The one's who typed the information, noted it faster than those who wrote it down. Those who were writing it down had to rationalize and rephrase the context to write it shorter and faster, not to fall behind. They're rethinking the main sentence, thus, coming closer to understanding it than those who typed everything word by word.
Pretty accurate I think. When it goes too fast and I am starting to forget half a sentence I focus hard on what was just said and when I type I'm more focused on literally copying every word.
Me too, oftentimes I end up making _some_ of my notes more of a concept map-looking thing than walls of text. Others, I just write only a line or two of the important bits.
true. I always prefer writing my notes with a pen and blank paper so that I can somehow structure the information to my own understanding, while if I type it I would've typed exactly how the information was given and I wouldn't understand anything, that's just copying.
Yes...I don't think it's soley about the physical aspect of writing rather than having to identify the key information and phrase it succinctly. I do think the physical aspect helps as it's engaging another sense though. A little discouraging as I can't write by hand anymore but I utilize the 'explain it to someone else's method a lot
What I learned from this video: - Retaining information is more important than just consuming it - Your goal should be to retain information so you can use it at right time and the right place. - When you put in more effort you retain information better. Ex. Take notes on paper instead of your laptop or mobile. - Repetition is key - Reread information you wanna remember, Talk about it with your friends, Create a summary and share it with friends who have similar interests. My tip: Make a summary of what you learned from the video like I did and chances are you will remember it for longer😊 Thank you
Great summary, but I had an objection at the "Example": It's not about "Putting effort into retaining information will make you remember things better" That is more of a personal choice or issue, you could write on a device and still remember it extremely clear, it depends on how important you want it to be. Taking notes on a paper however is great, but it's a hassle. Sure, putting effort into writing on a paper will retain an information better, but was it easy to store and keep it safe? And what if something happens to the papers? Are you going to rewrite your whole informations? I doubt. It's up to the person's preference on how they take notes and remember their "aha!" Moments, in fact, if you write things in a device, it's more accessible and way more convenient! Not to mention the endless space to store your information for free! EVEN BETTER! Some notes let's you save to clouds/drive/online so you can access it anywhere you go (also when your phone is lost, or to be replaced) Downside however is when you didn't bring your phone around or when it's dead (no battery) But it's not like it's any different from note pads, you think you can store your informations without bringing them with you? Yeah... I doubt. And wow, this is a long comment, anyways, in conclusion, it's not about how any method is better, it's a personal choice of which is greater.
Exactly the same with me! Plus, instead of underlining stuff when studying for a quiz or an exam, I write questions related to the topic and ask myself.
@@pixelrina thats the right method.we need to create questions from each line by understanding the concept,also creating short notes and memory capsules also work for quick revision.
That strategy actually has a name for it, the Feynman Technique. There's a couple of videos here on UA-cam explaining the concept, but your comment is essentially what it is.
@@stanleywu827 I've heard about that theory, actually our left brain is connected to our right arm and our right brain is connected to our left arm. Left brain is for creativity and right is for learning stuff. So technically you don't have to learn to write from left hand you just need to make use of your left hand more than you usually do, or if you are a left hander then you have to use right hand more. It is scientifically proven. It works.😉
Does this mean that the dumber I am, the more effort I need to learn, and the longer I'd retain the information? If biology knowledge enters my head swimmingly, and civics knowledge does not, I'd retain civics knowledge longer than biology knowledge?
What i have learned from the video: • the more effort you make in trying to study something the more it will stay with you. • taking note by hand is far more efficient than taking notes on digital devices because it makes you memorise the information for longer time. • try to remind yourself about what you studied or read about by talking about it with friends or explaining it to them
What I learnt from this video: The effort principle. The more efforts it takes to understand something, the longer it will be retained. That's why taking notes with pen & paper is more helpful because it takes more efforts and requires more understanding of the topic. Also, after taking notes, it will be awesome to go through the lessons in the text again, and after that, teaching others will be helpful. This is my summary. And to practicalize what I just learnt, I'm watching this video one more time.
From personal experience: Japanese characters stick the best when you slowly write them repeatedly and then write, read and read out loud sentences with said "kanji of the day". Studying in a small groups is also better than studying them alone. The key reason your brain forgets kanji is that it can't see a reason to retain them unless you give it to it. Japanese (and I'd argue Chinese) is not as hard as it is time-consuming. So if it takes you four years to go pre-intermediate, no issues and no one should call you slow. It's an abstract language, so take your time and find your own pace. Not everyone is composer is composer Evan Call who learned it in a few months cause it was a necessity, and perfected it on the job cause he had no other choice.
As someone also studying japanese, this has 1 problem, nowadays there isn't much need to actually write things by hand, so learning to just recognize the characters and their sound is more important than learning to write all of them from mind. This makes your progress in the language slower than it actually have to be
If for Chinese,you should just talk more and more,learning the words would never(i wouldn't say never but I'm 99% sure you wouldn't remember it)retain in your mind,that is because your brain might confuse the words voice and Chinese has many words that are same voice which sometimes if you aren't apply it in your life you wouldn't remember it
Learning how to learn is just as important as the material itself. Showing students how to take notes effectively, writing in blue ink for easier memorisation, drawing mind maps and using highlighters effectively are so helpful. Even reading out loud and re-writing notes helps me so much. Great video!
I hate ink pens, everything is permanent, meaning I can't revise my notes on the fly if I miswrite something, or screw up phrasing. And highlighting crap is useless for me. It's the same as bookmarking a webpage, I'll just ignore it.
The part about him teaching someone what he learned at the end of the video. One time when I was struggling with chemistry my brother really helped me out and gave me this method: he told me, “I do, you watch. I do, you help. You do, I help. You do, I watch. You do, you teach.”
So to summarize this after listening to the video just once (and im putting a lot of effort in this): - Core message: The more effort you put in something, the better you'll retain that information - Side message: i) When taking notes, it is advised to do it with the hand since it will stimulate your brains and therefore more effort will take place compared to digital equipment. ii) Having a small notebook or such with you is convenient since it will help you record it somewhere immediately after the "aHa-moment"
My method - ★while reading, underline and at the same time ★take extremely short notes (which r just key points and make no grammar sense) then i go and ★highlight important things of my notes with yellow highlighter and, ★what i wanna learn by heart it as it is, i highlight it in green. By the time you are done with this, you already get the concept and your notes are tidy too
I’m so proud of myself because I discovered this method just a couple days before watching this video, so I knew exactly what you were talking about! I remember having to study for an entrance exam where the syllabus was an entire school year worth of lessons, and because of my procrastination I put it all off to the last week. I knew that my method of verbal studying wasn’t gonna work out so I tried visual studying, and I accidentally did this method along with it too! Basically, I simply made a drawing of everything that I’m learning. How barcodes work? Draw that! How a laser printer works? Draw that too! I was able to visualize everything I’ve learnt, making it easier to remember, and because I’ve put effort into drawing it, it made it even easier! I’d study with my friend and be able to understand and memorize the content way faster than her, who’s learnt this already the past year, all because she is using the verbal learning method. I hope this helps all the students out there! Also, if you can, try to get a tablet instead for taking notes and write them with a digital pen, it saves the environment :)
I am a student and I always get top marks(nearly full) in science exams especially phys and chemistry. My method of studying is first read the text and copy everything that seems to be important. Then read it.If the content is too many, learn it repeatedly and after i have learnt all concepts, started the calculations which are very easy then as you remember the concepts.
