Week-1

Basics: meetings and boicots

Scrum: The Art of Doing Twice the Work in Half the Time

by Jeff Sutherland

In the future, historians may look back on human progress and draw a sharp line designating “before Scrum” and “after Scrum.” Scrum is that ground-breaking. It already drives most of the world’s top technology companies. And now it’s starting to spread to every domain where leaders wrestle with complex projects.


Scrum: The Art of Doing Twice the Work in Half the Time

How to learn fast

Jim Kwik

01:55 All learning is State dependent

08:15 Why it is important to “Learn How to Learn Fast”

19:30 6 Quick tips of fast learning

29:10 Two super-villains: Digital Overload & Digital Destruction

33:15 Digital Dementia - How modern people are losing simple memorisation capabilities

40:39 The Success Mindset - All behaviours are believe driven

47:26 Learn any subject faster - the “FAST” technique

50:35 A Story of Jim Kwik about his childhood and learning quickly

TO LEARN ANYTHING FASTER, JUST REMEMBER FAST.

TO LEARN ANYTHING FASTER, JUST REMEMBER FAST.

THE F IN FAST STANDS FOR FORGET.

  • If you want to speed up ‘kwik brain,’ you must temporarily forget three things.

  • Forget what you already know about the subject. A lot of people don’t learn faster because they feel like they already know the information. But your mind is like a parachute; it only works when it’s open.

  • Forget about anything that’s not urgent and important. You can’t multitask. If your brain is thinking about 4 different things, you’re not fully present – so you won’t learn ‘kwik’ly.

  • Forget your limitations. These are beliefs like your memory isn’t good, or you’re a slow reader, or you don’t have the right education to learn. But if you fight for your limitations, you get to keep them. Your memory isn’t fixed, and it is possible to remember hundreds of words and numbers the way I do onstage.

THE A IN FAST STANDS FOR ACTIVE.

  • In school, we were taught to learn by consuming information quietly. But you don’t learn by being lectured to. You learn by creating information and being active in the process.

  • Learning is NOT a spectator sport.

  • How can you be more active in your learning?

  • Ask questions.

  • Take notes. Write it downs, draw scheemes.

  • The more active you are, the more you will learn.

THE S IN FAST STANDS FOR STATE.

  • Your state is a snapshot of your mood – the mood of your mind and your body. It’s the emotional well-being that you feel in that exact moment.

  • Information combined with emotion becomes a long-term memory.

  • Many of us don’t remember what we learned in school because the umbrella emotion for most people in school was boredom.

  • You are the only person in control of your state.

  • How can you improve your state?

  • Change your posture or your body or breathing.

  • Sit or stand the way you would if you were totally energized.

  • Think about how you’ll benefit from the information.

  • All learning is state-dependent. Choose states of joy, fascination, and curiosity.

  • Sell your cleverness for bewilderment – Rumi.

THE T IN FAST STANDS FOR TEACH.

  • If you want to cut your learning curve in half, learn with the intention of teaching it to somebody else.

  • If you had to give a presentation on what you’re learning today, you would learn it differently. You would pay closer attention. You would take more detailed notes. You would ask better questions.

  • When I teach something, I get to learn it twice.

  • People often say that those who can’t do teach. But I never saw that as a negative. I always thought, wow, if I can’t do something, I can teach it, and then I can do it.


How to learn any language in six months

Chris Lonsdale TEDxLingnanUniversity

05:32 - How to learn any language in six months

07:59 - Principle # 1: Focus on language content that is relevant to you

08:49 - Principle # 2: Use your new language as a tool to communicate from day 1

09:37 - Principle # 3: When you first understand the message you will unconsciously acquire the language

10:31 - Principle # 4: Physiological training

11:45 - Principle # 5: Psycho-physiological state matters

12:22 - Action # 1: Listen a lot (brain soaking)

12:43 - Action # 2: Focus on getting the meaning first (before the words)

13:31 - Action # 3: Start mixing

13:58 - Action # 4: Focus on the core

15:22 - Action # 5: Get a language parent

16:29 - Action # 6: Copy the face

17:13 - Action # 7: "Direct connect" to mental images

thaler-lecture.pdf

From Cashews to Nudges: The Evolution of Behavioral Economics


Prize Lecture, December 8, 2017 by Richard H. Thaler1 University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Chicago, IL, USA