Skip to main content

Learning to Learn

There's an interesting concept that's gotten a lot of traction over the past couple of years called "meta learning".  It's a term coined by one Donald B. Maudsley, who defined it as "the process by which learners become aware of and increasingly in control of habits of perception, inquiry, learning, and growth that they have internalized". Translated from Sciencese, Maudsley is talking about how we figure out ways to become more efficient at learning new information.

HR managers (you know, those overpaid dimwits you complain to about your coworker stealing your lunch?) like to call it "learnability". Most people with real jobs don't call it anything at all. In reality, though, it's an extremely useful thing to understand, together with the techniques you would use to get good at it.

Myself, I'm a decent-ish learner. Mostly, that's because I've had to learn things on my own quite often - I had to teach myself web design, app development, blog management, SEO and a fair number of other arbitrary, esoteric topics. I think that's one of the most important things to having a "high level of meta learning awareness", as Wikipedia puts it - experience. The easiest way to get good at learning things quickly and thoroughly is, oddly enough, to learn a lot of things quickly and thoroughly. However, that doesn't mean you've got to spend hours and hours researching random things on the internet. There are a few things you can do to learn whatever it is that you happen to be studying at the time that much better.

The first, and for me, most effective thing you can do while learning is to use the Feynman Technique. The Feynman Technique was devised by Richard Feynman, the late Nobel laureate with the fabulous haircut. The easiest way to use this is to get yourself a piece of paper - or, if you have access to technology devised after 1990, a Word document. Then, study the concept you want to learn. Write down an explanation of the concept. It'll be hard at first, and you'll probably want to resort to all manner of technical jargon, but as much as possible, don't. Try and explain it in simple language - Reddit's r/ExplainLikeI'mFive has some fantastic examples of how to do this. When you're done, read up on anything you felt unsure about. If you did end up getting technical at some point, try rewriting that portion of your explanation to be simpler. And that's it! The Feynman Technique will help you learn much faster and retain much more, too.

Another technique I personally use a lot is a little more specific, in that it relates to video courses. Online video courses are all the rage now, from KhanAcademy's math and science to Coursera's programming courses to MasterClass' ridiculously expensive courses on everything from cooking to comedy. Here's the problem, though: nobody's got three hours to sit in front of a computer and watch videos anymore. My solution to this: videos at double speed. Most sites now have a control to set playback speed. I usually keep the speed on the videos I'm watching somewhere between 1.5 and 2 times the original speed, depending on the complexity of the video I'm watching. If your course comes with captions, it usually helps  to turn those on, as well. I was able to complete a 4-week course on Coursera in about four hours using this technique.

The other thing that I've found works really well is flashcards, particularly digital ones. This technique is really more applicable to things you have to memorize than complex concepts, but I think it's worth a mention anyway, because it's saved my hide more times than I can count. A flashcard, incidentally, is a piece of paper with a question written on one side and the answer on the other. So, for instance, if you're trying to memorize countries and capitals, you could have, say, "Turkey" written on one side and "Ankara" on the other. Now, personally, I hate cutting paper to size and writing on it, so I'm rather more partial to digitized versions of this. Sites like memorize.com let you create flashcards and memorize them online. There's also a tool called Anki, which I can't vouch for myself have heard great things about, which lets you create flashcards on your cellphone or tablet.

I think the best way to learn something is to learn about it on your own. You'll come across resources that you enjoy learning from, and you'll be able to remember what you learn. As such, I think these techniques are some of the most useful things I have ever learned. At any rate, I have a Coursera course to complete. Ciao.

Comments

  1. Excellent write-up. Have a super 2018, Rivik...Cheers!

    ReplyDelete
  2. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Your article is very nice thank you for share this such a wonderful article. I'll make sure to bookmark it and return to peruse a greater amount of your helpful information.
    sales pop by autoketing, pop up sales, autoketing app

    ReplyDelete
  4. Positive site. where did u come up with the information on this posting? I can't wait to read lots of your posts.Cheers for sharing with us your wonderful blog.
    autoketing app, chat facebook, facebook support chat

    ReplyDelete
  5. This pass practice is commonly costly as professional web developers can warfare you each and every share of one from a hundred bucks to thousands of dollars, depending not in the isolate away away off from how perplexing you nonappearance your website to be
    autoketing
    Shipping Bar for Shopify
    Free shipping bar

    ReplyDelete
  6. Your article is very nice thank you for share this such a wonderful article. I decided to add your blog to my bookmarks so I can return to it at a later date.
    abcya3 games online juegos motox3m3 Games of gogy

    ReplyDelete
  7. Cheers for sharing with us your wonderful blog.Love to read it,Waiting For More new Update and I Already Read your Recent Post its Great Thanks.
    game online Battle for the Galaxy Game Break The Cup Game Toon Cup 2017

    ReplyDelete
  8. Your articles are very useful. I really like them. It's very kind of you to share your insight.They give me effective tips. Thank you for sharing your insight.
    Papa's Scooperia free game to play free game Def Island Kick The Buddy kid games

    ReplyDelete

  9. food games 2019
    basketball games free
    soccer free games
    Your articles are very useful. I really like them. It's very kind of you to share your insight.They give me effective tips. Thank you for sharing your insight.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Appreciative for making the solid undertaking to analyze this. I believe it will be unquestionably If it's OK, do you appreciate that it's extra wide learning? It could be valuable and obliging for me and my mates.
    2 player games for boy
    io jogos 2019
    free online friv Games

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Exam Fever

As anyone currently in the twelfth will tell you, with varying levels of dismay, the final exams are right around the corner. Parents everywhere are seizing their children's phones and taking time off from work. Panicked screaming ensues at intervals. I don't believe there's a person on the planet who genuinely enjoys exam season. Actually, I take that back - there's no one in India  who enjoys exam season. Partially, I think this is our own fault. Exams are the most important things in an Indian student's life, so parents seem bent on bottling up all the worry and concern they have about their kid's education and allowing it to spew forth in a torrent of "No more video games!" and "Delete WhatsApp!" commands during the two months surrounding the exams. Small wonder, then, that at 17, I believe the purpose of exams is to seasonally blot the sunshine from otherwise happy lives. This whole exam fever thing does have some upsides. Okay,

The Game

I've a bit of a confession to make: I still play Minecraft off and on (I can hear all the hardcore gamers laughing from here). I even quite enjoy playing it. For those of you who don't know, Minecraft is a game about placing blocks to build structures in an infinite, 3D world. Basically, it's a discount LEGO set for computer-literate people. Much like legos, if you play it after you turn twelve, people assume that you're mentally incapable of dealing with anything more complex. I hate the idea that you become to old to play a certain video game. Unless something involves physical activity that'd be impossible to perform once you cross a certain age, I don't see why it should be age-restricted. I'm seventeen years old, and if I want to spend a night binge-watching Tom and Jerry and consuming obscene quantities of potato chips, that's my god-given right! I think people tend to assume that Minecraft is a simple game. Once you've built a squattish,