Right. The only things that I learnt that really stuck at university were the ones I wrote about. I started to realise that I didn't know what I thought until I wrote it down. I know, that sounds weird, but it's true.
@BellatorAstraGladiusКүн бұрын
This was exactly what I needed to solve my problem, thank you.
@neilbennett9281Күн бұрын
“ I got over 95% in a maths exam” 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 But because I only studied for 2 months, I can’t remember what the numbers above 95 are called. Any other subject but maths!
@peterpuck1878Күн бұрын
You don't need a GENIUS to understand... classic "Point 1. Learn how to learn the thing you want to learn." this video is 9 minutes of crap
@s13rr4buf3Күн бұрын
I'm watching this at 0.25x speed, and boy do you sound drunk!
@csamaiКүн бұрын
### Step-by-Step Guide Here’s a 7-step process based on the method described: **Step 1: Learn how to learn.** Discover the best way to learn your subject. Start with books or reliable internet resources. Example: For math, identify a problem-solving approach that emphasizes practice. _Citation: “Learn how to learn the thing you want to learn… You need to figure out the best way to do it.”_ **Step 2: Focus.** Dedicate undistracted time to your learning. Example: Use a quiet space like a library to concentrate without interruptions. _Citation: “You’re going to have to dedicate time… Find somewhere with no distractions.”_ **Step 3: Do the thing you want to master.** Engage directly with the skill or material. Example: Solve math problems if you want to improve in math. _Citation: “I needed to get better at solving maths problems, so I solved a lot of maths problems.”_ **Step 4: Work on your weak points.** Identify your weakest areas and spend the most time improving them. Example: Focus on calculus if it’s a difficult topic for you. _Citation: “Find your weakest points and work on those… That’s the fastest way to improve.”_ **Step 5: Test yourself regularly.** Self-testing teaches new concepts and highlights areas for improvement. Example: Cover solutions in math problems and solve them without peeking. _Citation: “Testing yourself doesn’t just uncover what you don’t know; it actually teaches you.”_ **Step 6: Seek feedback.** Work with someone who can evaluate your efforts and give constructive critiques. Example: Find a mentor, teacher, or peer who can guide you. _Citation: “If you can find someone who can evaluate your work and give you feedback, that is incredibly useful.”_ **Step 7: Understand the 'why.’** Don’t just memorize answers-invest time in knowing why solutions work. Example: Instead of just accepting that the derivative of x² is 2x, understand the concept of differentiation. _Citation: “You need to know why the answer is right… Build your intuition and insight into the subject.”_
@JulieMelvilleКүн бұрын
Here’s my why - why is everyone so willing to use AI generated images full of mis or no spelling usefulness. I hate seeing AI in everything and loaded with incompetence.Pulleeze stop.
@tsetsoangelov64552 күн бұрын
I am learning python :D I was asking myself how do you actually solve a problem what do you do :D
@resilientfarmsanddesignstu17022 күн бұрын
I am a novelist. What I do is to approach every piece of writing and communication as a persuasive argument. The argument need not be logical or rational, it could be psychological or emotional. The agents advancing the argument need not be persons, they may be non-human, they may be non-living phenomena, they may be larger societal or cultural structures and they may be immediate circumstances or some combination of these agents. The goal is to persuade the characters who are imbedded and the reader who is vicariously imbedded to decide to take some action which could be inaction. Essays are a great way to do this. To write a good essay, you must not only know your subject, you must also understand your audience - the reader of the essay, and their circumstances.
@DineshKumar-lq2ck2 күн бұрын
A good teacher knows how train mind to get the Best out ofit
@francoisjohannson1392 күн бұрын
wrinting means hold on to a thought that otherwise fly by ike clouds in the sky
@songofyesterday2 күн бұрын
I keep coming back to sololearn. More practice, and compared to codecademy it is actually affordable for my budget.
@incognitouser74513 күн бұрын
Is Ultralearning by Scott H. Young any good?
@engineeringmadeasy3 күн бұрын
Hi, I just got 30th Anniversary edition. Is that the one you've got? Or should I consider buying one of previous edition. Thanks.
@grapevine1253 күн бұрын
Had to watch this a couple times, not because it was confusing but because the background music was 🔥 lmao.
@MrRickyw013 күн бұрын
In 1971, I was taking courses like Calculus 3, Strength of Materials, Vibration Analysis plus others that I can't recall. Throughout the week, classes fell between 9 AM and 1 PM. I would get home by 2 PM. I started taking naps of 3/4 hours daily. I would wake up and review class notes. I didn't change my study habits. My report card yielded 4 A's and 2 B's. Yes, sleep helped me.
@MrRickyw013 күн бұрын
Around 1971, I took courses like Vibration Analysis, Calculus 3, Strength of Materials, and others I can't recall. They were all occurring between 9AM and 1PM. I would be home before 2PM, every day. I started taking naps that lasted 3 to 4 hours daily. I would wake up and review the class notes. I did not change my study habits. My report card registered 4 A's and 2 B's. Sleep was and is a good thing.
