Justin! ❤I was hoping you would release a video on ChatGPT and I am so glad you did! I found the advice on using ChatGPT as 'soundboard' and a 'gap checker' to be game-changing! 🤯 And I see that in essence, it is not the answers that matter, but the kinds of and the quality of questions one asks, and I think iCanStudy course, which I've been a subscriber to for a while now, does such a masterful job at training one to ask such kinds of questions! ❤ Thanks for the wonderful course and the great content you put out here on UA-cam!
why does the following prompt similar to Jusin's does not work? does not work as if do not give an order that is not linear, but an order that supports higher order learning. hey chatgpt i want you to act as an expert in ISO 9001 and imagine i am complete beginner. What are the most important concepts from this topic to start with and in which order? give me a brief overview of those concepts and your reasoning why it is best to learn them in that order.
I like to use higher order thiking while I'm talking to me out loud. I just can't understand information actively if I am reading silently. Do you think this is a good way to forcing myself to think better? It's like using active recall with these thinking strategies. At least I try and I think it helps me to feel motivated because I feel like I'm learning. It's so good when the knowledge solidify in memory because of active recall.
When and where will your book chapter be published? Something I’d really love to read as a msc Global Studies student who is interested in the digitalisation of society and its implications
I like your passion for learning brother could you please advice me from your understanding top 5 books that makes me topper and qualify competitive exams. - Follower from India.🙏🏾
@slerpaway8164 when I don't understand a piece of code. I can copy and paste it. Additionally, I ask chatGPT for analogies on concepts (e.g., classes, objects, for loops, functional programming, etc.) I even ask it for pros and cons of things. Very useful for syntax like how list comprehensions are meant to look.
@ 25;30 U said use chaptGPT to create analogies so you can spend more time evaluating at HOL. I know you said creating analogies is cog load but isn't it way more helpful to create it than to evaluate?
When reading a textbook, you say to skip the "understanding" tier of Bloom's Taxonomy and ask questions/analyze. I don't understand the information when I do this. However, this works for me very well in lectures or when watching videos. Would it be better to pause after reading and understanding a chunk of information and try to organize/analyze it rather than struggling to skip up the hierarchy? Is this something that just comes with time or is there a strategy that makes this easier?
He now just repeats the same points in every video and makes the video extra long. I liked watching him but now he’s just wasting time. All so we can buy his course.....
@@terminallucidity that is true but he makes the video excessively long when he could summarise it or direct the viewer to the explanation video. At the end of the day he only does this so that he doesn’t deleve into more detail the techniques he talks about which means as a subscriber his videos aren’t worth watching because he doesn’t talk about anything new.
You talked about intelligence being only a way of better thinking and that people who appear to have a Natural talent for certain topics are only thinking differently about them and are therefore able to facilitate knowledge easier. Could you maybe make a Video about typical frameworks for the most common topics (for example: math, philosophy and learning a Sport), how they differ and which mindset to use to make learning each topic easier?
Would it be true to say that procedural knowledge would be the last to go? Within declarative knowledge it would be higher order learning. But procedural would go after declarative if it ever should/does go
Hello! Great video Justin, i waited for this. Unfortunately not even 2 weeks ago ChatGPT has been banned from my country :D, i love living in a medieval town. I wanted to ask if someone can suggest me books for learning about the concepts he mentioned in the first part, like the Bloom and the Solo taxonomies. I'll try ask Notion Ai about in the meanwhile and see if is someway useful.
I have problem with staying focused and staying consistent but I've always wanted to be a straight A student and desipte my willings to put in the effort I end up with C grades due to poor focus, poor discipline and poor techique, do you think, an average person like me would be able to get straight A's ???
May I suggest you talk to a psychologist because the way you self describe, you might have ADHD. I was only diagnosed when I was in my 40's. BTW: there a few great ytubbers about adults with ADHD. How to ADHD, Jessica McCabe also Rick Green.