So you are saying that reading physical books is better way to learn and retain information then just listening to audiobook since reading requires more effort. Audible is not going to like it ;)
I think there are benefits to listening to audio books. For one, it's a lot easier to carry around, and second you can listen to them while doing other things. I personally dont really favor them, as I find it hard to get lost into it and imagining the world with my mind's eye (I primarily read fiction. Unsure if people who read nonfiction...or even other fiction readers, do this)
Of course and it's logical, when you read a physical book, you're active, you're doing something actively, but when you're listening to an audiobook, you're only passive...
@@AlexandraaFeodorovna That is true. From my experience i dont opt for any heavy info audiobooks, i rather use traditional book. But on the other side non-fictional/biography audiobooks are much useful.
Remember: TAKE YOUR NOTES IN YOUR OWN STYLE SO YOU CAN UNDERSTAND IT Making your notes personalised to how you understand the topic is crucial to helping you understand where the gaps in your knowledge are and can also aid in your teachers understanding your thought process
Summary of this video (so i put an effort to remember it) -this video is about the more effort u put, the more u remember -use pen to write instead of typing since it uses more effort -when listening to audio books, when u find smth that will be very important, stop for a while and make a summary of what u listen -then rewind to listen to the same part again -teach others when u are in a conversation since it uses more effort To sum up, THE MORE EFFORT U PUT IN REMEMBERING SMTH, THE MORE U REMEMBER THAT
Definitely true. I remember back in highschool, I used to really study intensively and spent hours and hours reading a lot of educational stuff online. The problem is, once I finish a video, article or a book, remember almost nothing from the material and also struggle to find the words to explain the content. Which made it feel like a waste of time and sooner I started to feel like there's something wrong and came to realization that I'm too focused on learning the material but not making deliberate efforts to store it in memory. So now, I try to condense information to check my understanding of the content. Carefully, I take notes and highlight important bits of info also helps me interpret better what is being discussed. It takes a lot of effort but it pays off. In the long run, this way of learning might help you get better at remembering things as well as make your time worthwhile studying. At the end of the day, all of us are different and unique in our own ways, there are way many options to choose from and pick the one you think sits well with you and see what works for you. Whether or not you find this useful, still wish the best of life and happy learning.
Dude I just woke up and saw you upload. I just want to say you are an amazing person and your videos are easy to understand. Thanks to you I took up meditation b/c of you pointing out the benefits. Have a wonderful day my guy!
I personally agree with this. I grew up being required to make a reviewer and I only use paper and pencil/pen. Since then until now as a college student, every time I made a reviewer through writing, the better the score I got and the better the grades I recieved.
hey dude you change my life your youtube channel change me . last year i was a person that was sad have bad grades and did not trust anyone but when i saw your channel it change me to work hard ,become better ,now im studying and working out ,trying my best at everything , most of all to never give up im glad i saw your channel thank you for being you and making me being me :D
Thank you so much! I finally know how to put this into words. This is something I've always called Head Knowledge vs Heart Knowledge. Someone could tell somebody a thing a million times and they won't truly understand until they experience it for themselves. I've always found someone walking me through doing a task I've never done before is much more efficient way for me to learn than just explaining things outright. A "show not tell" kinda thing. This way, I gather experience to reference back to if I ever forget something.
This is true, it really works for me. The thing is when you’re just typing/listening to the info, you are doing it passively. compared to when you are writing what you’ve heard, your brain is functioning more because it’s like you are putting the info in your mind twice or even more.
Our relationship with information is just like a relationship with a person. The more impactful the information the easier it is for us to retain the experience and everything related to it, just as we've bonded deeper with people who have been at our side our whole life compared to people we passed on the street.
When you brain tells you to give up, you remember a time when you succeded (you reach into the cookie jar and eat a cookie) and that should motivate you to keep going
This video is genius. I just sat down with my computer ready to space out after about 30 minutes of inefficient piano practice, where I really couldn't get the music right. I got frustrated and thought i would just give up for a bit and procrastinate. But now I know, in order to get the music right and really learn this piano piece, I need to work hard on it and take notes on the sheet music of what to remember and what is important. This was a really helpful lesson for me today.
So true! A lot of my friends used to question my way of reviewing because I tend to write while reading. I am very forgetful so i always keep pen and paper handy so i can list down important info, and it works every time.
such ultimate info to convince myself to not find easy stuff and expect stuff to be easy for procrastination, I know embrace the real truth, I thank you massively, my friend.
This has been one of the lessons in our psych class before. Professor said you remember more stuff if you use more of your senses, the touch, hearing, and sight. Use all and there's a better chance to remember what you need to
I take online classes so the lectures are recorded the method you mentioned is what I do. I listen to the lecture and take notes, I'll often pause the lectures to write things down and go back by a minute or two and listen to it again to get the right context. I review these notes before quizzes and papers and they make so much sense to me. I do something similar for reading textbooks because annotating doesn't work, I take notes in a sepeeate notebook.
my study method was - to annotate all the information what my professor talks about during discussion - highlight all the important information - rewrite my notes with my own words - discuss it to myself or to my friend (Then repeat.) *Always read/scan your notes every day or every another day to retain all the information you need to remember.
I love including things I've learned or have recently found interesting in conversations as well! I do this a lot when my mom picks me up from school and asks me about my day. I take advantage to 're-tell' her what I've learned in class and how we can use it today. It really works for me!
This is true advice, talking of experience. Am one of the people who forgets all the time. So I started to write down everything that I want to remember. It really helped.
This is really helpful. And yes, taking notes by hand can help u understand the information better as typing notes into phones or laptops also risk you to great distractions and it's faster. While writing, you have to remember the information for a longer time and also process it and try to understand it better + distractions are less (until something is happening in the external environment) .
Of course though, instead of just remembering something you are trying to learn, experiencing it for yourself and solving the problem in your own life is the whole point of self improvement. Don’t binge watch content, pause the video and put it into practice, and see for whether or not yourself if it works.
