Head to brilliant.org/TinaHuang/ to get started for free with Brilliant's interactive lessons. The first 200 people will also get 20% off an annual membership.
Thanks, I liked your medical and Naruto references :) as dietitian background and anime fan, now devops ~6 months aim to become a hands-on IT architect, it is nice to hear other information dense views. Most helpful tip of your video: practise as closely as possible the goal you want to reach. Btw, great job on the editing.
I hope this is a good summary for you all who don't have the time: I) Compass and Map for goals - describe your goals properly, plan the path to success II) Straight to the bullseye - Learn only what you need, no dilly dallying. You have to prepare for a coding interview? Don't waste time on learning the details of the needed language III) View notes as framework - No fancy notes, they should keep you focused during lectures and aid as a guide for reference. Like a glossary. IV) Retrieval - Say things from memory, to strengthen the neuronal pathway/memory. - Quiz yourself V) Solicit feedback 3 kinds of feedback - 1 Outcome based: informs you that sth doesn't work - 2 Informational: Tells you where sth doesn't work - 3 Correctional: Tells you where you are lacking right now VI) Experiment - Make thought experiments with your current knowledge, test ideas - Break someone else's code to understand the language better - Create a habit of questioning your surroundings
Pro Tip: Listen to this video in 2x speed, AND THEN you can "FASTLY learn how to learn anything faster!"🐇 💨 Loved to see that the 'Learning how to learn' book was an inspiration for this vid🙌🏼
@@TinaHuang1 So I'm not the only one listening to the videos at 3x speed. Finally, a worthy opponent! It's like having three shadow clones; I can watch anime and TH-cam videos three times as fast. It has been a very helpful skill for learning things faster.
I have applied every one of these techniques in lifting, but this video was the bridge I needed to start translating those lessons to data science. Thanks friend
This was so on point for me. I've been meaning to learn more advanced SQL for my PM job & Japanese so I can watch Anime without subtitles. Now I have a plan!
00:00 intro 01:03 compass & map 03:10 bullseye 05:05 the weakest link 07:22 notes as framework 09:06 combat the forgetting curve 10:34 feedback is a gift 12:03 experiment
Nice to meet you Tina, great informational channel. Need to watch more of your videos, you have so many awesome tips. There are so many study traps out there you can fall in. I'm one that takes a lot of notes, notes can take a lot of your learning time away. I spend so much time on note-taking. Thanks for the tips.
The "Sexy Jutsu" coment was a nice finish lol. I am starting to appreciate your videos more each time I watch. I have been a bad note taker since forever ( you could publish my notes when I am done). I still use tabs I put on each page that has critical info with a note/title for later reference. I am taking the Google Data Analytics and I am having fun but very little study time, I am thankful you and others like you share so much with us. I have wanted to do a study session with you for my accountability but I am not on a good schedule for that.
I would have loved to have seen a mention of the use of analogy/simile in order to assist both initial comprehension and lasting retention in the learning process. In fact, we see the technique in application in this very video by the frequent comparisons Tina Huang makes to Naruto's learning process. However, while powerful, it can be somewhat risky to implement because doing it incautiously or without correctional feedback can be harmful. Still, an excellent video - thanks so much for your content, Tina!
You knocked this video out of the park! One thing you always highlight that I kinda glossed over is not just having a compass, but being interested/curious about where you're going. Eventhough I had always had an interest in learning how R/Python, SQL and excel 'play together'. I didn't initially get a shot at my current job, but I always showed my bosses that I was interested in it. I had always created mock-up reports about my performance [as a lowly call center rep]. Then one thing happened. The data analysts who sat next to me [whose shoulder I always looked over], quit ... and the remaining data scientist used that to leverage for a higher raise...and was fired. When I found out about all this, and that there was an internal hiring test, I became the Hokage. I forged myself in the flame. I studied my ASS OFF. And got the job! I wrote all of this to say, always show interest in where you want to go. Even if no one is [initially] listening to you. Because a door might open when you least expect it.
For me, more important is full comprehension and retention of what I have learned and intuitivelyn integrating them into previously acquired knowledge.
This is helpful specifically for getting specific about your goal and using others to speed up your process. I take too detailed notes but much is based in imagery for connections but still full definitions. Regarding the retention, I find this extremely important to new learning concepts especially language. Leveraging tools like quizlet, anki or some other recall system which has many prebuilt decks (Granted that does not mean they are correct) I find the use of tools like this to recall for language or exam prep useful. Recall and testing is a good study method along with explaining to another person. If you cant explain it you dont really understand it well enough. That could fall into the corrective feedback but we know internally when were not adept enough usually. Real world application is something that comes easier over time with exposure to variety. You should think were would or would I not apply this solution. This is where you get when you are getting deeper into your skill. Sometimes faster mean stopping and walk away. I wake up with the answers often. I have learned more and deeper from failures than something going as expected. Everything becomes a skill in your toolbox.