Hi Justin, I love your videos I have a problem and I don't know if you can help me. In my Uni we have one final exam at the end of the year for all the subjects. I went from a system where assignments are consistent through the year and not all at once. It makes it very hard to adapt myself. I started my 3rd year, my grades are just a little above average and I don't feel like I mastered the materials. So I would like to have advices about how I could improve and master sthg when the exam and the course are really far apart . Sorry if my writing is a little messy, it is not my first language
I learned more from self learning than university lectures. For the most part, university lectures are a summary of textbook chapters and there is pressure on the faculty to cover content. They focus more on the math and problem solving and less on the actual concepts. In my free time, I revisit the university concepts I could not fully grasp at that time. There have been so many times when I just used to mechanically solve problems following a defined procedure. Now I have started to understand the why of the procedures after passing out 😛
Too much waffling about learning and very little discussion about chat GPT and AI. Rather than constantly reiterating the need to learn higher order, just link the many videos you discuss this in. AI is not very expert in my experience and finds it difficult to answer expert level questions, so it waters down the question to what it thinks the question is based on an assumption that the question is not properly asked. This is a big disappointment. Perhaps in the future there will be ways to request expert level responses instead of casual inquiry.
Hi! In the future would you consider collaborating with an illustrator to create a fully illustrated video? Your videos are rich in helpful content however I believe this would significantly increase viewers. This is because illustrated videos of rich content tend to be more engaging for the viewer. Although your videos have timestamp headings, I find I have to watch them in parts. Examples of channels that do this are: Amoeba Sisters, Psych2go, Improvement Pill etc Thanks :))
Of course I wouldn’t rely on chat gtp 100% since as he said I the video as it’s a language model and there were cases in which it pushed misinformation when used as a google and well tried to back.misinformation. Can’t deny it’s potential though.
Chat GPT coming out is like the first camera coming out. Everyone was worried artists would get lazy but what tends to happen is the bounds of what it is possible to create get expanded
Join my Learning Drops weekly newsletter here: bit.ly/4e6gX6j
Every week, I distil what really works for improving results, memory, depth of understanding, and knowledge application from over a decade of coaching into bite-sized emails.
First method: What I tried for retrieving information from chatgdp; 1. I ask gdp to generate 10+ questions for the specific chapter from a textbook or the entire textbook. Then it generates. 2. I use an app with infinite canvas to answer those questions that gdp gave me. 3. Then I ask chatgdp to generate answers to the questions with context. 4. I compare and correct errors based on what I answered and the information that I gained from reading the text book. I GIVE TWO MORE METHODS IN REPLY OF MY OWN COMMENT, I wanted to share my way of using chatgdp for retrieval, I want to know what you think and what I should do differently, or if it gave u new ideas for retrieval practices etc
The second method: 1. If I have written an essay, own thoughts and reflection on a subject etc, then I copy and paste this into Chatgdp and ask it to generate an analysis based on what I have written. 2. Then I ask it to generate further questions on the topic from the analysis, and ofcourse I answer those questions freely with effective methods for retrieval. 3. I repeat this process as a discussion with chatgdp "this will require practice on how to write promts for discussion".
The third method should be the first 😂: 1. have relevant research papers, textbooks etc to acquire and properly encode the information. 2. After we are done with reading, then we use chatgdp for discussing the topics.
I know no one likes to be corrected on the internet... But it's ChatGPT, not GDP.
How did you upload a book for it to look through
@@d1btd3265 you can basically copypasta a textbook into chatgpt and ask it to summarize it. (although I'm not sure how accurate it will be) or you can read the book and ask for the topics in the book.
I've been using it for studying, for writing my own syllabi and lesson plans. Not for having it give me all off the information as it gives wrong information sometimes. I do use it to explore subjects before deciding if I'm interested in them.
Although you can get caught up in making it perfect. Sometimes you just have to accept what you get and move on.
Self-regulated learning: monitor your learning and make adjustments. Processing information: relationships, what is more and or less important, how it could be importantin real world, creating analogies for different groups of information, ask it examples then use own brain to (higher order:)evaluate if thats right. then ability to retrieve and use the knowledge. To specific questions make it hard for gpt to be correct. Ask it in what order is best to learn things, like a syllabus, take control of your order. You can give it different relationships in a network of info and ask it if there are other relationships that might be missing, to look for those areas. Let it facilitate parts of your higher order learning
I LOVE this! This is exactly what I've found, too. The chat bot has been awesome to "bounce ideas off of" and form connections. I've discovered that I can even tell it what I'm reaching for, and it will sometimes fill in the gaps for me. It seems a bit "closed minded" sometimes, but that's to be expected to some extent. It has really been helpful to me, even just as a debate buddy.