@JustCause23 күн бұрын
for the love of God get to the point
@smokingsix3 күн бұрын
Well, this study I believe ( i haven't read it but ) might be flawed in one aspect. From the video it emphasizes on performance in tests scores ( Which is entirely different from learning ) . and then sleep. Could it be possible that the people sleeping late were just not in the right frame of mind at the *time* the test usually take place? ( what time does the test take place? was the test also taken at like say 5 pm as well as at 9 am ? )
@anabelpancorbo93094 күн бұрын
You make great content but packt is terrible. I would advise people not to get it, the site is constantly collapsing. Not worth the money!
@BattleSKY84 күн бұрын
Does aptitude have anything to do with this? Sort of like a dormant thing in you to learn math so well and so fast. Maybe your initial teacher just wasn't very good. Maybe, maybe.
@cnsqonline4 күн бұрын
Hate the idea of being ostracized because you improved learning
@burakozc30794 күн бұрын
I had never struggled on maths or physics. My way is, i always think about how can i do it? What is the logic behind the formulas? Etc. I never accept anything is hard for me because it is not. I just ask myself why is that formula is like that. For example one of my exam in the college, i looked all the formulas about subject and went to sleep. I just tried to find out where all the formulas comes from, and their logic while half sleeping. Another funny stuff i did is, for thermodynamics 2, i read the book and squeesed it in one word "OHA". It means something like "whoa" in english. The trick was, "Ottoda H(Enthalpy) Artar", in english "for otto cycle enthalpy gets higher". Then i drove the otto p-v and t-s diagrams from this info. Then i drove diesel and brayton diagrams from looking that first drawings. Then from those diagrams i figure out the formulas and from here, you do just some simple calculations. I got %100 and my friend that i teached this method got %80 from exam. Sometimes i used "Unit analysis" for finding the equation and then solve the problem. I was brilliant in maths and physics but i sucked very hard on chemistry and all the other sh!t. Because i am totally useless when it comes to memorise stuff. 🥲👍🏿
@AlexanderMoen4 күн бұрын
Fantastic video. Favorited and revisited twice now
@chocolatecosmos14244 күн бұрын
I just discovered your channel and I'm so glad I did.
@xxxboy-tm3dt4 күн бұрын
thank you a loooot
@doyourbest76555 күн бұрын
German grandfather said about sleep: “one hour before midnight is worth two after”. Go to bed.
@ezycuberz45635 күн бұрын
1) Learn the best way to learn your subject 2) Deep work 3) Just do your subject, don't waste time on other tasks 4) Focus most on weak points 5) Tests, lots of it. (Uncovers weak points & teaches) 6) Find your missed Mr Simpson 7) Go depths for every topic
@НиколайЛузгарев-о2ч5 күн бұрын
WHY have you read 100 books on python? Do you have time to write anything in Python? I've been programming in Python for many years, more than 10+ and it's not my first language. I've grown from a tester to the head of Python + DS backend development. I am involved in backend development, extensive experience in SDET, have taught internal courses for several companies. Why didn't you have 1 - 2 books on python and the desire to learn from documentation on your own experience and communication with professionals? 100 books really doesn't seem to be such a big deal if you take a big period and a very vague topic like math or philosophy. But Python's too specific. you read one book, that's enough for 100 hours of practice to move on. you read the second one, which is much deeper on many issues and that's enough to work with. Perhaps over the next few years you will actually need another, let's say 5-10 more - some will deal with algorithm issues, some with specific frameworks of the subject area, some will deal with related issues like code architecture or deploying to the cloud. But HOW do you read 100 books on a topic as specific as a single scripting language with a very transparent framework. - if we're talking about really reading with practice and understanding each chapter, that's even for a 200 page book enough time, given the exercises. - If it is about flipping through and a rough understanding - then how can you recommend one or the other? a lot of them are like 90% of the time. - If you understand the basics of python in the first book, the second one will not read like the first one and will seem easier. especially book number 100. I love reading, I believe that on many topics only a book can give understanding, not tutorials, video tutorials or even courses, but the idea of reading 100 books on python is either absurd or a fraud.
@orikusgodbreka93815 күн бұрын
4:40/8:51 still no method...oh advertising now 5:33/8:51 😂😂 I mean the video is rubbish...great manipulation and storytelling but basicly practicly 10 sec of information...
@marcelonascimento78655 күн бұрын
Nothing's new here. Everyday a "big shot" claims to know the secret of everything 😂😂😂
@acrosstheworld22835 күн бұрын
So basically you are a reader, not doer.
@vipnetworker5 күн бұрын
This is such an excellent video. Thank you for making it. I am 45 years old, a life long learner, currently studying multiple topics on my own, but in self study. Most of my study is in reading and listening with very little output, because it is simply for my own knowledge or use of the topic. I suppose use would be a form of output, for example I am studying 2 languages right now and have been casually for years, but I have been realizing for some time a missing component has been me actually WRITING in these languages. It is such a key, critical missing key and this video did an excellent job showing that, not only for my language learning, but also the variety of other topics I am currently studying both for work and hobbies. Thank you for this gift 🙏
@wybuchowyukomendant6 күн бұрын
I use ai for feedback. Just make sure you feed it a book or two on the subject, so it knows what it`s talking about.
