This is my 2nd video watching from you. I'm in my first year at a community college doing my prerequisites classes on trying to get into the Nursing Program when I transfer into a university hoping to get my BSN. I'm not a smart student, I find lecture very boring, and almost everday I am just cramming at school because I work full time and I have no time to study, so I don't actually learn. However, I learned a quite number of tips from you that I will try to apply in my life: 1. Input > Output 2. Practice myself thinking that I am a teacher 3. Make flashcards I can't thank you enough!
This video is very beneficial! you summed up hundreds of TH-cam videos ive seen here about how to efficiently note take. From 2hr long videos to 30 minutes and now 6 minutes, you've summed it all. I would say you should have put timestamps to make it more organised and clear and also specified when to do things like skimming through the lecture notes would be considered 'pre-lecture', answering questions would be 'post lecture' because you can identify some of the answers through the lecture being taught aswell as on chatgpt and Anki summary is part of the revision strategy which is a bit after :) overall you've got a new sub, keep it up. would love to see a video on how to efficiently fit everything into a schedule weekly like uni, coursework, study time outside of uni work, actual work, gym and maybe even time for faith (islam in our case).
This helped me a bunch, thank you! I was so confused to why my notes aren’t helping me and why I’m never looking at them again. You explained everything perfectly! Shukran 😁
that is just awesome content man, there's no visual or noise pollution as many videos, and you really used the words that was needed to be used, without stalling hear me out, this channel will still be a hit, keep teaching like that pls
Sir. Great advice. I am a senior doctor who has been studying for internal medicine board. I have been using ai perplexity with Claude opus. I summarize I make flashcards generate case histories. Use it in an active recall manner. Excellent experience
Keep your notebook in your bag during the lecture. Then take your notes after the lecture is over. Ask and note what you missed. Before the next lecture, look at your notes then put them aside during the lecture.
Hi there, do you mean for step 1 or step 2? If so here you go www.reddit.com/r/medicalschoolanki/comments/swjqzh/anking_overhaul_step_1step_2_version_11_update/
Guys it depends guys listen let me tell you not all teachers teach good enough to listen and understand so take notes from those teachers lectures where u are sure u wint understand a thing even if u tried 100%
Hey, I'm so much inspired by your videos and I really feel your channel is worthy of being subscribed. I am studying charted accountancy , audit and Law I do wonder if these tips might help me Every single year , lots of amendments and changes take place in all of my subjects and I'm convinced that chap gpt might not be very helpful in this case. Apart from this, I really think this video was worth watching Thank you so much Drew.
Thank you Drew! Really means the world to me when people find value in my videos. I can imagine with Law and auditing how many rules are added and changed, bless you mate
just got you randomly recommended and really liked the videos so far. questions i have: 1. is chatgpt reliable? it linked me good sources, but im always overly sceptical so i never bothered to use it over books from our library, but thats really tedious (the books ^^) 2. could trying to explain a concept / topic to a toddler be a good way of active recall? like just writing down how id give a lecture about my topic to someone whod be way too young to understand if id just "mindlessly repeat". i love to just write about something cuz it also has therapeutic effects when i write down my thoughts and that seems like a good way to combine those 2 things to keep me positive and relatively stress free.
1. Chatgpt IS actually helpful! But im grade 12 now😅 and i use it often when theres a concept i don't understand but it really helps! Just ask it in specific ways like "explain this to a teen or x years old kid" or just basically ask it whatever u r confused about (but not math! Its unreliable there....lies with confidence😅😂) . But i still would advise to check in with ur books, like make sure what u r learning from ChatGPT is also included in ur textbook or syllabus. 2. And yh, u can write down what u learnt!👍 u could even try teaching chatgpt as well😂. Like pretend u r teaching someone and asks ChatGPT to rate it or smtg. Hopes this helps!!🎉
Salam alaikum brother. I was wondering how you find your questions in Anki? Like i've been introduced to Anki a year prior to entering medical school in order to prepare myself. I've tried using Anki the first semester, but I found finding the right questions about my topic difficult. How do you do it? It's just that the searching is really difficult. Thus now I've jumped to remnote to make my own flashcards, but as you know it takes a lot of time. I've made flashcards for lectures, but haven't even studied them because I can't keep up w the new lectures etc. Any advice?