I appreciate the tips on this, especially for learning SQL as a future data scientist (hopefully)… for anyone in the same boat I’d definitely say check out Tina’s videos on learning SQL!
i agree with the retreival stuff if you cram before a test you wont remeber anything need to study the same material over sessions every day for it to stay
1. You have to UNDERSTAND before anything 2. Do active recall : exaplain to yourself the metter and you'll se if you really know 3. FlashCards so the forgetting curve doesn't make you forget everything you've studied 4. Much and much practice
One good example of a correctional feedback is the Rust compiler. It doesn't just suggest a correction, but rewrite your code, optimises it, serve you a coffee and could even replace your software engineer 😅
> I watched this video > Didn't understand Naruto references > Watched all of Naruto & Shippuden > Re-Watched this video > Understood the content :) Great video
Hey Tina! Once again a very informative video, so thank you for this. I was hoping that if you could make a video on how to cover the essentials Data Science Mathematical part? I've been trying to focus on probability and statistics but somehow they are still giving me major headaches on a day-to-day basis. I'm assuming that since you're a Data Scientist, you know the struggle 😸
Also, not directly relevant, but physical exercise/strength training improves brain cognition. For me it also increases motivation and makes easier to envision goals.
Thanks for the info! :) I actually read Ultralearning based off your recommendation in a previous video. I’ll now have to check out the other you mentioned in this video! What do you think of Jim Kwik and his accelerated learning techniques? I’ve been using Brilliant for about 5 weeks now and it’s a lot of fun!
Also, the best thing you can do for your studies is to give yourself time! you can be the most efficient student ever. but with more time the better you will be even better. So start early!
Thanks a lot for this wonderful video love the Naruto reference , can you please give some tips how to find relative work so we can implement the thighs we learn and take our skills a level further . (Like in of your video you mentioned while you were learning "rust" language you did some work for a University Professor that help you to learn things effectively and a dead line to projects forces you to do work faster )
I have two objections here: 1) I question the premise of encouraging the desire to learn fast fast fast. Learning thoroughly might be better. I recall some people in history with a multitude of detailed accomplishments like Darwin described how they felt they learned and thought slowly, but focused on the same project for a long time thoroughly, and therefore were able to deliver a large accomplishment in the end. 2) "Just look it up" is very situational. I noticed during my college years that I actually had an *additional intuition* that other people around me did not have, regarding things I actually had in memory. For instance at the age of 10 I memorized the periodic table. Seemed meaningless in hindsight but in my college years I noticed that a lot of my thinking that had tangential relation to it seemed to be a lot easier for me than my peers. Presumably we all have one *additional intuition* per memorized system or collection of facts. We just don't notice.
Does learning fast imply fast applications? I believe optimal scenario is fast learning with a thorough application and teaching others, which seems to be the case here. {refer to the learning triangle} also, a blend of intuition and knowledge is ideal, which again seems to be the case here.. perhaps i missed the target of your comments, thoughts?
@@ethannorton3470 I would agree. The thing about intuition is that it takes a lot of investment to memorize or learn something so deeply that it becomes intuitive. So you got to pick your battles and can't learn something as deeply as that with everything. I just think that it's easy to overcompensate in the opposite direction and rely on google as a crutch.
@@ethannorton3470 If you memorize facts rather than look them up you can work more fluently in some areas. For instance the things I've memorized in programming are a lot more fluent for me than the ones where I constantly look up.
@@cyberneticbutterfly8506 i like to account for fluidity in the change of knowledge, and "facts" are probably pretty fluid, which again supports google page rank algorithm.
I need some guidelines about learning blockchain. In this video you are mention that you are learning blockchain currently. Can you please tell me how & where to learn blockchain ( resources to learn)?
Head to brilliant.org/TinaHuang/ to get started for free with Brilliant's interactive lessons. The first 200 people will also get 20% off an annual membership.
thankss , please make the next video about the blockchaine and tell us about your learning goal 😜
Gracias te admiro mucho 😊...
Thanks, I liked your medical and Naruto references :) as dietitian background and anime fan, now devops ~6 months aim to become a hands-on IT architect, it is nice to hear other information dense views. Most helpful tip of your video: practise as closely as possible the goal you want to reach. Btw, great job on the editing.