Literally one of the few people who actually know about learning and teaching it well.
I've been ooking for this kinda video for a while this will be so useful for me
just getting into ChatGPT.. super awesome breakdown!!
I know what you mean,ooking always works out for me,shame not many people know about it
bruh I've ooked for this shit for a long time.. Can't wait to integrate it
I just ooked all over my dog, shit.
@@fk_torty do you please give me link of chatgpt
7:28 An analogy for information networks and pattern recognition that I use is a set of interconnecting hexagons analogous to the Giant's Causeway. The main idea is placed in the center, while the basic ideas are sprung from the short range of hexagons, and the more complicated, sophisticated, or specific ideas are sprung from the furthest edges.
That sounds like a mindmap and also like the octagonal interface of an ASK hypermedia system known as "ASK Michael" that Richard E. Osgood showcased in his 1994 dissertation, "The Conceptual Indexing of Conversational Hypertext". "ASK Michael" segmented the content of Michael Porter's book "The Competitive Advantage of Nations" into single pointed "stories" surrounded by eight categories of question lists generated from the story at the center. The eight categories were: Warnings, Opportunities, Analogies, Alternatives, Context, Specifics, Causes and Results. The online "Engines for Education" hyperbook by Roger Schank and Chip Cleary is an excellent example of this kind of hypermedia that make long videos like this one more accessible.
ASK hypermedia systems (mid 1990's)
"Engines for Education" online hyperbook by Roger Schank and Chip Cleary
ASK Systems
www.engines4ed.org/hyperbook/nodes/NODE-358-pg.html
Small correction wrt GPT versions. GPT-3 has been out for a long time (since 2020). ChatGPT (released in November 2022) uses GPT-3.5, which is substantially better than GPT-3, and fueled its astronomic growth. GPT-4 was released about a month ago and is now also availabe to ChatGPT users, as well as through API's allowing you to build applications on top of it
I prefer Bing Open AI as it provides links. I use both. What I like about it is, after getting a response. I can then pick specific elements from the first response and ask for more information and examples. It definately is a great tool. I used to finding information online, so it definately has it's limitations, but it is a great edition for searching for information and for learning. I find it helpful for when I am not even motivated to do research on my own (it is very fast). Its a good crutch as I am often tired, especially in the morning, so if I want to get better understanding (especially of math, stats and other quantitative based topics, it helps me great my brain in gear for the day). I am more of a night person, so it can be hard when I work from home to ramp up my brain in the morning before work when I need to jump and start doing research, analysis, etc.
You can also ask it to explain it to you as if you were a 10 year old. While simultaneously asking it to relate the concept to the bigger picture (AKA make it teach you using the Whole, Part, Whole method).
You are getting better and better at explaining the concepts of higher order thinking with each video. Amazing, great work! I’m also having a structure for learning in my mind and I’m happy to see my observations (organization and prioritization) are correct.
The more he studies higher order learning, the more he understands and the simplier his explanations get.
Happy to hear that!
3:23 - Fascinating. That B-roll clip is of a Cyrillic keyboard. I've watched probably 100 keyboard videos because I was obsessed with mechanical keyboards for a few years, and I never even saw one video with a Cyrillic keyboard. This is so interesting.
(I actually bought Cyrillic stickers once to put on my keys when I was learning to type with that alphabet.)
3:35 people don't get what I say when I tell people you need social skills to use this. You have to have a dialogue with it. An understanding of linguistics is huge with this thing.
It's not suitable at all for novices that don't know the domain vocabulary or possible lines of inquiry they might be able to pursue if they knew the keywords and questions to ask.
tldw: ask gpt to create analogy, give relationships (few shot learning) and ask gpt for missing relationships
Thank you so much
What you mean by "missing relationships"?