Me and my roommate fell into this routine where we study and sometimes one of us asks what the other is studying at that point. We have short convos about the topic and I noticed that summarizing it to her helps me an awful lot with memorizing the key points.
I know everybody is into audio books but I just cannot and do not want to get into it. I love reading and the most important part of that is it forces me to focus on one task which is how it should be. I do not want to get into audible because some girl aka makeup guru on youtube listens to audiobooks while piling on makeup in a long session.
I agree with you for the most part. I keep book diaries when reading books in which I take notes about what I've read after each session, how I interpret it and what kind of value that sort of knowledge brings to me. Also if I had to look up any vocabulary or generally didn't understand something fully, that gets noted to be researched before I continue. That way I've found I really gain a solid understanding of the given subject and remember the information gained for years. I still listen to and highly value audiobooks, that I can listen to when doing mundane tasks. When doing so I listen at a higher speed, so I have to concentrate to understand everything and also keep a notepad beside me at all times so I can take generall notes and note time signatures of important parts or information that needs further research on my part. I also pause it often to think about what I've heard and try to explain it to myself in my head as if I was teaching it to someone. The way I see it it's just another tool that allows for a beautiful new way of knowledge acquisition, if you know how to use it for yourself.
With audio books I find it hard to imagine the world I am seeing. Also, if I get lost during a paragraph I can read the page again a lot easier than trying to rewind it (which would probably make me more lost)
I very much prefer physical books, but I have found reading a physical boom while listening to it at the same time makes a wonderful exercise to learn languages ;)
In general, I agree with this, yes, this way you remember/memorise things much easier. Unfortunately though, this study is a "general study", so exceptions to both of those results will not be mentioned. With exceptions I mean people who are not the "average" person. Some people have it particularly difficult to study/take notes at the same time, if there are interferences with that. For example: I can take notes and then generally understand what has been said in the classroom, if I sit at the correct seat - the closer I sit to the teacher, the more likely I will pick up everything the teacher has said and write notes. BUT the further I am away from the teacher the harder it is and the less I will be able to focus/can take notes. I have a disability that is often overlooked, because you can only notice it if I suffer from it. This disability makes it terribly difficult to listen and repeat/take notes. Which is why I never took notes when I was in school, because my parents and I told them I need the information and lesson input physically, if not, I will not be able to perform as well as the other students do, because my disability will let me misunderstand a lot more than it seems. As far as I know, I am not the only person with this struggle within (or even outside of) this disability, which is why many of us are diagnosed with dyslexia, autism, ADHD etc. The disability is called auditory processing disorder. It's one of those invisible disabilities that you can't see until you really suffer from it - or notice someone have a hard time. Fortunately, I have it mild, so it's not as bad, but it is bad in a regular school environment where there's noise, different seats, different factors of distractions that make it SO hard to study, because not many teachers are okay with it or even aware. Two of my former teachers were not okay with it, one called me dumb (and was fired) and the other gave me a bad grade, even though they made the lesson exclusively vocal (told us that we don't need to take notes), even though the curriculum stated it needs to be vocal and scriptive. I was told from younger friends, who were in a class beneath me - and had that teacher, too - that they were told to change "this behaviour" by the curriculum manager and ever since the teacher changed. But I'll never forget how traumatising it was, especially after my parents had to tell the teacher to treat me better at a parent-teacher conference and they suggested I should go to a psychiatrist, specifying in speech and breathing, even though I already was going to a speech therapist at the time.
This is so true. It's a little scary to think about how much time I've wasted by simply reading and watching a video. You need to take notes. It takes more time and yeah effort, but it's necessary if you want to be able to remember and actually use that information in your life. Thanks Pill. I wish I knew at least his first name.
That is actually true. I have a twin, and she and I would do this thing where we would rewrite and search for more information and write it on a piece of paper. It became a habit and it's actually really effective. Especially with memorising things, cuz sometimes we forget the spelling. We would have a pile of papers for every subject. (Well, mostly science and history.)
wow this 4 minutes video changed the perspective of my life development. thank you! this helps a lot. i will surely do the same thing as yours, bringing a small pad with me and write down interesting things i remember suddenly. what a big tip really!
For me taking notes by hand is better, not because of the effort (because I type slowly, so a computer would be more effort) but because I include more of my senses. I listen to the lecture, think about what the important things I need to note are, and sort of "feel" when I write them down. Same when it comes to studying it later, I often read aloud, because then I also hear myself saying it.
Dudeeeeeeee this makes so much sense I’ve always taken written notes and I found it easier even though it was harder but it really does make a difference.
For me, taking notes by hand or computer doesn't matter, what does is how/why. I create elaborate notes and study guides when I take notes on the computer, but I just do the main points (anything probably important) when I write on paper. It really is the effort you put in; when you learn/note-take something as though you're going to have to teach it to someone, you learn it more thoroughly, and you just learn it overall better.
I usually just reread what I’m reading until there’s a picture in my head. I’ll go word for word until each word connects to one another and make up a summary, takes extra time but really works
I took notes the old school way and I recorded the lecture. Later that day or the next I would listen to the recorded class and type my notes using both the recordered material and written notes. works great.
I've always preferred to take notes by hand because it forces me to be more concise. "Twice as many notes" is terrible. It doesn't necessarily mean the other group missed far more, but rather means they ended up compressing information, which is easier to recall and study afterwards. Also because I like using highlighters and notating my notes, which I only have time to do if I put more information into fewer words.
Yep, note-taking, as for me, is the most effective way to remember things. I can easily comprehend lessons, concepts, etc., when I got to see them and when I write it on my own. 👌
The problem is that I tend to start studying just a few days before the exam starts and there isn't enough time to take notes of the whole syllabus. I end up recalling only half of what i learned which contributed to my average CGPA. Maybe i should stop procrastinating, but i'm gonna graduate from college in like 9 months, so i might as well keep procrastinating.
Dude I already found this method on my own ...thanks to it i can take it easy on tests and exams and i learned how to not care too much about things ....it was a really nice.
For me to learn and remember information is to Retell / Explaining what the information that i get (either to someone or just talking to yourself), cuz if u can explain it, it means that u understand it :) The method maybe different with only write it down, but the effort may the same
The traditional perspective of learning is more effective than today. Pen and paper will help you to retain and easily remember something you written, because the way you writing it, it's already processing in your brain. The technologies nowadays are still relevant but people should not relying on it in every aspects of their lives. We need to back to basic sometimes when necessary. Thumbs up 👍👍
Definitely interesting. Despite typing out all of my notes, I do put quite a lot of effort into them. Then I use speechify to read and listen to my notes a few times. It makes sense that more effort = more memorization.