I hope this is a good summary for you all who don't have the time:
I) Compass and Map for goals
- describe your goals properly, plan the path to success
II) Straight to the bullseye
- Learn only what you need, no dilly dallying.
You have to prepare for a coding interview? Don't waste time on learning the details of the needed language
III) View notes as framework
- No fancy notes, they should keep you focused during lectures and aid as a guide for reference. Like a glossary.
IV) Retrieval
- Say things from memory, to strengthen the neuronal pathway/memory.
- Quiz yourself
V) Solicit feedback
3 kinds of feedback
- 1 Outcome based: informs you that sth doesn't work
- 2 Informational: Tells you where sth doesn't work
- 3 Correctional: Tells you where you are lacking right now
VI) Experiment
- Make thought experiments with your current knowledge, test ideas
- Break someone else's code to understand the language better
- Create a habit of questioning your surroundings
Thumbs up for saving me 14mins
Thank you
Thanks ❤️
Pro Tip: Listen to this video in 2x speed, AND THEN you can "FASTLY learn how to learn anything faster!"🐇 💨
Loved to see that the 'Learning how to learn' book was an inspiration for this vid🙌🏼
2x only? ROOKIE NUMBERS
@@TinaHuang1 So I'm not the only one listening to the videos at 3x speed. Finally, a worthy opponent! It's like having three shadow clones; I can watch anime and TH-cam videos three times as fast. It has been a very helpful skill for learning things faster.
@@stanleytaveras6884 THAT'S THE SPIRIT
@@TinaHuang1 One day I will be on your level!! 😞Maybe today I'll try out 2.25x speed 🤣
@@stanleytaveras6884 But it will also depend with the communication skill of a speaker.
I have applied every one of these techniques in lifting, but this video was the bridge I needed to start translating those lessons to data science.
Thanks friend
This was so on point for me. I've been meaning to learn more advanced SQL for my PM job & Japanese so I can watch Anime without subtitles. Now I have a plan!
Thanks!
thanks so much for supporting the channel!
I really, really love your videos. So realistic and well thought out.
00:00 intro
01:03 compass & map
03:10 bullseye
05:05 the weakest link
07:22 notes as framework
09:06 combat the forgetting curve
10:34 feedback is a gift
12:03 experiment
Also in description :)
Nice to meet you Tina, great informational channel. Need to watch more of your videos, you have so many awesome tips. There are so many study traps out there you can fall in. I'm one that takes a lot of notes, notes can take a lot of your learning time away. I spend so much time on note-taking. Thanks for the tips.
Feedback is the way! Dynamic programming is hell! Great video!
Thank you Tina for such amazing content!!! It really helps and the best thing about your videos are that they are super relatable!!
True!
Malayali aano?
@@nuansd yes!!!
Girl, you are truly good at explaining your content!! Amazing and concise job!!!
It's kinda crazy how frequently I relate to you, when you say 'bout your experiences.
thank you!✨
I'm an IT undergraduate, And, your videos are so helpful to me 🥰 In debt to you tbh 😇🙏Thank you so much. Keep up the good work.
I want to thank you, because you are really inspire me, I'am tooking the career, a pharmacist how learn data science, thank's for all your video
The "Sexy Jutsu" coment was a nice finish lol. I am starting to appreciate your videos more each time I watch. I have been a bad note taker since forever ( you could publish my notes when I am done). I still use tabs I put on each page that has critical info with a note/title for later reference. I am taking the Google Data Analytics and I am having fun but very little study time, I am thankful you and others like you share so much with us. I have wanted to do a study session with you for my accountability but I am not on a good schedule for that.
thanx for being so awesome and sneaking in Naruto clips to help show examples of what you're trying to show us. =)
Recently found your content and feel like we have such similar headspace and struggles & watching you explain things helps soooo much! Thank you!
Amazing advice. Always click fast on your videos as soon as you upload. Keep it up Tina 🙌🏽
I would have loved to have seen a mention of the use of analogy/simile in order to assist both initial comprehension and lasting retention in the learning process. In fact, we see the technique in application in this very video by the frequent comparisons Tina Huang makes to Naruto's learning process. However, while powerful, it can be somewhat risky to implement because doing it incautiously or without correctional feedback can be harmful.
Still, an excellent video - thanks so much for your content, Tina!
I can never get over your hand gestures. ❤
That being said, I'm going to use retrieval technique for the information in this video.
These tips are really helpful. Than I you Tina.
