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Learning Strategy Quotes

There are 110 quotes

"Talk to yourself...It's so important to speak the language."
"Really the only way to do well in this class is to get a lot of practice by solving problems yourselves."
"The best information gap is the information gap that exists between the people in the room. You need to tap into it, you need to exploit it, and you need to make it non-threatening."
"Before you can do those hard things, you've got to learn how to do the fundamentals."
"It's the sustained effort over a long time that counts, not bursts of sustained efforts or all-nighters."
"It's important to study hard but also to study smart."
"Remembering the Kanji helps you create an entry for every kanji inside your mental dictionary. This is extremely powerful."
"If you're planning on becoming able to fluently read Japanese, you're gonna need to know all the kanji, so doesn't it make most sense to learn them in the order that makes them easiest to learn?"
"The most important part is not what course you take, but rather how you leverage what you learn."
"Meet a lot of people who are smarter than you and ask them questions, pay attention, and follow-up and validate and check the things that you learn."
"Read books that have similar objective...and study them."
"Don't try to learn all 12 scales at once. Pick one scale a week and drill that baby in."
"I might as well just go hard mode now because you're learning how to learn."
"Just tackle it a little bit each day. Programming is hard, learning Python and anything else is difficult, but it's really easy if you just tackle it a little bit each day. That's cool."
"The real purpose of practice is to establish weaknesses."
"It's more important to set up a schedule that you can really stay consistent with rather than trying to do too much at the start and then feeling overwhelmed by everything."
"don't focus on that focus on learning the things that you're interested about within those classes"
"Just find one quick simple combo to start with and only use that combo when you're absolutely sure you're gonna land."
"Your self-study process will be so much better if you're just honest with yourself on what you're interested in."
"Build a playlist of songs you want to learn in lesson videos you find useful."
"You don't need to master every single tiny detail."
"Get broad first, go deep, but it's a 't' with multiple it's not really a 't' because I think you have to go deep multiple places."
"The most important step is the first one: you must jump into new lessons and new conversations in order to make a language breakthrough."
"The best thing you can do is sit there, watch, absorb, and adjust."
"You want to focus on what I did when I joined chatrooms... That's how you should treat chat rooms."
"JavaScript is the best first language you can absolutely wrap your head around."
"When you're the youngest person in the room, don't do the most amount of talking. Do a lot of listening and ask a lot of questions. You'll learn a lot."
"Please, please, please do not try to memorize everything. It's a recipe for disaster."
"Use it like a book, learn from it dedicated, throw it in First Aid, review First Aid if you want, use an accessory Pathoma book, and that's it. You'll be fine."
"Bottom line is make connections between facts and information in your brain because it might help this information stick around longer."
"And all an acronym is, is just using the first letter of a set of words or a word, couple of words to remember certain information."
"Learn how to learn... Chances are whatever it is that you're trying to learn someone has probably learned that already."
"Rely a lot on ignoring your fear and rewatching replays."
"Learn, adapt, experiment, and survive." - Loading screen
"It shouldn't be overwhelming if you start and take baby steps, read the rules, figure out what the base stuff you need is, build off of that."
"The best way to keep up is to read it right then and there, keeping everything fresh."
"Spaced repetition: review words over a spaced amount of time so you never forget them."
"Start slowly and then just gradually build up speed."
"Start copying. Drop here you go, gain some humility and try to learn some midlane. Best of luck."
"Copy what they are doing, pay attention to their lanes, their skill builds, their item builds, and copy it."
"Start using English with English speakers since day one."
"Even if you learn two words a day for a year, you would increase your vocabulary arsenal by 700 words."
"Taking a course is the best way to go about this because you're given a step-by-step process."
"JavaScript... most complicated thing... take it piece by piece... integrate those pieces together."
"Just take what they do and do it, it's that simple."
"Understanding the logic behind moves is better than memorization."
"If you're going to watch TV, at least watch in the language that you're learning."
"The quickest way to end the frustration and get the regular practice you need to start speaking your language well is to go out and find a bunch of speaking partners."
"You want to start building your mental map, your mental web of this area of law."
"If there's a question that you do particularly bad on, you want to highlight that question so you know to come back to it the most."