@id7myzv6 күн бұрын
# SNAKES GAME # Use ARROW KEYS to play, SPACE BAR for pausing/resuming and Esc Key for exiting import curses from curses import KEY_RIGHT, KEY_LEFT, KEY_UP, KEY_DOWN from random import randint curses.initscr() win = curses.newwin(20, 60, 0, 0) win.keypad(1) curses.noecho() curses.curs_set(0) win.border(0) win.nodelay(1) key = KEY_RIGHT # Initializing values score = 0 snake = [[4,10], [4,9], [4,8]] # Initial snake co-ordinates food = [10,20] # First food co-ordinates win.addch(food[0], food[1], '*') # Prints the food while key != 27: # While Esc key is not pressed win.border(0) win.addstr(0, 2, 'Score : ' + str(score) + ' ') # Printing 'Score' and win.addstr(0, 27, ' SNAKE ') # 'SNAKE' strings win.timeout(150 - (len(snake)/5 + len(snake)/10)%120) # Increases the speed of Snake as its length increases prevKey = key # Previous key pressed event = win.getch() key = key if event == -1 else event if key == ord(' '): # If SPACE BAR is pressed, wait for another key = -1 # one (Pause/Resume) while key != ord(' '): key = win.getch() key = prevKey continue if key not in [KEY_LEFT, KEY_RIGHT, KEY_UP, KEY_DOWN, 27]: # If an invalid key is pressed key = prevKey # Calculates the new coordinates of the head of the snake. NOTE: len(snake) increases. # This is taken care of later at [1]. snake.insert(0, [snake[0][0] + (key == KEY_DOWN and 1) + (key == KEY_UP and -1), snake[0][1] + (key == KEY_LEFT and -1) + (key == KEY_RIGHT and 1)]) # If snake crosses the boundaries, make it enter from the other side if snake[0][0] == 0: snake[0][0] = 18 if snake[0][1] == 0: snake[0][1] = 58 if snake[0][0] == 19: snake[0][0] = 1 if snake[0][1] == 59: snake[0][1] = 1 # Exit if snake crosses the boundaries (Uncomment to enable) #if snake[0][0] == 0 or snake[0][0] == 19 or snake[0][1] == 0 or snake[0][1] == 59: break # If snake runs over itself if snake[0] in snake[1:]: break if snake[0] == food: # When snake eats the food food = [] score += 1 while food == []: food = [randint(1, 18), randint(1, 58)] # Calculating next food's coordinates if food in snake: food = [] win.addch(food[0], food[1], '*') else: last = snake.pop() # [1] If it does not eat the food, length decreases win.addch(last[0], last[1], ' ') win.addch(snake[0][0], snake[0][1], '#') curses.endwin() print(" Score - " + str(score)) print("bitemelater.in ")
@id7myzv6 күн бұрын
just a game code [i created it] ._.
@variolaa10896 күн бұрын
thank you... I am just reading a fascinating book on art.. and I switch to artwork of the epoches, and then I put it together.. now I understand why it works better this way
@jesuspp51576 күн бұрын
took too long to get to the point,
@gliddensbest6 күн бұрын
As a high school teacher, I absolutely love your content. It is always on target and well researched. You create entertaining videos with the kind of content I am trying to pass on to my students and while I do my best to make my classes as entertaining as possible, nothing quite compares to a well-executed video presentation. Thank you for your efforts, it has been a big help to me and my students.
@danh56376 күн бұрын
Hi Giles do you have any examples online of the maths problems. What they looked like, how they were structured etc? Thanks.
@TerRowle-ut2ns6 күн бұрын
Eight minutes of waffle ‘the best way to learn is to study’ - wow, what insight.
@sb61816 күн бұрын
Is the scale of procrastination dependent on the consequences of inaction? Deadlines can be effective in managing procrastination. And some personality types benefit from being managed or directed rather than setting their own arbitrary deadline. Similarly, multi-tasking is generally ineffective whereas focusing on one thing at a time tends to lead to better results and feelings of achievement or progress. On Monday this week my one priority for the day was to finish an important presentation for work - the phone went onto airplane mode for a few hours, there was no guilt about not going to the gym or not eating an Instagram worthy breakfast and lunch or even putting the laundry on. That task was my priority and it got done over 4hrs only. The laundry and gym still got some attention that day but they were not my one priority.
@Robert-in6xs6 күн бұрын
6 minutes of wasting your time. Doesn't start telling you "the secret' until about 6:15
@rayrayray41166 күн бұрын
Ah fill in the gaps, brilliant E t. sh t a d d e.
@paulklee57906 күн бұрын
‘You wouldn’t got through people’s rubbish and take it home with you…’ Mmmm: have you never been to a car boot sale?
@wolfich46846 күн бұрын
Эссе Мышление письмом 3
@wolfich46846 күн бұрын
Рпонял Лучше дальше расиягивать Лучше вводить разнообращие 3