Learning faster is like teaching your friend how to tie their shoes, if you can explain it simply, you really understand it.
Imagine you're learning about gravity, and you want to remember why things fall down. The Feynman Technique helps you do that by pretending you are the teacher. You pick a topic, like gravity, and then you try to explain it in simple words, as if you're talking to a little kid who just learned how to count.
How It Works
- Pick a Topic: Choose something you want to understand better, maybe gravity or how a bicycle moves.
- Explain It Simply: Try to teach someone else, using simple words and examples they know, like comparing gravity to a toy that always goes back to the ground when you let it go.
- Check for Gaps: When you get stuck while explaining, that means you need to review that part, just like when you forget how to tie your shoes, you look at them again.
By doing this, you find out what you really know and what you still need to learn, all in a fun, easy way! Learning faster is like teaching your friend how to tie their shoes, if you can explain it simply, you really understand it.
Imagine you're learning about gravity, and you want to remember why things fall down. The Feynman Technique helps you do that by pretending you are the teacher. You pick a topic, like gravity, and then you try to explain it in simple words, as if you're talking to a little kid who just learned how to count.
Examples
- Explaining gravity as if you're talking to a five-year-old.
- Describing how photosynthesis works using simple words and drawings.
- Teaching fractions by dividing a pizza into parts.
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