You solidify understanding by teaching it to someone else.
@ProfFeynman Learning is wisdom Teaching is WISDOM
@ProfFeynman The best test of mastery is how simply you can explain it.
@ProfFeynman my best technique and strategy up to this date.
@ProfFeynman Teaching helps you learn it even deeper.
You haven’t truly learned until you can teach without overthinking. That’s when the knowledge sinks into your bones. Teaching forces you to confront gaps in your understanding and close them. If you want to accelerate your learning, don’t just consume information. Share it, explain it, simplify it......that’s where real mastery lives.
@ProfFeynman If you can't explain something to others in simple terms, you don't fully understand it.
@ProfFeynman the best way to learn is to teach it.
@ProfFeynman To teach is to learn twice. The best test of knowing is showing. You master what you help another grasp.
@ProfFeynman This was a great line…
@ProfFeynman Explaining it out loud is great… if only my brain didn’t crash mid‑sentence and take me with it
@ProfFeynman Be hash on your teachability and tolerance on their coach-ability
@ProfFeynman Exactly. There is no other way. Only by teaching and sharing can we solidify it.
@ProfFeynman Teaching something gives your brain its own workout routine
@ProfFeynman you expand more.when you teach to others. thanks for the post.
@ProfFeynman And then SOON after you teach the course - write the book - before you forget what all the difficulties were and it all becomes trivial!!!
@ProfFeynman Teaching is the best way to solidify your knowledge. Test yourself , teach others use the knowledge you gained.
@ProfFeynman teaching turns knowledge into deep mastery.
@ProfFeynman Through expression you internalize knowledge
@ProfFeynman I have to agree. This is on the money. Words with a lot of weight here.
@ProfFeynman true, it is the last part of the learning process and no less important
@ProfFeynman Teaching turns knowledge into mastery. Explaining forces you to see what you really know and what you don’t.
@ProfFeynman You also learn other's pitfalls, failed priors that make up the foundation of their understanding. The machinery is often there; it's just programmed wrong.
@ProfFeynman Teaching sharpens the edges. Explaining makes it yours.
@ProfFeynman For sure. It’s all good writing it down and revising it but until you have to physically explain it that’s when you’ll know if you totally understand.
@ProfFeynman Facts. If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it deeply. Teaching forces clarity, it's the final boss of learning.
@ProfFeynman Teaching is learning twice and that solidifies the information.
@ProfFeynman That is a good way to learn. Problem is its slow and slow = bad
@ProfFeynman You don’t really get it until you can teach it.
@ProfFeynman Teaching is learning. Retention is reputation.