Thank You! 💐 You cleared my doubt and UA-cam recommended this video when I am in the doubt of whether I choose online note making or offline note making.
Last year, I was one of the few students in my class that would use pen and paper in a slide based class. I ended up doing well, even if I only got about 80% of what lecture talked about.
I found it really helpful while I was studying for my exams was relaying all the information I learned back to my siblings or literally anyone who was willing to listen/learn… something about having to teach it to someone else really makes you put in more effort in understanding the material…
the blue ink is very convenient for me because of AP Exams which typically only allow black of blue ink. I’ve been using blue ink to practice getting used to writing quickly and it’s honestly great
One of the things that helped me was writing things I forget like fornulas or words I misspell in the first page of my rough note.. It really helps a lot!
A bit of a problem for me personally is that I never like to do something if I'm not able to completely understand why and/or how to do something to the point at which I am able to teach someone else. This makes me extremely confident and efficient in what I do end up doing but more often than not ends up in me not doing a whole bunch and feeling overwhelmed by how much I want to/ need to do that I do nothing
Can’t agree more, pure gold. As a side note, I LOVE the new animation style! There’s a huge difference between this and the now-boring Videoscribe style Amazing info, amazing presentation... thanks so much.
I am the type who likes to write it on papers and it really has a huge difference in retaining the information to last as a knowledge if extra effort is added to is as well.
The thought of making notes with technology has never crossed my mind. I’m able to understand easier and memorize almost instantly when I write down. This is why I have 3-4 sets of notes for the exact subject with the same exact material. I just rewrite everything for notes before exams
This made a lot of sense to me. I remember books that I read with my physical hands last year more than a podcast that I listened today. It was because I had to put in effort to read and take in the knowledge instead of just lounging and listening to the podcast.
I agree with the effort idea. But would caution against thinking that physical note taking is necessarily the best method. I am very much an audio learner. and purposeful active listening helps me much more than note taking. Different methods are going to work for different people.
I always take note when my teachers are discussing (especially when it's related to Math). Sadly, I'm sometimes too tired and my brain decides to let me sleep. I've adapted and learned to STILL write down notes when I'm half-asleep (a lot of my classmates find me amusing and they've admitted to using me as their sort of wake up call), but the end results were funny. I wrote gibberish, and my sentences didn't follow the lines in the notebook anymore. My letters too stilted, too close, got cut off, etc. So rest well people! Don't be like me whose regular sleeping hours are 3-6 hours a day :DDD
This would make sense because you are engaging your limbic system and amygdala which encodes memories more than one way into your brain thus activating various nodes. As opposed to just listening. I like this reinforcement. Very helpful.
I believe the writing vs typing was more to do with the fact that because writing is slower and you can’t just straight up write down everything the lecturer says, you need to find a more efficient way of getting the point across on the paper, essentially reorganize and rephrase the info which requires actually processing and understanding it instead of just listening and copying, and that makes it stick to your head better. That’s the same reason why teaching a concept to someone else helps you remember - you have to process and understand it first so you can teach it to someone else. I’m not sure it’s really about the effort, for example: reading the same book 3 times requires a lot of time and effort, but you could probably get the same or better benefits if you just read it once while doing your method of keeping an eye for important points and key concepts and writing them down. Probably less time and effort, but probably more efficient still. 🤷♀️
The one's who typed the information, noted it faster than those who wrote it down. Those who were writing it down had to rationalize and rephrase the context to write it shorter and faster, not to fall behind. They're rethinking the main sentence, thus, coming closer to understanding it than those who typed everything word by word.
Pretty accurate I think. When it goes too fast and I am starting to forget half a sentence I focus hard on what was just said and when I type I'm more focused on literally copying every word.
Me too, oftentimes I end up making _some_ of my notes more of a concept map-looking thing than walls of text. Others, I just write only a line or two of the important bits.
true. I always prefer writing my notes with a pen and blank paper so that I can somehow structure the information to my own understanding, while if I type it I would've typed exactly how the information was given and I wouldn't understand anything, that's just copying.
which opens up the way for logic to settle in and allows you to gain alot of intuition.
Yes...I don't think it's soley about the physical aspect of writing rather than having to identify the key information and phrase it succinctly. I do think the physical aspect helps as it's engaging another sense though. A little discouraging as I can't write by hand anymore but I utilize the 'explain it to someone else's method a lot
What I learned from this video:
- Retaining information is more important than just consuming it
- Your goal should be to retain information so you can use it at right time and the right place.
- When you put in more effort you retain information better.
Ex. Take notes on paper instead of your laptop or mobile.
- Repetition is key
- Reread information you wanna remember, Talk about it with your friends, Create a summary and share it with friends who have similar interests.
My tip:
Make a summary of what you learned from the video like I did and chances are you will remember it for longer😊
Thank you
Great summary, but I had an objection at the "Example":
It's not about "Putting effort into retaining information will make you remember things better"
That is more of a personal choice or issue, you could write on a device and still remember it extremely clear, it depends on how important you want it to be.
Taking notes on a paper however is great, but it's a hassle.
Sure, putting effort into writing on a paper will retain an information better, but was it easy to store and keep it safe? And what if something happens to the papers? Are you going to rewrite your whole informations? I doubt.
It's up to the person's preference on how they take notes and remember their "aha!" Moments, in fact, if you write things in a device, it's more accessible and way more convenient! Not to mention the endless space to store your information for free!
EVEN BETTER! Some notes let's you save to clouds/drive/online so you can access it anywhere you go (also when your phone is lost, or to be replaced)
Downside however is when you didn't bring your phone around or when it's dead (no battery)
But it's not like it's any different from note pads, you think you can store your informations without bringing them with you? Yeah... I doubt.
And wow, this is a long comment, anyways, in conclusion, it's not about how any method is better, it's a personal choice of which is greater.
@@BVK. note pads are better.
Cope, mald, and seeth.
And reply if you get no maidens
Gr8. Now go write this down on paper.
You just typed it like the students in the experiments.
Now run it back
You learned it straight away
Also from personal experience when i read out loud it's better
Yeah me tooo
That Albert Einstein profile pic says it all
@Statiolove by Alejandra Same because I focus on saying stuff more than understanding
Liquid Dog same
@Statiolove by Alejandra The same thing with me, and that always made me question if I had ADHD or something.
The only thing that REALLY works for me is when I pretend That I’m teaching a lesson about what I’m studying
Exactly the same with me! Plus, instead of underlining stuff when studying for a quiz or an exam, I write questions related to the topic and ask myself.
@@pixelrina thats the right method.we need to create questions from each line by understanding the concept,also creating short notes and memory capsules also work for quick revision.