Justin I've really bought into your philosophy over the past month, I've watched/listened to well over half of all videos you have - great stuff. Few things I've thought about recently, moving from university to the working life:
1.) As a junior, I'm already attending a lot of meetings where the topics discussed are often centered around a specific in-depth topic of our business. Other attendees are professionals with multi-year experience and thus they already have the connections in their brains, when the discussion topic changes they right away know what we're talking about, the relevant problems and challenges - I don't.
This often leads to a situation that my focus drops, since I can't make sense out of things right away. The company is midsized, so internal documentation doesn't allow me to just "learn things" on my own. I'm wondering, how could I make the most sense out of these meetings? Can't ask too many questions, since we're often on a tight schedule. Feel like there's more value to be extracted in these meetings, if I knew how to parse the discussions better.
2.) What are your thoughts on the "10000 hour rule" framework? If we buy into that philosophy, but apply your core ideas -> How much could we reduce the requirement of 10000 hours, if most of the practise we conduct is higher order learning or in the higher tiers of Bloom's taxonomy? E.g., could we reduce the hours required to become an expert to 7000 hours?
3.) Will you ever create a product on your website, that would allow self-service learning? The coaching sounds great, but I'm not sure if I could make it work. I'd gladly buy some product off you that I could consume at my own pace though. Do you know of Healthygamer, something similar to Dr.K's Guide, it's a good product to sell and makes sense businesswise, scales better compared to coaching. Maybe in the future?
Thank you
Icanstudy is a course that you can go through at your own pace. You'll have to ask for feedback to make things go smoother and not waste time making mistakes you aren't aware of, specially at the beginning, but you can ask it whenever you want.
the 10 000 hours rule is just an idea peddled by pop-science writer Malcolm Gladwell, who doesn't really have the actual academic rigor supporting his books thesis. He's a writer, not an academic. There's no hard rule that it *must* be 10 000 hours. And different skills would take different lengths to master. As well as the differing ability/capacity of individuals to achieve mastery. At most you can say you need to spend a long time to gain mastery, which is something everyone already knows intuitively anyway.
I hope it's not too much to ask for, but a session with a concrete example how you'd use it, would be super helpful. 🙏🏼
Well, if you know how to structure prompts do it with the framework of your subconscious mind (ua-cam.com/video/Solb9uA-tgQ/v-deo.html... The Power of Your Subconscious Mind (1963) by Joseph Murphy).
I think this could help.
Yeah I was also questioning the same thing
He's trying to get you to buy his courses thats why he's not giving you real ways to apply it. Or trying to force you to apply this 'higher level learning' on your own, by making you come up with your own ways to use the information from his videos =)
Buy his course as someone in Technique Training I think his course is amazing he teaches you how to experiment and expand your ideas and to test and hypothesize i researched and all of the things he says aligns
I'm still in high school and for the past year I have been using chatgpt for all my homework and even essays. I also cheat on tests, so I am a straight A's student. Recently, I started to feel bad about it, and started to do my homework by myself. Today, I got an essay to write, but I absolutely CAN NOT write. So, is it bad if I get chatgpt to write an essay, then I'll read it, just to get an idea what it should be about, and then I'll write the essay by myself based on what I read?
Make sure you learn from the essay
Learn the essay as if it came out of you.
you're pathetic
I actually discovered chatGPT before it blew up. I was so confused because not many people knew it. Im happy chatGPT is getting recognition.
You are cool
TAKEAWAYS
- Build a SYSTEM around AI, so you don't need to change every time it upgrades.
- Nowadays, what's valuable it's not ISOLATED (pre-structural) knowledge, but EXTENDED ABSTRACT knowledge
- You need HIGH ORDER KNOWLEDGE. For that, you need to train your COGNITIVE LOAD tolarance. (SELF REGULATED)
- 4 key process: 1) What to learn; 2) Finding appropriate information; 3) Processing information; 4) Retrieving information
- DEEP PROCESSING is the vulgar equivalent of INTELLIGENCE. Some people has more of it, but it can bem infinitly trained.