You knocked this video out of the park! One thing you always highlight that I kinda glossed over is not just having a compass, but being interested/curious about where you're going. Eventhough I had always had an interest in learning how R/Python, SQL and excel 'play together'. I didn't initially get a shot at my current job, but I always showed my bosses that I was interested in it. I had always created mock-up reports about my performance [as a lowly call center rep].
Then one thing happened. The data analysts who sat next to me [whose shoulder I always looked over], quit ... and the remaining data scientist used that to leverage for a higher raise...and was fired. When I found out about all this, and that there was an internal hiring test, I became the Hokage. I forged myself in the flame. I studied my ASS OFF. And got the job!
I wrote all of this to say, always show interest in where you want to go. Even if no one is [initially] listening to you. Because a door might open when you least expect it.
Sidenote: any takes on Go/Rust/Julia? Is this something newbie Data Scientists like myself need to dig into in 2022?
Awl man really needed this video, it's amazing -and the Naruto references? Absolute stroke of BRILLIANCE! ♥ ♥ ♥
This video is so helpful! I'm not a tech person, but I'm super into learning so something like this is really helpful for me.
Tina’s growth on TH-cam !!! 🚀🚀
Yes! This is the thing I was searching to deal with time loss.
the references from naruto is much to the point and easy to relate with it , great video and much needed at time 😁😁
Tina you’re a blessing.
For me, more important is full comprehension and retention of what I have learned and intuitivelyn integrating them into previously acquired knowledge.
Really loved how you made it approachable by bringing up Naruto as an exemple
I think developing an intuition would be the most important part of learning something new.
Hey! I Just subscribed your channel!!love your content
Your advice always hits home💚💚
This is helpful specifically for getting specific about your goal and using others to speed up your process. I take too detailed notes but much is based in imagery for connections but still full definitions. Regarding the retention, I find this extremely important to new learning concepts especially language. Leveraging tools like quizlet, anki or some other recall system which has many prebuilt decks (Granted that does not mean they are correct) I find the use of tools like this to recall for language or exam prep useful. Recall and testing is a good study method along with explaining to another person. If you cant explain it you dont really understand it well enough. That could fall into the corrective feedback but we know internally when were not adept enough usually. Real world application is something that comes easier over time with exposure to variety. You should think were would or would I not apply this solution. This is where you get when you are getting deeper into your skill. Sometimes faster mean stopping and walk away. I wake up with the answers often. I have learned more and deeper from failures than something going as expected. Everything becomes a skill in your toolbox.
I appreciate the tips on this, especially for learning SQL as a future data scientist (hopefully)… for anyone in the same boat I’d definitely say check out Tina’s videos on learning SQL!
i agree with the retreival stuff if you cram before a test you wont remeber anything need to study the same material over sessions every day for it to stay
Loved it! Especially the Anime examples 🤣
Your videos are getting better and better 🌟 👍
1. You have to UNDERSTAND before anything
2. Do active recall : exaplain to yourself the metter and you'll se if you really know
3. FlashCards so the forgetting curve doesn't make you forget everything you've studied
4. Much and much practice
I clicked so fast 😆
Haha no simp for u
SAME
@@magicallybabelicious see
Here before this comment get popular
Me tooo🤣🤣
My forgetfulness is not a curve but instead a constant straight line 😅 Great reminder that we all can forget stuff. Thanks 🌻
Very useful, thanks !
And I love the Naruto metaphors too :)
thanks for the great tips
I use the same note taking method. It's great. Thanks for the book recommendation, I will check out Ultralearning. Great video!
You're such a great teacher 😁
So much information. Perfect video. I am trying to use reviewing for exactly same reason. I work on interview questions these days. 🤓
really helpful, keep going girl.
I assume the last reference is when they used the reverse harem jutsu against Kaguya lol .. It's a great video Tina ! Your tips are so helpful :)
Stop being so cute ibi
Thank you very much! These are in fact very practical advices!
One good example of a correctional feedback is the Rust compiler.
It doesn't just suggest a correction, but rewrite your code, optimises it, serve you a coffee and could even replace your software engineer 😅
love your videos
Thank you. Very helpful.
> I watched this video
> Didn't understand Naruto references
> Watched all of Naruto & Shippuden
> Re-Watched this video
> Understood the content
:) Great video
xD
As a Naruto fan myself, I love how you make references to the show all the time.
Hey Tina! Once again a very informative video, so thank you for this. I was hoping that if you could make a video on how to cover the essentials Data Science Mathematical part? I've been trying to focus on probability and statistics but somehow they are still giving me major headaches on a day-to-day basis. I'm assuming that since you're a Data Scientist, you know the struggle 😸
great video. thank you so much
Thank you !