That strategy actually has a name for it, the Feynman Technique. There's a couple of videos here on UA-cam explaining the concept, but your comment is essentially what it is.
Active recall
Mee too
My method for study::
1.I used first read it .
2.Underline the imp. Pts.
3. write very short notes on underlined sentences and it really works.
Thank you
My method is same as u
How many times do u read it b4 it sticks to ur mem?
Read the whole book and then make notes or read the topic and make notes along with?
@@uroojrajput4541 read the topic only not for whole book.
It also depends upon how much days left for exam..😅
Revision ! Revision ! Revision !
The key to every damn academic success.
exactly
"The more effort you put in recording a piece of information the more you'll retain it."
That was the aahah moment of this video.
Taking it to the extreme you'd definitely remember something you've carved in stone or even wood.))
How about using your left hand when you are right handed?
@@stanleywu827 I've heard about that theory, actually our left brain is connected to our right arm and our right brain is connected to our left arm. Left brain is for creativity and right is for learning stuff.
So technically you don't have to learn to write from left hand you just need to make use of your left hand more than you usually do, or if you are a left hander then you have to use right hand more.
It is scientifically proven. It works.😉
Improvement Pill Banjo is in smash now you should say GUH-HUH!
Does this mean that the dumber I am, the more effort I need to learn, and the longer I'd retain the information?
If biology knowledge enters my head swimmingly, and civics knowledge does not, I'd retain civics knowledge longer than biology knowledge?
What i have learned from the video:
• the more effort you make in trying to study something the more it will stay with you.
• taking note by hand is far more efficient than taking notes on digital devices because it makes you memorise the information for longer time.
• try to remind yourself about what you studied or read about by talking about it with friends or explaining it to them
Blue ink, rather than black ink, is said to help memorization. I'm using it, and quite honestly I think there's something to it.
That's interesting
Me too! I find it easier to visualize a sheet of my notes written in blue than black!
I used to use blue when i found out red works wonders for me so i use that now
I think it's a placebo but ok
Didn't work for me 😢
What I learnt from this video:
The effort principle. The more efforts it takes to understand something, the longer it will be retained. That's why taking notes with pen & paper is more helpful because it takes more efforts and requires more understanding of the topic.
Also, after taking notes, it will be awesome to go through the lessons in the text again, and after that, teaching others will be helpful.
This is my summary. And to practicalize what I just learnt, I'm watching this video one more time.
Wow
Great video.
1) Take notes by hand
2) Use these notes to cheat on your test
Subscribed
not lemars 😂
😂😂😂 i laughed so hard
Pro gamer move
Lolol
It really works! xd
From personal experience: Japanese characters stick the best when you slowly write them repeatedly and then write, read and read out loud sentences with said "kanji of the day". Studying in a small groups is also better than studying them alone. The key reason your brain forgets kanji is that it can't see a reason to retain them unless you give it to it. Japanese (and I'd argue Chinese) is not as hard as it is time-consuming. So if it takes you
four years to go pre-intermediate, no issues and no one should call you slow. It's an abstract language, so take your time and find your own pace. Not everyone is composer is composer Evan Call who learned it in a few months cause it was a necessity, and perfected it on the job cause he had no other choice.
As someone also studying japanese, this has 1 problem, nowadays there isn't much need to actually write things by hand, so learning to just recognize the characters and their sound is more important than learning to write all of them from mind. This makes your progress in the language slower than it actually have to be
If for Chinese,you should just talk more and more,learning the words would never(i wouldn't say never but I'm 99% sure you wouldn't remember it)retain in your mind,that is because your brain might confuse the words voice and Chinese has many words that are same voice which sometimes if you aren't apply it in your life you wouldn't remember it
@@hihi4948 Makes sense especially for Chinese.
4 years? bro thats way too long, a few months enough to learn enough to be at an almost native levels and that is even fi youre slacking
Learning how to learn is just as important as the material itself. Showing students how to take notes effectively, writing in blue ink for easier memorisation, drawing mind maps and using highlighters effectively are so helpful. Even reading out loud and re-writing notes helps me so much. Great video!
I hate ink pens, everything is permanent, meaning I can't revise my notes on the fly if I miswrite something, or screw up phrasing. And highlighting crap is useless for me. It's the same as bookmarking a webpage, I'll just ignore it.
The part about him teaching someone what he learned at the end of the video. One time when I was struggling with chemistry my brother really helped me out and gave me this method: he told me, “I do, you watch. I do, you help. You do, I help. You do, I watch. You do, you teach.”
So to summarize this after listening to the video just once (and im putting a lot of effort in this):
- Core message: The more effort you put in something, the better you'll retain that information
- Side message: i) When taking notes, it is advised to do it with the hand since it will stimulate your brains and therefore more effort will take place compared to digital equipment.
ii) Having a small notebook or such with you is convenient since it will help you record it somewhere immediately after the "aHa-moment"
What a dedication!!
My method -
★while reading, underline and at the same time
★take extremely short notes (which r just key points and make no grammar sense) then i go and ★highlight important things of my notes with yellow highlighter and,
★what i wanna learn by heart it as it is, i highlight it in green.
By the time you are done with this, you already get the concept and your notes are tidy too
I can’t believe I watched your vids from animated moving hands to seeing you with your very own animations. You’re such an inspiration.
I’m so proud of myself because I discovered this method just a couple days before watching this video, so I knew exactly what you were talking about!
I remember having to study for an entrance exam where the syllabus was an entire school year worth of lessons, and because of my procrastination I put it all off to the last week. I knew that my method of verbal studying wasn’t gonna work out so I tried visual studying, and I accidentally did this method along with it too!
Basically, I simply made a drawing of everything that I’m learning. How barcodes work? Draw that! How a laser printer works? Draw that too! I was able to visualize everything I’ve learnt, making it easier to remember, and because I’ve put effort into drawing it, it made it even easier! I’d study with my friend and be able to understand and memorize the content way faster than her, who’s learnt this already the past year, all because she is using the verbal learning method.
I hope this helps all the students out there! Also, if you can, try to get a tablet instead for taking notes and write them with a digital pen, it saves the environment :)
Thx for the advice
Thank you for sharing!
Does this work for Accounting students? 😫
@@thejirah same dude accounts, law , audit
@@simonshrestha9518 can u give an example? how do u draw audit analysis and other technical accounting stuff?
Literally perfect timing as I'm struggling to remember this new info for school and 100% makes sense!
Awesome
Try using spaced repetition method
I am a student and I always get top marks(nearly full) in science exams especially phys and chemistry.
My method of studying is first read the text and copy everything that seems to be important.
