Learn How to Learn

2019/01/05

The reasons why I want to learn this course:

  1. Deeply understand the material from my favorite fields such as mathematics, computer sciences, etc.
  2. Learn quickly and more effectively.
  3. Avoid procastination.

Focused and Diffuse Modes

Brain and Learning

The brain weigh 3 pounds but consumes 10 times more energy by weight than the rest of the body. The brain is dynamic. After a sleep or a nap, the brain upgrades by generating more synapses on dendrites, the connection between neurons.

Famous people use different think modes:

The point is to switch between two thinking modes back and forth.

Procrastination

When we really don’t want to something, the insular cortex is activated. This cortex is associated with pain. As a result, the brain switches the attention to something else. Procrastination resembles addiction:

Construction of bad habits

Construction of bad habits

Willpower consumes a lot of neural resources. That why we should use it wisely.

Chunking is related to habit. Habit is an energy saver which allows us to free our mind for other types of activities.

The law of Serendipity: Lady Luck favors the one who tries

Habit composed of 4 parts:

  1. The cue: the trigger launches ‘zombie’ mode. Determine what triggers you into procrastination:
    • Location.
    • Time
    • Feeling.
    • Reaction.
  2. The routine: the habit mode, effortless mode in the brain to do an activity. Need to rewind the old habits.
    • Plan. Keep adjust the plan.
      • Daily “to-do” list.
      • Weekly task list.
      • Maintain leisure time.
      • Eat your frog at the morning. *
  3. The reward: The habit keeps continuing because it gives a pleasure after finish the routine.
    • Bigger rewards for bigger achivements.
  4. The belief: The underlying belief reinforce the habit by repeatively claiming ourself that the habit is good.

Focus on process, not product

Techniques

Practice makes permanent

Practice makes thought patterns impaint into the brain. Focusing intensely helps improve the formed patterns, strengthen the neuron structure.

Memory

There are multiple memory systems for different types of learning.

Long-term memory and short-term memory

Long-term memory and short-term memory

Long-term memory

Sleep

Working memory (short-term memory)

Techniques

Brain Model

Neuromodulators

Neuromodulators

Acetylcholine

Dopamine

Serotonin

Chunking

Definition

Context and chunks

Context and chunks

A chunk is the neural network inside our brain firing together, which connects concrete ideas and information into a bigger pattern through meaning and use. It is later easily to access. A chunk is considered as a item of bottom-up learning mode. To improve understanding of a particular subject or material, a chunk needs to be associated with a context. From that, we can determine whether to use, access to that chunk based on the context. To gain mastery, we should use both the bottom-up learning (chunking) and top-down learning (a big picture) inside the context of knowledge.

The octopus of attention

The octopus of attention

The working memory is located at prefontal cortex which includes about 4 slots to access memory. When focusing, we has the “octopus of attention”. He use his tentacles slip through 4 slots to access memory. He losts his power when we are tired of, in pain, or any negative emotions.

Chunking is an activity in which we connect small pieces of information into a bigger. We can form a chunk by repetition, learning through examples, learning bit by bit from the material. We can arrange the methods into sequential steps:

  1. Focus on the material. Turn off all distractions.
  2. Understand the basic of materials. It glues all the connected information together.
  3. Learn by doing: solve the exercises, practice the material. Even if you understand something, it does not mean that you can naturally do it.
  4. Give context for the chunk. We dicide when to use the chunk or when not to use.

Techniques

Context and learning modes

Context and learning modes

One of the problem of learning and reviewing materials is the illusion of compentence. It means that by some ineffective learning methods such as re-reading, highlighting, we delude ourself into thinking that we have already understand the materials. It is also true with searching information on Internet, or practice one thing over and over again. To tackle this problem, several methods are proposed which can categorized into two groups: (1) learning methods (note-taking, text on margin instead of highlighting, chunking), (2) review methods (recall, mini-test delierate practice).

Readings

Renaissance Learning

The first principle is that you must not fool yourself - and you are the easiest person to fool.

Interviews

Terrence Sejnowski

Some tidbits from the interview:

Nelson Dellis