Waalykom salam, I would say if you’re struggling to make flashcards and keeping up with new lectures, try to think about the information you’re making flashcards for, ask yourself do you really need to remember this particular thing in order to become a better doctor or is it wasting your time making a flashcard for it. I used to make a flashcard for every single detail but know I only make flashcards in order to see the whole picture. So one flashcard would be “what is the spinothalamic pathway?” And I try to remember as much i can from the info and would see the long flashcard answer and see the things I missed. So my two tips are, know what you need to know for the future and compress flashcards if you can’t keep up. Hope this helps.
@@abadi_saak Thanks for your answer. I'll try that out, which will be quite a challenge as I'm indeed inclined to write everything down. I think you forgot to answer the other question? How do you navigate through the Ankingdeck? Because finding the questions for your current lecture isn't easy.. How do you do it?
Next time I have my teacher teaches a new topic I will make sure to follow these steps. Thank you
Wonderful, glad you found it helpful Adrian!
This is my 2nd video watching from you. I'm in my first year at a community college doing my prerequisites classes on trying to get into the Nursing Program when I transfer into a university hoping to get my BSN.
I'm not a smart student, I find lecture very boring, and almost everday I am just cramming at school because I work full time and I have no time to study, so I don't actually learn.
However, I learned a quite number of tips from you that I will try to apply in my life:
1. Input > Output
2. Practice myself thinking that I am a teacher
3. Make flashcards
I can't thank you enough!
It make me so happy that my tips are helping, I pray that you enter the Nursing program you have in mind, best of luck!
This video is very beneficial! you summed up hundreds of TH-cam videos ive seen here about how to efficiently note take. From 2hr long videos to 30 minutes and now 6 minutes, you've summed it all. I would say you should have put timestamps to make it more organised and clear and also specified when to do things like skimming through the lecture notes would be considered 'pre-lecture', answering questions would be 'post lecture' because you can identify some of the answers through the lecture being taught aswell as on chatgpt and Anki summary is part of the revision strategy which is a bit after :) overall you've got a new sub, keep it up. would love to see a video on how to efficiently fit everything into a schedule weekly like uni, coursework, study time outside of uni work, actual work, gym and maybe even time for faith (islam in our case).
The quality of your videos is crazyy bro
This helped me a bunch, thank you! I was so confused to why my notes aren’t helping me and why I’m never looking at them again. You explained everything perfectly! Shukran 😁
that is just awesome content man, there's no visual or noise pollution as many videos, and you really used the words that was needed to be used, without stalling
hear me out, this channel will still be a hit, keep teaching like that pls
Means the world! So glad you liked the style
nice exactly what i need
This is very simple and most effective way
Amazing video
Amazing video! My god, very happy I found that. Thank you
Glad it's helping! you're very welcome
Sir. Great advice. I am a senior doctor who has been studying for internal medicine board. I have been using ai perplexity with Claude opus. I summarize
I make flashcards generate case histories. Use it in an active recall manner. Excellent experience
I glad you found it helpful my friend! I found that the technique you mentioned alongside a few other things is such a great way to learn.
Keep your notebook in your bag during the lecture. Then take your notes after the lecture is over. Ask and note what you missed. Before the next lecture, look at your notes then put them aside during the lecture.
What a great channel, thank you for this video!
Brilliant video!
Glad you liked it!
