Views : 10,465,317
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Aug 2, 2022 ^^
Rating : 4.973 (3,300/494,524 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-21T12:50:15.039833Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
I recently had a MASSIVE argument with my university because they repeatedly did not provide any feedback to essays or exams. Just a mark and that's it. I backed my perspective with a ton of academic works on education, that I doubt any of them ever read.
I'm going to show them this video. Because university courses that don't provide feedback are virtually useless.
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I think there's another way to think about this
A. Expertise is about recognizing the pattern
B. Recognizing pattern comes from storing highly structured information in the long-term memory via FEEDBACK
Four things it takes to store highly structured information in the long-term memory via FEEDBACK
1. Repeated Attemps (WITH FEEDBACK) - you must have some type of feedback first
2. Valid Environment (PROPER FEEDBACK) - the feedback should give you valuable lesson to improve the next time
3. TIMELY FEEDBACK
4. Deliberate practice (PROGRESSIVELY UPGRADE FEEDBACK) because overlapping & repeating feedback won't help you become better, it must be upgraded over time for new lessons, and hence improved expertise accordingly
-> As you can see, it all surrounds feedback, which indeed, is the core of learning, recognizing pattern as we see in machine learning.
After all, ti's about using feedback in the right way, right?
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The four things are
1. Valid environment (chess is valid, roulette is random)
2. Many repetitions (predicting election results is hard as they are rare events with low repetitions vs. tennis shots)
3. Timely feedback (anesthesiologist gets instant feedback vs. radiologist gets delayed feedback)
4. Deliberate practice (practice at the edge of your comfort zone, identify weakness and work on it)
4.1K |
After a horrendous 2022, shell-stunned financial backers have misfortunes to recover and a lot to consider, as an expansion report and a pile of different information did close to nothing to change assumptions that the Central bank would probably keep climbing interest rates regardless of whether the economy dials back, And that implies more red ink for portfolios for the principal quarter of year 2023. How might I benefit from the ongoing unstable market, I'm currently at a junction choosing if to exchange my $250k security/stock portfolio
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The last part hit so hard for me, my grandpa is a very good musician, and he didn’t study music but his brother offered him a job as a pianist when he only knew the basics but he needed to provide for a family of 5 children so he took the job he played piano and organ every day for many for many hours, he told me that he didn’t like playing the piano but the few times I have heard him he plays extremely good and knows about a ton of stuff that not even my mother knew about, like when he was in my home studio he started patching my synth and started jamming and my mom was like you know how to used that? And he was like: yeah, and I hate it! I’m not sure what made him hate music that much he eventually bought a building and started renting apartments and sold all his instruments, but still getting out of his comfort zone made him a great musician
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Success depends on the actions or steps you take to achieve it. Building wealth involves developing good habits like regularly putting money away in intervals for solid investments. Financial management is a crucial topic that most tend to shy away from, and ends up haunting them in the near future.., I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life!!
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@khabuda
1 year ago
The pattern recognition became very clear to me when I learned Morse code. The human brain takes 50 milliseconds to process and understand a sound. People regularly send and receive Morse code at 30 words per minute, which puts the dit character and the gap between all characters at 40 milliseconds. So you literally have to process sounds faster than the brain can recognize them. Over time you start to hear whole words in the code rather than individual letters, but you still have to decode call signs character by character. You basically cache the sounds in your brain without processing them, and once the whole set of characters passes, your brain is able to turn it into an idea and add it to the stack of previous ideas while your ears are already caching the next set of characters.
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