10 Principles To Learn Anything

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It's about learning, coding, and generally how to get your sh*t together c:

It's a FREE weekly 1hr livestream about AI & tech topics eg. how to build a GPT, how to build AI products, jobs in the era of AI etc.

Check it out if you're interested in learning AI & data skill, then applying them to real freelance projects!

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⏰Timestamps
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00:00 intro

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🎥Other videos you might be interested in
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Hi, my name is Tina and I'm an ex-Meta data scientist turned internet person!

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You are very clear and helpful. I am 70 and retired. Trying to learn AI. My brain is very scattered. You help. Thank you.

toddpeterson
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One way that worked for me to learn stuff at beyond the surface level that not many people talk about is a full on immersion. Make study your whole life. Cut out everything else. The learning speed is exponential compared to other methods. It might feel slow or same as 'effective' learning methods but the knowledge compounds quicky. You only need one tip from the mentioned ones in the video to make it work. That is creating a right environment, but in this case the environment has to be hostile and boring so that the learning becomes the only 'fun' thing to do.

一本のうんち
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Personal notes


Step1- 10% duration should be dedicated to meta learning (why, what, how) use ai prompts (check video) to speed up

Stuff to be aware in order to stay focused: procrastination, sustaining focus, right focus (arousal lower for focus to be wider in the case of complex tasks; increase your arousal by increasing internal and external environment)

Principle 3 - directness is all about what is the next actions and practicing what really matters (learn to code by coding a project)

Principle 4 - drill (in order to solve the pb of egg-chicken) by writing questions and stuff you dont understand and focus on it (a tactic that can be useful is time slicing: isolate the most difficult part of a complex task repeat it again and again until you master it)

Combine p3 and p4

Principle 5 - retrieval (test yourself to know if you master what you are learning) activate your neurons

Principle 6 - feedback (3 types : outcome feedback like a comedian testing new jokes, informational feedback by asking what is right and is wrong, feedback with mentor or supervisor involves understanding, use gpt for these)

Principle 7 - retrieval (prevent the forgetting curve by spaced learning and proceduralization)

Principle 8 - intuition (about digging deep in a subject, like Feynman technique that mastered the fundamentals)

Principle 9 - experimentation (there is a limit to how much ressources you can get for intermediate and expert level, that is why it is essential to experiment everything like van Gogh did for painting by pushing the boundaries)

Ok I've got a list of principles, but now how do I actually apply all of this? For today, for next week, for the next following months?

uaweezaherri
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i really like the series about education and learning. please keep on making these. i would love it if you would create a detailed video on first principles thinking. THANK YOU.

youtoo
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Great video! Please do more like this. I actually had already read Ultra Learning years ago, but struggled to put the lessons into practice (my ADHD really didn't help), and I was re-reading it not long ago, but it wasn't much different this time either. Now I'm reading Scott Young's new book, Get Better At Anything. It would be awesome if you talked about it too.

thesirion
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Loved the way you broke everything down into bite sizes! Thank you. I'm going to start using these principles

OldKingEnergy
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As someone who doesn't comment and is looking to finally start a new journey to learning something new, this video came up at the perfect time. I took notes on this, used the prompt and are gonna take steps to get good at this. Thank you so much for the great video and hope for more like this or any other content from here!

nicholasfraser
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I really enjoyed this video and liked this kind of video (book review). It was more impactful because not only did you read it, you gave us your thoughts, how you applied it, and how it worked for you. You also gave great examples of other people and other areas of life that this can be applied. I plan to buy and read this book because your experience with it inspired me to try it for myself. To answer your question at the end: yes, please make more book review videos like this. All your videos are great!

jorgenunez
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Thanks for the video!
Personally for me, the most difficult thing in learning or working on something is not to take a pause. Because it's hard to predict all things that can happen in my life to create a decent schedule. For example, I created a schedule to learn python, but suddenly I noticed that I don't understand (or forgot) some topic, e.g. lambda functions or I got sick for a week or so. It's really tough to get back because I feel like I lost the track.

oleksiimaksymov
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stay blessed you r so gifted you r making a positive impact GOD BLESS YOU your parents must be very proud of you take care
you are precious keep it up

BABABABA-ud
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This is the part of Youtube I thoroughly enjoy

azraelfirstofhisname
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You have a real talent for explaining complex things.

AlfredoLowery-nl
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Me: Watching this video at 2 am before final exams

mrskinnywrists
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This is a great video. I got his book because I want to do a deeper dive into learning. I will be watching this video over and over after I read the chapters.

patientx
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Watching these kinds of videos at the start of my masters degree is super helpful.

veronicasmemories
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Thanks for the information 💕 the video is informative and amusing at the same. I have a suggestion that you may add a summary at the end with a visualization in the case maybe just an ordered list of the principles. And other cases maybe a mind-map so we can imagine the full picture at the end.

afnandawoad
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It was very helpful thank you so much for making ✨

tejas.parjane
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It's a good book. You don't need to adapt the whole thing from the book, just what works for u. Also just to give u head's up it's not about some shortcut, it will just correct the mistakes you do while learning stuff

shashankchaudhary
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A "science of learning" (neuroscience, psychology, etc.) series would be interesting. I've just begun my data science journey and have been piecing together the bleeding edge consensus (yours included) on the optimal way to learn all these new things. Strangely there isn't tons of content on it, but it would be very helpful. Just my 2¢.

jondoe-jrtl
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My questions have finally been solved, thanks tina, i am going to read this book for more knowledge! Great video btw

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