Hey, do you have any links to decks for Medicine (MD) specifically, if not MBChB/BMBS/MBBS will do
Hi there, do you mean for step 1 or step 2? If so here you go
www.reddit.com/r/medicalschoolanki/comments/swjqzh/anking_overhaul_step_1step_2_version_11_update/
@@abadi_saak i meant the ready made anki decks for med school
Yeah so this is the Anking deck I was talking about in the video
@@abadi_saak aha Thanks mate
Guys it depends guys listen let me tell you not all teachers teach good enough to listen and understand so take notes from those teachers lectures where u are sure u wint understand a thing even if u tried 100%
how do you revise the topic before your professional exams?
Hey, I'm so much inspired by your videos and I really feel your channel is worthy of being subscribed.
I am studying charted accountancy , audit and Law
I do wonder if these tips might help me
Every single year , lots of amendments and changes take place in all of my subjects and I'm convinced that chap gpt might not be very helpful in this case.
Apart from this, I really think this video was worth watching
Thank you so much
Drew.
Thank you Drew! Really means the world to me when people find value in my videos. I can imagine with Law and auditing how many rules are added and changed, bless you mate
Hey ✋, the intro was just superb🎉❤
should i do the flashcards of the same lecture evryday?
just got you randomly recommended and really liked the videos so far.
questions i have:
1. is chatgpt reliable? it linked me good sources, but im always overly sceptical so i never bothered to use it over books from our library, but thats really tedious (the books ^^)
2. could trying to explain a concept / topic to a toddler be a good way of active recall? like just writing down how id give a lecture about my topic to someone whod be way too young to understand if id just "mindlessly repeat". i love to just write about something cuz it also has therapeutic effects when i write down my thoughts and that seems like a good way to combine those 2 things to keep me positive and relatively stress free.
1. Chatgpt IS actually helpful! But im grade 12 now😅 and i use it often when theres a concept i don't understand but it really helps! Just ask it in specific ways like "explain this to a teen or x years old kid" or just basically ask it whatever u r confused about (but not math! Its unreliable there....lies with confidence😅😂) . But i still would advise to check in with ur books, like make sure what u r learning from ChatGPT is also included in ur textbook or syllabus.
2. And yh, u can write down what u learnt!👍 u could even try teaching chatgpt as well😂. Like pretend u r teaching someone and asks ChatGPT to rate it or smtg. Hopes this helps!!🎉
Great video 👏
Thank you!
Salam alaikum brother. I was wondering how you find your questions in Anki? Like i've been introduced to Anki a year prior to entering medical school in order to prepare myself. I've tried using Anki the first semester, but I found finding the right questions about my topic difficult. How do you do it? It's just that the searching is really difficult. Thus now I've jumped to remnote to make my own flashcards, but as you know it takes a lot of time. I've made flashcards for lectures, but haven't even studied them because I can't keep up w the new lectures etc. Any advice?
Waalykom salam, I would say if you’re struggling to make flashcards and keeping up with new lectures, try to think about the information you’re making flashcards for, ask yourself do you really need to remember this particular thing in order to become a better doctor or is it wasting your time making a flashcard for it. I used to make a flashcard for every single detail but know I only make flashcards in order to see the whole picture. So one flashcard would be “what is the spinothalamic pathway?” And I try to remember as much i can from the info and would see the long flashcard answer and see the things I missed. So my two tips are, know what you need to know for the future and compress flashcards if you can’t keep up. Hope this helps.
@@abadi_saak Thanks for your answer. I'll try that out, which will be quite a challenge as I'm indeed inclined to write everything down. I think you forgot to answer the other question? How do you navigate through the Ankingdeck? Because finding the questions for your current lecture isn't easy.. How do you do it?
Great 😊
Glad you liked it!
hi! i am in high school right now. will this method work for my ap bio and other ap classes i am talking? great video btw
thanks
Lol “tranquilo cabron” that make me laugh
But bro i need to put the knowledge IN first to put it out. So passive is important no?
Well passive can help, but keeping everything under the active recall umbrella will really bring out the good in studying
So i shouldn’t make a mindmaps for topics?
If you’re a visual learner like me, yh would highly recommend it
@@abadi_saakEveryone is a visual learner. You know the term of "Pictures speaking louder than words". Because it truly does.