- Limitations of ChatGPT: 1) It doesn't know what is factually true information (for now); 2) It's limited by the quality of your inquiry; It struggles when you give it too many parameters or are too specific
- You can use AI to assist you with ORDER CONTROL of your learning rather than using the textbook order
- Use AI to theorise, generalise, hypothesise, reflect (HIGH ORDER LEARNING). You have to have ideais and ask AI foi other ideas for you to think.
- AI it's not that good for retriveing (low order learning). Do it yourserlf.
An understanding, yes, which is allowed through quick and accurate summarization
Thank you for making such a deep and comprehensive guide for this! I ask it to generate practical situations of concepts and it does pretty good
Hey! I'm totally with you on the evolution of AI in business. It’s fascinating to see how collaborative AI can streamline operations and boost efficiency.
One of his best videos so far. Keep up the great content Justin. Thank you for sharing your thoughts on this ✨
Thank you! Will do!
Thanks for all explanations. however quick suggestion, it would be really great, if you limit videos timings not more that 15-20 minutes. this is based on my personal experince. Keep insipiring and keep guiding.thanks.
Working on a bunch of large writing projects, 6 hours a day for like a month lol idk ama this shit is amazing I can speak to the limits and what it can do
Another useful extension-
UA-cam Summary with ChatGPT & Notes-This can help us study videos
He starts talking about how to use GPT effectively at min. 22:00
I’ve made over 1000 practice exam questions with gpt!! I love it!!
Maybe make a technical video on storing chats in a vector database? I don't know many videos that have shown vector database retrieval in a custom chatGPT interface using the API key, but storing in vectors seems promising for the future in my opinion.
*purpose of memory retaining for the LLM model as the chat length memory is short, and search on chat documents can lend a hand to jog its memory although not perfect.
What is vector database?
As a teacher, it's risky calling this the "future of learning."
If you're a conscientious, studious person you'll probably make it work for you. If you're like the overwhelming majority of the rest people using ChatGPT as a "study aid" (and I use that term *very* loosely), you'll only end up setting yourself back even further.
right on, you gotta grind, hustle and bustle to stay at the top. no amount of chatbot teaching is gonna change that.
@@joyalshaji2730 I'd disagree as someone who's a developer, who knows a couple of programming languages, but was forced to do something in an entirely different language. By using ChatGPT and reading up on the explanations (double-checking the documentation) I was able to write an application, that is somewhat failsafe and accomplishes what it was expected to.
Hey Justin, hope everything is fine . You didn't release a video this week.
Is it possible u create a video using the latest version of chat gpt ?
Thank you
Finally the gods have answered our prayers thank you Justin 🙏🙏🙏
haha i loved the part where you talked about bad habits and how they will catch up with you eventually.
They caught me in university. The bad habits in question were doing absolutely fuck all. :D
thank you very much for this guide! I'm a teacher and I'll be introducing AI to my students soon. This is extremely valuable information :)
Have been waiting for you to post this Justin
I hate how useless chatGPT is at university maths. It cant answer basic questions from my course :( When I ask questions, I can never trust if the answer is correct
I think the reason I've been a good student my whole life is because i've been thinking similarly to this.
I didn't know someone had this idea this well when i need it
Hi sir , we need another video on some steps how to build a higher order learning skill
You ask the right questions to engage the evaluate and analyze steps of the Bloom's hierarchy to find relationships by contrasting and comparing. This is the step. How are concepts related.
A ChatGPT video straight to Create/Evaluate on Bloom's scale. Justin is based _AF._
When that book comes out, please give us a heads up.
you are the G.O.A.T of teaching, sir.
Great content❤
Remember when airplanes and calculators became more mainstream?
Human calculators adapt digital calculators into different jobs that solved problems beyond the low level stuff like memorizing sin/cosine tables and multiplication tables. Long distance travel by train and ship was lower in demand in exchange of the more convenient option to fly to a destination.
AI isn't gonna eliminate higher-order problem solving, lower-order retrieval recall, or specialization; but it will remove mentoring jobs for workers who are generalists.
Video starts at 22:00. Skip the beginning if you’ve already watched this guy before
You are so helpful that it makes me want to cry 😭 thank you!!
