👇🏼 Thread
If you have yet to comprehend something, you are wasting your time trying to learn it.
Understand the whole picture before you spend time memorizing individual facts or rules.
The cost to memorize these things is low, but the payoff is high.
Simple is easy. Repetition of simple items is easier to get through.
This is where you fill in the gap in a sentence. It's quick and effective.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloze_test
It's easier for our brains to store a memory when it can be attached to something visual.
Instead of filling in a missing word, you fill in a missing piece of an image.
A good tool for drawing images is @excalidraw
A set is a collection or group of objects i.e. a set of fruits.
It's more difficult to retain memories based on sets (unless it's in the same order every time).
These are hard to learn. Better than sets, but still difficult. Instead, break them into small chunks.
i.e. trying to learn the difference between historic and historical
It's easy to get these confused. Try to avoid this if you can.
You want to be able to recall the information in the shortest amount of time. This can
- reduce error rates
- increase specificity
- reduce response time
- improve concentration
It's easy to remember things when you relate it to what you already know. A common example is associating two people with the same name — one person you already know and a new person.
Connect it to your personal life. It will save you time and be easier to recall.
Things that are vivid and shocking are easier to retrieve. If it evokes strong emotions, it will be easier to remember.
If the information is specific to a context, it will spark the memory faster.
It may seem redundant to have 3 situations for learning one concept. However, you can keep all 3 simple and as long as they make meaningfully help you learn that thing, they are valid.
There may come a time when you want to back up the knowledge with data. Keep sources around just in case. Plus you can revisit later to dive deeper.
Information may go out of date (depending on what you're learning) so be sure to keep a date around. You may need to update your information in the future.
It's easy to say over-consume information and tell yourself you'll need it all in the future. Instead prioritize what you need to know to accomplish your near-term goals.
joeprevite.com/learn-quickly
"Effective learning: Twenty rules of formulating knowledge" by Dr. Piotr Wozniak
supermemo.com/en/archives199…
End thread