Then read it.If the content is too many, learn it repeatedly and after i have learnt all concepts, started the calculations which are very easy then as you remember the concepts.
So you are saying that reading physical books is better way to learn and retain information then just listening to audiobook since reading requires more effort.
Audible is not going to like it ;)
I think there are benefits to listening to audio books. For one, it's a lot easier to carry around, and second you can listen to them while doing other things. I personally dont really favor them, as I find it hard to get lost into it and imagining the world with my mind's eye (I primarily read fiction. Unsure if people who read nonfiction...or even other fiction readers, do this)
Of course and it's logical, when you read a physical book, you're active, you're doing something actively, but when you're listening to an audiobook, you're only passive...
If you actually watched the video he says it’s still useful
@@AlexandraaFeodorovna That is true. From my experience i dont opt for any heavy info audiobooks, i rather use traditional book. But on the other side non-fictional/biography audiobooks are much useful.
Yes
Remember: TAKE YOUR NOTES IN YOUR OWN STYLE SO YOU CAN UNDERSTAND IT
Making your notes personalised to how you understand the topic is crucial to helping you understand where the gaps in your knowledge are and can also aid in your teachers understanding your thought process
I agree.
Summary of this video (so i put an effort to remember it)
-this video is about the more effort u put, the more u remember
-use pen to write instead of typing since it uses more effort
-when listening to audio books, when u find smth that will be very important, stop for a while and make a summary of what u listen
-then rewind to listen to the same part again
-teach others when u are in a conversation since it uses more effort
To sum up,
THE MORE EFFORT U PUT IN REMEMBERING SMTH, THE MORE U REMEMBER THAT
Thank you 😊
Definitely true. I remember back in highschool, I used to really study intensively and spent hours and hours reading a lot of educational stuff online. The problem is, once I finish a video, article or a book, remember almost nothing from the material and also struggle to find the words to explain the content. Which made it feel like a waste of time and sooner I started to feel like there's something wrong and came to realization that I'm too focused on learning the material but not making deliberate efforts to store it in memory. So now, I try to condense information to check my understanding of the content. Carefully, I take notes and highlight important bits of info also helps me interpret better what is being discussed. It takes a lot of effort but it pays off. In the long run, this way of learning might help you get better at remembering things as well as make your time worthwhile studying. At the end of the day, all of us are different and unique in our own ways, there are way many options to choose from and pick the one you think sits well with you and see what works for you. Whether or not you find this useful, still wish the best of life and happy learning.
Dude I just woke up and saw you upload. I just want to say you are an amazing person and your videos are easy to understand. Thanks to you I took up meditation b/c of you pointing out the benefits. Have a wonderful day my guy!
I became more calm and managed control some of my temper.
I personally agree with this. I grew up being required to make a reviewer and I only use paper and pencil/pen. Since then until now as a college student, every time I made a reviewer through writing, the better the score I got and the better the grades I recieved.
hey dude you change my life your youtube channel change me .
last year i was a person that was sad have bad grades and did not trust anyone but when i saw your channel it change me to work hard ,become better ,now im studying and working out ,trying my best at everything , most of all to never give up im glad i saw your channel thank you for being you and making me being me :D
I didn't know studying could be this enjoyable. After following the effort rule. I kinda spend more time studyin' than usual. It helped me a lot. 🥰
If you want to remember something , write it down.
This is common knowledge.
Or it used to be.
Andrew Fishburn true!
Common knowledge is not inherent, it is taught and learned
My grandpa always tells me to write what I know five times without looking so my _hands_ know what needs to be remembered😂😂😂
What if I still can’t remember after writing it down? I re-read what I’ve written down? Reading feels too passive when you need to memorise.
@@imthecoolest50 before questioning it try it out once
Thank you so much! I finally know how to put this into words.
This is something I've always called Head Knowledge vs Heart Knowledge.
Someone could tell somebody a thing a million times and they won't truly understand until they experience it for themselves.
I've always found someone walking me through doing a task I've never done before is much more efficient way for me to learn than just explaining things outright. A "show not tell" kinda thing. This way, I gather experience to reference back to if I ever forget something.
This is true, it really works for me. The thing is when you’re just typing/listening to the info, you are doing it passively. compared to when you are writing what you’ve heard, your brain is functioning more because it’s like you are putting the info in your mind twice or even more.
Our relationship with information is just like a relationship with a person. The more impactful the information the easier it is for us to retain the experience and everything related to it, just as we've bonded deeper with people who have been at our side our whole life compared to people we passed on the street.
now I'm curious about the cookie jar method
Manipulation
When you brain tells you to give up, you remember a time when you succeded (you reach into the cookie jar and eat a cookie) and that should motivate you to keep going
@@MRVukable Thanks
Nir Barshay me too
MRVukable oh lol i already do that all the time, though it doesn’t always work...
This video is genius. I just sat down with my computer ready to space out after about 30 minutes of inefficient piano practice, where I really couldn't get the music right. I got frustrated and thought i would just give up for a bit and procrastinate. But now I know, in order to get the music right and really learn this piano piece, I need to work hard on it and take notes on the sheet music of what to remember and what is important. This was a really helpful lesson for me today.
So true! A lot of my friends used to question my way of reviewing because I tend to write while reading. I am very forgetful so i always keep pen and paper handy so i can list down important info, and it works every time.
such ultimate info to convince myself to not find easy stuff and expect stuff to be easy for procrastination, I know embrace the real truth, I thank you massively, my friend.
This has been one of the lessons in our psych class before.
Professor said you remember more stuff if you use more of your senses, the touch, hearing, and sight. Use all and there's a better chance to remember what you need to
I take online classes so the lectures are recorded the method you mentioned is what I do. I listen to the lecture and take notes, I'll often pause the lectures to write things down and go back by a minute or two and listen to it again to get the right context. I review these notes before quizzes and papers and they make so much sense to me. I do something similar for reading textbooks because annotating doesn't work, I take notes in a sepeeate notebook.
this was uploaded right after i had my exams 😞
but that’s ok! that’ll be useful next time! 😊
kessa that’s the spirit!
Bruh! Same!
Literally me 😥
my study method was
- to annotate all the information what my professor talks about during discussion
- highlight all the important information
- rewrite my notes with my own words
- discuss it to myself or to my friend
(Then repeat.)
*Always read/scan your notes every day or every another day to retain all the information you need to remember.
Woah, thanks
I love including things I've learned or have recently found interesting in conversations as well! I do this a lot when my mom picks me up from school and asks me about my day. I take advantage to 're-tell' her what I've learned in class and how we can use it today. It really works for me!
This is true advice, talking of experience. Am one of the people who forgets all the time. So I started to write down everything that I want to remember. It really helped.