"If you can turn this into a poor man's flash card, what you want to do is highlight the right information."
"So the idea again is to focus on something to understand it very well and that's how you can use it to talk about lots of different topics so you can use this vocabulary and other things."
"Pre-study is effectively creating that bookshelf before you go ahead and put all the books on the shelf."
"Don't just read, understand every single concept."
"Take notes, watch it multiple times, and apply everything that you learn as this is not a random trend to hop on or short-term hype up."
"If you're starting to learn something, start with really small focused projects."
"By only going to these resources like YouTube when you actually get stuck and need help, that is the best way to learn."
"Understanding like a native solves every problem that you have about how to learn."
"Make sure the vocabulary is out of the way first so you're not gonna be surprised by the vocabulary that's coming."
"Start small and study often. Understand this is a marathon not a sprint."
"Superior memorizers used a spatial learning strategy, engaging brain regions such as the hippocampus that are critical for memory and for spatial memory in particular."
"Use metacognitive regulation: plan how you will obtain your learning goals, monitor your progress while studying or taking a test, then evaluate your preparation for an exam and your performance in studying."
"You should be aiming to spend as much time as possible with and in the language itself."
"The main goal is to get your studying down to just 25 to 35 minutes per session."
"What active recall comes down to is just making your brain do the work."
"The best approach to learn any of these tools on the list is to practice, practice, practice."
"If you can remember the alphabet, you can remember the PQRS T."
"I think it's a really good idea to spread out your learning for programming."
"You are the one who has to be ready with both the skills in the T-shaped learning strategy."
"It's a proven strategy that is made up of three main stages: learning, reinforcing, and remembering."
"We need to have some kind of exploration."
"Just in time learning: don't worry about all the things that you'll worry about later in your business, what's most important right now is figuring out how to get started."
"Separate fluency from the means of fluency."
"Get the gist of it first, then move on."
"Spacing it out... the theory is that if you retrieve it right before you forget it, then you remember it again and the next time it's going to decay at a slower rate."
"I would rather start off easy to build my confidence and then get harder as I go along."
"My goal with this strategy is not necessarily to get 100 or the highest marks in the class, but more so to gain a good comprehensive understanding and foundation that I can build more medical knowledge on top of."
"Don't focus in concentrated all in one day; spread it out."
"Stacking is taking one habit that you do already, and getting the new habit — which is going to be our English study — and putting them close together, so one leads right to the other."
"You are going to have to consolidate as you go along."
"Make sure you understand the concepts as you go along."
"Reading once and recalling is better than rereading multiple times."
"Understand things at a high level first."
"Do a lot of reading, just do a ton of reading, and test yourself on what you are remembering with that reading."
"Focus on understanding, not memorization."
"Finish a couple of key principles, practice them quickly, and then rest your brain for the day."
"Keep a notebook. It helps you with things you don't know... even the act of just writing it down kind of cements it in your brain."
"When you want to learn new words effectively, read for 30 minutes every day."
"Interleaved practice is more effective for long-term retention than block practice."
"Leverage, leverage, leverage your advantages as an adult learner so that you can learn German smarter, not harder."
"Good readers reread. If they didn't understand something, 'Oh, that didn't make sense, I'm going back.'"
"The rule of three: Read it once, read a problem again, really understand the question."
"Test yourself as you go; it's a really, really useful and vital way of doing that."
"Learn in pieces; that's the best way to learn."
"Test yourself constantly; it allows you to accurately identify gaps of knowledge."
"Make a plan for your memorization."
"If you want to remember something really important, it's a good idea to break it down into bits and get all your friends to help you."
"It's about developing their skills, not simply taking lots of practice tests."
"If you are new to Unity or even to game development, recreating older games is a really good way to start learning and growing your skills."
"It is always better to study K's law first and then move to the other types of circuits."
"Eighty percent of your English learning time should be either going out in person or finding ways to interact with others."
"Try to learn less, and then you can actually take those things and really do something magical."
"You want to be learning something where the thing that you're learning is easy to understand from the other information that you already know."
"Remember, if you want to get fluent in English faster, don't worry about the difficult things up here; get fluent with the basics down here."