Thank you so much for this Dr Justin! ❤I was hoping you would release a video on ChatGPT and I am so glad you did! I found the advice on using ChatGPT as 'soundboard' and a 'gap checker' to be game-changing! 🤯
And I see that in essence, it is not the answers that matter, but the kinds of and the quality of questions one asks, and I think iCanStudy course, which I've been a subscriber to for a while now, does such a masterful job at training one to ask such kinds of questions! ❤
Thanks for the wonderful course and the great content you put out here on UA-cam!
Glad you found this video useful!
why does the following prompt similar to Jusin's does not work?
does not work as if do not give an order that is not linear, but an order that supports higher order learning.
hey chatgpt i want you to act as an expert in ISO 9001 and imagine i am complete beginner. What are the most important concepts from this topic to start with and in which order? give me a brief overview of those concepts and your reasoning why it is best to learn them in that order.
Great job, thanks for sharing!
Cheers from Sweden 🕺🏻🪩
New subscriber!! ❤
Just getting started on my AI journey - couldn't have asked for a better foundation.
I like to use higher order thiking while I'm talking to me out loud. I just can't understand information actively if I am reading silently. Do you think this is a good way to forcing myself to think better? It's like using active recall with these thinking strategies. At least I try and I think it helps me to feel motivated because I feel like I'm learning. It's so good when the knowledge solidify in memory because of active recall.
I would like to enroll your "Ican Study" but its too expensive for me. Anyway, thank you for your impeccable UA-cam videos on learning effectively.
When and where will your book chapter be published? Something I’d really love to read as a msc Global Studies student who is interested in the digitalisation of society and its implications
Best on UA-cam! 😊
I like your passion for learning brother could you please advice me from your understanding top 5 books that makes me topper and qualify competitive exams. - Follower from India.🙏🏾
I was waiting for this video
Thank you Justin! Will support you always!
This video is excellent.
I make videos on the science of happiness and success. I'd like to ask your editor where he learned how to edit like this?
Can you provide some recommendations to videos that aid the maximisation of input instructions to get the best possible output ?
Been using it to learn Python and its bren great.
How are you using it to learn python
@slerpaway8164 when I don't understand a piece of code. I can copy and paste it. Additionally, I ask chatGPT for analogies on concepts (e.g., classes, objects, for loops, functional programming, etc.)
I even ask it for pros and cons of things. Very useful for syntax like how list comprehensions are meant to look.
Dude, what's your skin care routine?
Is it the same browser which failed to crack UPSC prelims?
Justin, what do you think of what people call "second brain"?
@ 25;30 U said use chaptGPT to create analogies so you can spend more time evaluating at HOL. I know you said creating analogies is cog load but isn't it way more helpful to create it than to evaluate?
When reading a textbook, you say to skip the "understanding" tier of Bloom's Taxonomy and ask questions/analyze. I don't understand the information when I do this. However, this works for me very well in lectures or when watching videos. Would it be better to pause after reading and understanding a chunk of information and try to organize/analyze it rather than struggling to skip up the hierarchy? Is this something that just comes with time or is there a strategy that makes this easier?
I don’t get how you can spend so much time on a video yet say absolutely nothing at the same time. So much fluff just get to the point please
He now just repeats the same points in every video and makes the video extra long. I liked watching him but now he’s just wasting time. All so we can buy his course.....
@@terminallucidity that is true but he makes the video excessively long when he could summarise it or direct the viewer to the explanation video.
At the end of the day he only does this so that he doesn’t deleve into more detail the techniques he talks about which means as a subscriber his videos aren’t worth watching because he doesn’t talk about anything new.
You talked about intelligence being only a way of better thinking and that people who appear to have a Natural talent for certain topics are only thinking differently about them and are therefore able to facilitate knowledge easier. Could you maybe make a Video about typical frameworks for the most common topics (for example: math, philosophy and learning a Sport), how they differ and which mindset to use to make learning each topic easier?
Brilliant video
Would it be true to say that procedural knowledge would be the last to go? Within declarative knowledge it would be higher order learning. But procedural would go after declarative if it ever should/does go
I feel like this is something Alhaitham would study.