This is really helpful. And yes, taking notes by hand can help u understand the information better as typing notes into phones or laptops also risk you to great distractions and it's faster. While writing, you have to remember the information for a longer time and also process it and try to understand it better + distractions are less (until something is happening in the external environment) .
Of course though, instead of just remembering something you are trying to learn, experiencing it for yourself and solving the problem in your own life is the whole point of self improvement.
Don’t binge watch content, pause the video and put it into practice, and see for whether or not yourself if it works.
Me and my roommate fell into this routine where we study and sometimes one of us asks what the other is studying at that point. We have short convos about the topic and I noticed that summarizing it to her helps me an awful lot with memorizing the key points.
when i learn a new word i think of a word close to it.either close by word or close by its meaning.idk about yall but this works so well for me
I know everybody is into audio books but I just cannot and do not want to get into it. I love reading and the most important part of that is it forces me to focus on one task which is how it should be. I do not want to get into audible because some girl aka makeup guru on youtube listens to audiobooks while piling on makeup in a long session.
Dhyana yess finally someone I agree with! I really don’t like audio books, but I like physical ones!
I agree with you for the most part. I keep book diaries when reading books in which I take notes about what I've read after each session, how I interpret it and what kind of value that sort of knowledge brings to me. Also if I had to look up any vocabulary or generally didn't understand something fully, that gets noted to be researched before I continue.
That way I've found I really gain a solid understanding of the given subject and remember the information gained for years.
I still listen to and highly value audiobooks, that I can listen to when doing mundane tasks. When doing so I listen at a higher speed, so I have to concentrate to understand everything and also keep a notepad beside me at all times so I can take generall notes and note time signatures of important parts or information that needs further research on my part.
I also pause it often to think about what I've heard and try to explain it to myself in my head as if I was teaching it to someone.
The way I see it it's just another tool that allows for a beautiful new way of knowledge acquisition, if you know how to use it for yourself.
With audio books I find it hard to imagine the world I am seeing. Also, if I get lost during a paragraph I can read the page again a lot easier than trying to rewind it (which would probably make me more lost)
I very much prefer physical books, but I have found reading a physical boom while listening to it at the same time makes a wonderful exercise to learn languages ;)
Yess agree
"The more effort you put in recording a piece, the more you'll retain it."
"The more senses that are involved, the more and the better the learning. "
In general, I agree with this, yes, this way you remember/memorise things much easier.
Unfortunately though, this study is a "general study", so exceptions to both of those results will not be mentioned.
With exceptions I mean people who are not the "average" person. Some people have it particularly difficult to study/take notes at the same time, if there are interferences with that.
For example: I can take notes and then generally understand what has been said in the classroom, if I sit at the correct seat - the closer I sit to the teacher, the more likely I will pick up everything the teacher has said and write notes. BUT the further I am away from the teacher the harder it is and the less I will be able to focus/can take notes.
I have a disability that is often overlooked, because you can only notice it if I suffer from it. This disability makes it terribly difficult to listen and repeat/take notes. Which is why I never took notes when I was in school, because my parents and I told them I need the information and lesson input physically, if not, I will not be able to perform as well as the other students do, because my disability will let me misunderstand a lot more than it seems.
As far as I know, I am not the only person with this struggle within (or even outside of) this disability, which is why many of us are diagnosed with dyslexia, autism, ADHD etc.
The disability is called auditory processing disorder. It's one of those invisible disabilities that you can't see until you really suffer from it - or notice someone have a hard time.
Fortunately, I have it mild, so it's not as bad, but it is bad in a regular school environment where there's noise, different seats, different factors of distractions that make it SO hard to study, because not many teachers are okay with it or even aware.
Two of my former teachers were not okay with it, one called me dumb (and was fired) and the other gave me a bad grade, even though they made the lesson exclusively vocal (told us that we don't need to take notes), even though the curriculum stated it needs to be vocal and scriptive.
I was told from younger friends, who were in a class beneath me - and had that teacher, too - that they were told to change "this behaviour" by the curriculum manager and ever since the teacher changed. But I'll never forget how traumatising it was, especially after my parents had to tell the teacher to treat me better at a parent-teacher conference and they suggested I should go to a psychiatrist, specifying in speech and breathing, even though I already was going to a speech therapist at the time.
Yo if you could make a video about how to get over your ex, that would be amazing cause I’d love to hear what you had to say about it
@@ImprovementPill thanks a ton!!
Sleep with her best friend😉
@invictus prime I deadass did that and it didn’t even help me
exercise
dont see her - in person / photo
life goals - religion/work etc
🤣🤣🤣🤣
This is so true. It's a little scary to think about how much time I've wasted by simply reading and watching a video. You need to take notes. It takes more time and yeah effort, but it's necessary if you want to be able to remember and actually use that information in your life. Thanks Pill. I wish I knew at least his first name.
That is actually true. I have a twin, and she and I would do this thing where we would rewrite and search for more information and write it on a piece of paper. It became a habit and it's actually really effective. Especially with memorising things, cuz sometimes we forget the spelling. We would have a pile of papers for every subject. (Well, mostly science and history.)
wow this 4 minutes video changed the perspective of my life development. thank you! this helps a lot. i will surely do the same thing as yours, bringing a small pad with me and write down interesting things i remember suddenly. what a big tip really!
You are the most motivating person I know.
(Personal experience)
@@ImprovementPill No The world is honored to have people like you......
exams are coming and i’ve been deciding which notes would be better to use to review, and surprisingly this shows up on my recommendations 🥳
For me taking notes by hand is better, not because of the effort (because I type slowly, so a computer would be more effort) but because I include more of my senses. I listen to the lecture, think about what the important things I need to note are, and sort of "feel" when I write them down. Same when it comes to studying it later, I often read aloud, because then I also hear myself saying it.
Dudeeeeeeee this makes so much sense I’ve always taken written notes and I found it easier even though it was harder but it really does make a difference.
Maybe you should write this video down if it makes so much sense
For me, taking notes by hand or computer doesn't matter, what does is how/why. I create elaborate notes and study guides when I take notes on the computer, but I just do the main points (anything probably important) when I write on paper. It really is the effort you put in; when you learn/note-take something as though you're going to have to teach it to someone, you learn it more thoroughly, and you just learn it overall better.
I usually just reread what I’m reading until there’s a picture in my head. I’ll go word for word until each word connects to one another and make up a summary, takes extra time but really works
Your animations are getting better and better in every video, man. 👌🏼👍🏼
I took notes the old school way and I recorded the lecture. Later that day or the next I would listen to the recorded class and type my notes using both the recordered material and written notes. works great.
