maybe you could copy it word for word, then after class you can make it in your own words, or better yet, request for the presentation and look over the slides on your own to take notes.
This is a good method, because she is explaining what she had learned, in her own words, which usually means she has a deep understanding of what is the topic about, and understands.
But to be honest you won’t remeber everything and Zack has everything and can learn all of it creating his own version Emily might not remeber everything and sometimes the way you write in your own words is wrong
I went through all my years of studying without notes or reversion Its really simple just pay attention when the teacher is explaining And try to explain it back to another classmate
@@tuanzixiao3666 yeah my computer science teacher just puts something on the board that he didnt even write and starts eating and then he gets mad if we dont do the work when there is no work
@@MyNameIsntLong yup, i went to an international school and literally every teacher is there for that enormous paycheck, our old history teacher uses slides that he finds online, the tests too, me and ma hoomies in online school would just find the same test but with answers online lmao
@@MyNameIsntLong my pe teacher does that. He hits on his phone all day, we don’t even do anything. He just makes us walk around the gym for the whole class, then gets mad when we are bored and tired
Emily: "Oh, you're finished with the slide. Can you now wait for 15 minutes, I need to write it in my own words. What do you mean you have 20 more slides and you won't be stopping after each of them for me specifically?"
My history teacher is really nice in that she confirms most of the class is willing to continue. My English teacher gives us until she finishes explaining to write notes and then off to another slide; only safety is if she gets sidetracked and talks about a story that is unrelated so you can power through notes
I didn’t take notes really in high school but consistently did better then most of my classmates, made one girl cry because I didn’t try at anything and did better than her
My teachers, in social subjects such as History and Literature, forces our class to jot down every details in the slide and on the blackboard. At the end of term, they will check our notebook.
@@Myth_Investagator understandable but in the next lesson it's useful to have your notes from last class, and for my school the essays we write we use our notes for all the information
Something I like to do is putting two mascots in my notes with speech bubbles that have jokes made from keywords in my notes. Customised and visual notes are easier to remember (for me) so draw a lil' guy next to your notes
I am kinda like Zack because I take notes and I tried my best to write every single word what the teacher said and when I get home, I rewrite it in my own words . Simple❤❤
In high school, the sad reality is, it doesn’t matter how deeply you’ve understood the topic. If you’ve blindly memorised all the material you’re probably the top student lol.
Ye true as some teachers literally take the explanation or whatever in their presentation and replace some words with blanks Your best bet is to just copy them all down.
@@2bplayerrytwo38 yep, especially with subjects that use foreign languages, from 6-8 grade my schools forced us to learn Latin and Sanskrit (two languages that literally no one speaks and hardly a few teachers can teach them well) and safe to say, it was all blind memorisation
@@scarose dude it’s RU-vid and you can’t be talking because you don’t care either since you didn’t capitalize the first word’s first letter Not to mention you didn’t even put a comma down or an “it” you really should make sure you are making the same mistakes you point out and yes I know I’m doing the same thing but I’m not the criticizing someone for no reason I’m criticizing you to defend someone
Me : **tries Emily's technique and later realizes I can't take notes cuz I forgot everything or because my teacher explains like she has a train to catch and I don't even get time to blink**
@@mikeyangeles6340 honestly i wouldnt say its smart because our teacher lets us take a picture but we have to write them on our notebooks when we get home
Bro became mr.obvious for 60 seconds and this is his most viewed video? What about the ones that we didn’t know yet wanted to know, or just needed to know for the future?
This is so stupid. I had a few teacher that wanted us to use their method to study and I can get why they would do that if they were teaching to little kids (elementary school mostly) who still don't have their own method, but when you try to force you method on adults you are just an idiot
I know it's exhausting but I actually do both, I divide my pages into what the slides say and the other half for my notes, and for bonus I highlight the keywords on both sides
It’s different for everyone in reality, for example I have really good retention and if I just focus my mind on what’s being told I can understand material very well, but if I’m taking notes I tend to do worse since my brain is split between listening and note taking. TLDR do what fits best for you, there isn’t one clear “better” way
Never took a single note in school or even studied notes for that matter, graduated highschool at the same time i got my associates degree in general science. Most of my learning was from doing homework and seeing patterns.
At least Trader blade it is most likely can't stop because she's trying to train her brain is isn't fully trained yet and you don't get a worse grade because of that
Thank you so much! This helped me prepare for the exam because i do not understand what word my teacher is using it's because i'm a american and i only know a few words. Thank you so much i very appreciate it.
I would forget everything if I were emily- so first I'll be like Zack at first and then make it into my own words to understand way faster not to forget anything-
Yep, the problem with this most of the time is students doesnt even have a clue what the professor is talking about, especially in higher level sciences or math
It kinda makes sense that Emily will get the higher grade bc she let her teacher explain the notes, which makes her understand more, and she copies it down in her own words to make an easier understanding.
Guess which student has the higher grade: - Kyle goes to school every day and listens to the teacher, but doesn't always finish work on time - Ethan goes to school less than 3 days a week and always hands everything in, rarely ever late Edit: it's Ethan. I am Ethan. You don't always need to be there to try your best. I rest my case.
This question is more based on if the grading system is weighted or point based, if it's point based then Kyle would mostly likely lose especially if the class has a lot of assignments/homework that he repeatedly turns in late. If the system is weighted then Kyle will fare much better than Ethan as the missed assignments can't negatively impact him enough especially if the course is more weighted towards tests. Next to consider is the grade that these students are in. If it's highschool then Ethan will get the win due to the amount of assignments. If it's college then Kyle gets the dub cause Ethan will fail the final and that is the end of 25-40% of your grade in college. This is more complicated than a simple problem and more info would be required on a grading policy in the syllabus to get an accurate answer.
yeah but then u gotta watch it, so ur basically in class for 2 hours then when your at home you’re watching the class and taking notes, so ur in class for 4 hours pretty much
@@masonnnnnnnn Yes but it’s good if you accidentally miss out some key parts so you can just forward or skip to the part that you need to write or something
99% of the time, a student who is making a exact copy of the teacher actually ends up not understanding the material because that’s all they’re doing, coping, not learning. Emily has the higher grade because she waits to understand it first then copies it down in her own summarized words.
@@liammitchell9120 there are some tests that don’t have open notes. And let’s say you memorized the answers, sure you get a high grade on the test but you a low score on daily grades because they are created by the teacher most of the time.
I like following along with the slides but re-wording the notes a bit so it makes more sense for me but I still KNOW that my explanation is accurate and not misinterpreted by me since I sti closely followed the original notes, especially if I'm going to use my notes in the future and forget what the original meaning was. Of course, sometimes, I can't do this because teachers don't give us time to.