Another really huge hole in the studies and even this video and all of learning-youtube is that not all of us are students. I'm a working professional who continues his learning on his own, completely self directed. It'd also recommend considering the delivery of this video. You're taking the usual academic approach which is bottom-up with the hope that it helps the learner/viewer to understand but on a platform like youtube everyone will have churned by the end to actually get your final message. If you had started with your conclusions and worked your way down to the important parts of the study then that would have made things more clear. "Should I take notes?", "It depends on your overall strategy and context", "oh okay, what are those strategies and contexts?" That kind of flow would have made this video much clearer IMO. Nobody really cares about the studies, we care about the conclusions and the reasonings behind them. Good video in any case, thanks for putting the work in to ask questions that everyone seems to to take for granted.
The reason I decided to become a nurse was because I discovered the power of creative problem solving. Your story reminds me to stay true to being myself as both an artist and aspiring healthcare professional. Thank you for being yourself with the world. 🌟✨☀️
Sooo if rereading and writing notes is not effective how can I read med the right way so I accomplish the checklist concepts ….. I’m asking about usmle and med career in general please
I'm trying to decide between Scrintal and Milanote. If you're familiar with Milanote, how would you compare it with Scrintal in terms of workflow and how intuitive it is?
Your video should be viewed by every medical student in the U.S. before they take their Step 1 exam. Most definitely. Thank you so much for your insights. It's saving me a lot of time and effort. God bless my friend.
1/ Study with "why", actively answer the question 2/ Remember and understand the general,topic instead going to detail 3/ Learn outside the box, connect the knowledge in a different field,subject
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: [04:04] ChatGPT can create multiple choice flashcards from a given article. [05:00] Create tables for comparison topics by instructing ChatGPT. [05:41] Use ChatGPT to create flashcards with masked answers for spaced repetition. [06:26] Create flashcards in another language using ChatGPT. [07:09] Extract key points from lecture transcripts and turn them into flashcards with ChatGPT. Made with HARPA AI
The only and super important problem with qbank is when you start to study from qbank you learn some random facts but can't categorize them in your mind and can't relate them to each other but when you study from a book you see all types of for example cardiac arrhythmias arranged in one or two pages! This way when you are asked a question in that topic you can bring all of them in your mind and see which is one is matched with the question. I love to study from qbank because answers part explain topics very well but the problem that Ive mentioned is a big challenge and kept me torn about using qbank as my main resource!
1. WHY does this happen? Why does _____ lead to _____? (Question why everything happened for better understanding) 2. Learn as much as you can about a topic and the big picture (actually understanding a topic=memorization). Learn the big patterns of a topic (how can you apply this topic in real life, potential situations?) *Recommendation: use screentool *3. Connecting outside the box (figure out how to apply a concept in real life). Learn this method through practice. Connect concepts to things familiar to you (scene in movies/books, interesting stories, logical reasoning, etc)