Thank you ❤
Hello! Great video Justin, i waited for this. Unfortunately not even 2 weeks ago ChatGPT has been banned from my country :D, i love living in a medieval town. I wanted to ask if someone can suggest me books for learning about the concepts he mentioned in the first part, like the Bloom and the Solo taxonomies. I'll try ask Notion Ai about in the meanwhile and see if is someway useful.
Thank you! The video was so good, it made me think, "is this video A.I generated?"
This is a video I want to see 🔥
love the new haircut lol
Have you seen any change in higher order learning/thinking with GPT 4? Thanks a lot for the great video!
Hey Justin, with Chap-GPT 4 what has changed from your video?
I have problem with staying focused and staying consistent but I've always wanted to be a straight A student and desipte my willings to put in the effort I end up with C grades due to poor focus, poor discipline and poor techique, do you think, an average person like me would be able to get straight A's ???
May I suggest you talk to a psychologist because the way you self describe, you might have ADHD. I was only diagnosed when I was in my 40's. BTW: there a few great ytubbers about adults with ADHD. How to ADHD, Jessica McCabe also Rick Green.
ChatGPT is the future and it's here now.
man got a hair buff
AI for president!
Hi Justin, I love your videos
I have a problem and I don't know if you can help me.
In my Uni we have one final exam at the end of the year for all the subjects.
I went from a system where assignments are consistent through the year and not all at once. It makes it very hard to adapt myself.
I started my 3rd year, my grades are just a little above average and I don't feel like I mastered the materials.
So I would like to have advices about how I could improve and master sthg when the exam and the course are really far apart .
Sorry if my writing is a little messy, it is not my first language
I learned more from self learning than university lectures. For the most part, university lectures are a summary of textbook chapters and there is pressure on the faculty to cover content. They focus more on the math and problem solving and less on the actual concepts. In my free time, I revisit the university concepts I could not fully grasp at that time. There have been so many times when I just used to mechanically solve problems following a defined procedure. Now I have started to understand the why of the procedures after passing out 😛
Woah
Are you Chinese or Korean?😮
wow this video is rock solid!
kinda useless to me
get the feeling that the script was written by chatgpt
It just doesn't make sense study anymore.
I hate lineair teaching it blocks you from learning in a way that helps you
Commenting for the algorithm
🫶
The video didn't show how to use chat gpt ,I watched the video it was a waste of time
Too much waffling about learning and very little discussion about chat GPT and AI. Rather than constantly reiterating the need to learn higher order, just link the many videos you discuss this in. AI is not very expert in my experience and finds it difficult to answer expert level questions, so it waters down the question to what it thinks the question is based on an assumption that the question is not properly asked. This is a big disappointment. Perhaps in the future there will be ways to request expert level responses instead of casual inquiry.
The only reason i don't watch your videos even though i know it will be helpful is that your videos are so long
I can't wait till AI can just live for me. Smooth sailing. 🤤
They should have learned how to LEARN in grammar school, high school. By college it's too late.
jaldi jaldi comment kr deta hun likes milenge 🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂
Could you make your videos shorter please?
I need time to study.
damnn thats a long ass intro
Hi! In the future would you consider collaborating with an illustrator to create a fully illustrated video? Your videos are rich in helpful content however I believe this would significantly increase viewers. This is because illustrated videos of rich content tend to be more engaging for the viewer. Although your videos have timestamp headings, I find I have to watch them in parts. Examples of channels that do this are: Amoeba Sisters, Psych2go, Improvement Pill etc Thanks :))
Yooo
ChatGPT does feel like a super google for sure! Just hope it doesn't make it so easy that people get lazy and barely remember anything.
Of course I wouldn’t rely on chat gtp 100% since as he said I the video as it’s a language model and there were cases in which it pushed misinformation when used as a google and well tried to back.misinformation. Can’t deny it’s potential though.
Don't care what other people do. Care what you do
@@HelloThere-xs8ss what other people do is very important.
@@BrianGlaze No
Chat GPT coming out is like the first camera coming out. Everyone was worried artists would get lazy but what tends to happen is the bounds of what it is possible to create get expanded