Loved your naruto references... it made it so much fun and interesting.
Also, not directly relevant, but physical exercise/strength training improves brain cognition. For me it also increases motivation and makes easier to envision goals.
Your videos are always so helpful Thanks!
needed this still thank u
Great video.
next vid : How to retain your learnings :coolCat:
Yey! Great video! Loved the Naruto references.
thank you for sharing 😊
thank you for this good video
Thanks i always wait for your vdoz
thankss , please make the next video about the blockchaine and tell us about your learning goal
I love the reference to Naruto :)
Great video, thanks ❤
You are a gift from heaven
Great content!!!
I love how you make awesome Naruto references!
It feels like the hundreds of hours watching anime was not a waste of time 😅
The fastest way to learn something is to create shadow clones and make them learn it for you
Learning is a superpower
I love experimentation! help me to see progress
Those Naruto references are awwweeesomeeeee!!!💕💯
Thanks for the info! :) I actually read Ultralearning based off your recommendation in a previous video. I’ll now have to check out the other you mentioned in this video!
What do you think of Jim Kwik and his accelerated learning techniques?
I’ve been using Brilliant for about 5 weeks now and it’s a lot of fun!
I was really liking the video because of the tips, but i ended up loving it for the Naruto explanations.
Liked and subscribed on The Naruto reference
pretty nice tips! luv u
Also, the best thing you can do for your studies is to give yourself time! you can be the most efficient student ever. but with more time the better you will be even better.
So start early!
Thanks a lot for this wonderful video love the Naruto reference , can you please give some tips how to find relative work so we can implement the thighs we learn and take our skills a level further . (Like in of your video you mentioned while you were learning "rust" language you did some work for a University Professor that help you to learn things effectively and a dead line to projects forces you to do work faster )
I love the naruto examples... 🧡
Omg I love your Naruto analogies! 😂
a chain is strong as its weakest link I really liked that
Really live the Naruto references
You're my favorite otaku 😂 🙌🏼
That people learn and forget things so quickly invalidates the dogma around the education system
I love how you use Anime for your examples its funny and oddly helpful
I have two objections here:
1) I question the premise of encouraging the desire to learn fast fast fast.
Learning thoroughly might be better.
I recall some people in history with a multitude of detailed accomplishments like Darwin described how they felt they learned and thought slowly, but focused on the same project for a long time thoroughly, and therefore were able to deliver a large accomplishment in the end.
2) "Just look it up" is very situational.
I noticed during my college years that I actually had an *additional intuition* that other people around me did not have, regarding things I actually had in memory.
For instance at the age of 10 I memorized the periodic table. Seemed meaningless in hindsight but in my college years I noticed that a lot of my thinking that had tangential relation to it seemed to be a lot easier for me than my peers.
Presumably we all have one *additional intuition* per memorized system or collection of facts.
We just don't notice.
Does learning fast imply fast applications? I believe optimal scenario is fast learning with a thorough application and teaching others, which seems to be the case here. {refer to the learning triangle} also, a blend of intuition and knowledge is ideal, which again seems to be the case here.. perhaps i missed the target of your comments, thoughts?
@@ethannorton3470 I would agree.
The thing about intuition is that it takes a lot of investment to memorize or learn something so deeply that it becomes intuitive.
So you got to pick your battles and can't learn something as deeply as that with everything.
I just think that it's easy to overcompensate in the opposite direction and rely on google as a crutch.
@@cyberneticbutterfly8506 from my understanding, google has always been about enhancing, not so much reliability or a crutch. perhaps a jetpack?
@@ethannorton3470 If you memorize facts rather than look them up you can work more fluently in some areas. For instance the things I've memorized in programming are a lot more fluent for me than the ones where I constantly look up.
@@cyberneticbutterfly8506 i like to account for fluidity in the change of knowledge, and "facts" are probably pretty fluid, which again supports google page rank algorithm.
Thanks for this clear, concise informative video. Love it!
I need some guidelines about learning blockchain. In this video you are mention that you are learning blockchain currently. Can you please tell me how & where to learn blockchain ( resources to learn)?
great video
Ur videos are great. Always helpful. Glad to know the cool girls like naruto👍
also you must think what is hard or complicated to you and concentrate and practice two time more on that then on the rest stuff
As a fellow lefty I love seeing someone with notes that look as messy as mine. It's hard to relate to videos with notes that look like art.
You are very intelligent person girl
I really needed this!! Thank you :) Your examples are great and inspiring
I'm positive the real sponsor for this video was Naruto😂 and now I have a goal to watch it😅. But really thanks for the tips Tina🙏🏾