I've always preferred to take notes by hand because it forces me to be more concise. "Twice as many notes" is terrible. It doesn't necessarily mean the other group missed far more, but rather means they ended up compressing information, which is easier to recall and study afterwards.
Also because I like using highlighters and notating my notes, which I only have time to do if I put more information into fewer words.
Same here
Ever since I started using this I'm learning French vocabulary very effortlessly.
Thanks you!
Yep, note-taking, as for me, is the most effective way to remember things. I can easily comprehend lessons, concepts, etc., when I got to see them and when I write it on my own. 👌
E ' ER too bad my handwriting is terrible so i kinda have to type it all out.
I've been doing this for so long. Writing helps you retain and understand the information better.
The problem is that I tend to start studying just a few days before the exam starts and there isn't enough time to take notes of the whole syllabus. I end up recalling only half of what i learned which contributed to my average CGPA.
Maybe i should stop procrastinating, but i'm gonna graduate from college in like 9 months, so i might as well keep procrastinating.
This is deep, I see myself in this situation in a few years too.
@@rasae4597 Pro tip: Don't be like me.
The panic attacks you get the night before the exam isn't very pleasant.
I used the same pfp wow lol
If you identify the problem and make no effort to fix it then you’re a loser.
So you've graduated college by now right? Has your procrastination problem improved?
Dude I already found this method on my own ...thanks to it i can take it easy on tests and exams and i learned how to not care too much about things ....it was a really nice.
For me to learn and remember information is to Retell / Explaining what the information that i get (either to someone or just talking to yourself), cuz if u can explain it, it means that u understand it :)
The method maybe different with only write it down, but the effort may the same
The traditional perspective of learning is more effective than today. Pen and paper will help you to retain and easily remember something you written, because the way you writing it, it's already processing in your brain. The technologies nowadays are still relevant but people should not relying on it in every aspects of their lives. We need to back to basic sometimes when necessary. Thumbs up 👍👍
When the answer to the question is f*king try lol.
Saturn Reign literally lmao
Sad but true
Most people don't...
The best to listen an audio book by taking notes. It is amazingly time saver. Wish all school books were in audio form.
Definitely interesting. Despite typing out all of my notes, I do put quite a lot of effort into them. Then I use speechify to read and listen to my notes a few times. It makes sense that more effort = more memorization.
Thank You! 💐 You cleared my doubt and UA-cam recommended this video when I am in the doubt of whether I choose online note making or offline note making.
Thank you, school just opened and I'm overwhelmed. Also live your videos, they are very useful.
Audio Recording lectures and taking notes you didnt get the first time really helps.
Last year, I was one of the few students in my class that would use pen and paper in a slide based class.
I ended up doing well, even if I only got about 80% of what lecture talked about.
I found it really helpful while I was studying for my exams was relaying all the information I learned back to my siblings or literally anyone who was willing to listen/learn… something about having to teach it to someone else really makes you put in more effort in understanding the material…
the blue ink is very convenient for me because of AP Exams which typically only allow black of blue ink. I’ve been using blue ink to practice getting used to writing quickly and it’s honestly great
One of the things that helped me was writing things I forget like fornulas or words I misspell in the first page of my rough note..
It really helps a lot!
A bit of a problem for me personally is that I never like to do something if I'm not able to completely understand why and/or how to do something to the point at which I am able to teach someone else. This makes me extremely confident and efficient in what I do end up doing but more often than not ends up in me not doing a whole bunch and feeling overwhelmed by how much I want to/ need to do that I do nothing
I just went on amazon and bout a little pocket size notepad. I had been thinking of doing this. The video definitely reinforced it. Thanks!
Can’t agree more, pure gold.
As a side note, I LOVE the new animation style! There’s a huge difference between this and the now-boring Videoscribe style
Amazing info, amazing presentation... thanks so much.
I am the type who likes to write it on papers and it really has a huge difference in retaining the information to last as a knowledge if extra effort is added to is as well.
The thought of making notes with technology has never crossed my mind. I’m able to understand easier and memorize almost instantly when I write down. This is why I have 3-4 sets of notes for the exact subject with the same exact material. I just rewrite everything for notes before exams
Improvement pill here !!I love the way you say it !!I Feel positive vibes around me!!
The method of loci is amazing for memorizing stuff.
Hard work + smart work makes u perfect...
Challenge yourself to be the leader. Challenge yourself for everything you want in life.
BE THE ONE
This made a lot of sense to me. I remember books that I read with my physical hands last year more than a podcast that I listened today. It was because I had to put in effort to read and take in the knowledge instead of just lounging and listening to the podcast.
Honestly coming from my perspective writing by taking notes always has helped me
This is an amazing study, and it makes so much sense. It seems like the information is literally etched in our brain when it is written by hand.
thx a lot sometimes i end up listen to any book that i listen to more than twice just to remember it but your way its so much better than i thought
I agree with the effort idea. But would caution against thinking that physical note taking is necessarily the best method. I am very much an audio learner. and purposeful active listening helps me much more than note taking. Different methods are going to work for different people.
For four continuous years, i have been making notes in school to help me memorize and honestly,it really helps and sits in the back of ur mind
this is literally how i aced everything in school, i copy the questions and answers on a sheet of paper 10x
Silver Light oof
Always take notes! Writing is powerful! Repeat, repeat, repeat!!!
I always take note when my teachers are discussing (especially when it's related to Math).
Sadly, I'm sometimes too tired and my brain decides to let me sleep. I've adapted and learned to STILL write down notes when I'm half-asleep (a lot of my classmates find me amusing and they've admitted to using me as their sort of wake up call), but the end results were funny.
I wrote gibberish, and my sentences didn't follow the lines in the notebook anymore. My letters too stilted, too close, got cut off, etc.
So rest well people! Don't be like me whose regular sleeping hours are 3-6 hours a day :DDD
This would make sense because you are engaging your limbic system and amygdala which encodes memories more than one way into your brain thus activating various nodes. As opposed to just listening. I like this reinforcement. Very helpful.
I believe the writing vs typing was more to do with the fact that because writing is slower and you can’t just straight up write down everything the lecturer says, you need to find a more efficient way of getting the point across on the paper, essentially reorganize and rephrase the info which requires actually processing and understanding it instead of just listening and copying, and that makes it stick to your head better. That’s the same reason why teaching a concept to someone else helps you remember - you have to process and understand it first so you can teach it to someone else. I’m not sure it’s really about the effort, for example: reading the same book 3 times requires a lot of time and effort, but you could probably get the same or better benefits if you just read it once while doing your method of keeping an eye for important points and key concepts and writing them down. Probably less time and effort, but probably more efficient still. 🤷♀️
Having a journal also helps a lot. It keeps our thoughts organized and boosts our memory.