Then, mentally recall all principles and main points you want to keep in mind. Here, many people make the mistake to sim

Author : zhicham.nani.1232
Publish Date : 2021-01-05 11:53:01


It was Schopenhauer who already stated in the 1850s, “When we read, another person thinks for us: we merely repeat his mental process.” So to learn, we need to think by ourselves.

But most people act like their brains would keep everything. They focus on reading a specific number of books a year. By focusing on quantity, instead of learning, they forget anything they read. Ultimately, for them, reading is mere entertainment.

You can spot these people easily. For example, they say they’ve read a book, but lack the words to explain their takeaways. Likely, they haven’t learned a thing from reading it.

Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman (1918–1988) was an expert for remembering what he learned. Bill Gates was so inspired by his pedagogy that he named Feynman, “the greatest teacher I never had.”

In essence, the Feynman technique consists of four steps: identify the subject, explain the content, identify your knowledge gaps, simplify your explanation. Here’s how it works for any book you read:

Teaching is the most effective way to embed information in your mind. Plus, it’s an easy way to check whether you’ve remembered what you read. Because before you teach, you have to take several steps: filter relevant information, organize this information, and articulate them using your own vocabulary.

To protect ourselves from overstimulation, our brains filter and forget most of what we consume. If we remembered everything we absorb, we wouldn’t be able to operate in our world.

If you’re after a way to supercharge your learning and become smarter, The Feynman Technique might just be the best way to learn absolutely anything. You can think of it as an algorithm for guaranteed learning.

Feynman mastered this process like no other. The people of his time knew him for being able to explain the most complex processes in the simplest language. They nicknamed Feynman “The Great Explainer.”

Since the invention of the internet, society has seen countless advances that have benefited many and been scrutinized by others. With this advancement, though, came a whole host of misunderstandings.

The Feynman Technique is one method to make us remember what we read by using elaboration and association concepts. It’s a tool for remembering what you read by explaining it in plain, simple language.

Not only is the Feynman Technique a wonderful recipe for learning, but it’s also a window into a different way of thinking that allows you to tear ideas apart and reconstruct them from the ground up.

http://elta.actiup.com/cqn/Video-AEK-Athens-Hapoel-Unet-Holon-v-en-gb-vdd30122020-.php

http://old.cocir.org/media/cdz/video-vienna-capitals-v-black-wings-linz-v-at-at-1srf-15.php

http://www.ectp.org/kzz/videos-Vaasan-Sport-Tappara-Tampere-v-en-gb-att-.php

http://startup.munich.es/mlt/video-KS-Cracovia-Krakow-Unia-Oswiecim-v-en-gb-1huv-.php

http://elta.actiup.com/cqn/video-AEK-Athens-Hapoel-Unet-Holon-v-en-gb-zxr-.php

http://molos.bodasturias.com/jph/Video-Bili-Tygri-Liberec-HC-Vitkovice-Ridera-v-en-gb-gii-.php

http://www.ectp.org/kzz/Video-Vaasan-Sport-Tappara-Tampere-v-en-gb-ojj30122020-.php

http://old.cocir.org/media/cdz/video-vienna-capitals-v-black-wings-linz-v-at-at-1rgz-19.php

http://www.ectp.org/kzz/video-Vaasan-Sport-Tappara-Tampere-v-en-gb-qlu-.php

http://molos.bodasturias.com/jph/videos-Bili-Tygri-Liberec-HC-Vitkovice-Ridera-v-en-gb-wtb-.php

Your Distance” by William Garratt — 340,219,451 views These days, you can truly never have enough reminders for people to keep their distance to stay safe and healthy! This perfectly looping GIF by William Garratt was a great way to share that reminder.

The more I tried to explain how serious we were, the less he understood. My words seemed to go in one ear and out the other. At that moment, I understood what people meant when they said, “You can’t please everyone.”

What I love about this concept is that the approach intuitively believes that intelligence is a process of growth, which dovetails nicely with the work of Carol Dweck, who beautifully describes the difference between a fixed and growth mindset. Here’s how it works.



Catagory :general