Vaidehi Joshi found that many resources on the web about core computer science concepts she wanted to know more about were either too obtuse or too academic. She started a blog, basecs, where she wrote down something she had learned that week--every week--for an entire year. While learning something new in and of itself was a delight, her curiosity led her to question how people learn best.
She discusses the Feynman Technique, which, through a processes of iteratively explaining a concept to someone who doesn't know anything about it, strengthens the knowledge for both the student and the teacher. The best way to do this is by telling a narrative. It keeps the listener engaged, while also serving as a way of identifying gaps in ones' own understanding, as new questions arise.
Links from this episode99. The Technical Side of Deep Fakes
98. The Ethical Side of Deep Fakes
Special Episode: Health Metrics at Scale
97. The Challenges of Bespoke Solutions in a Regulated World
I Was There: Stories of Production Incidents
96. Incubating a Startup
95. Intelligence Through Logging
94. Engineering Management
93. Conferences in a Virtual World
92. Strategies for Improving Your Mental Health
91. Destigmatizing Mental Health
90. Saving Lives at Scale: Part Two
Special Episode: Scaling Businesses During a Pandemic
89. Saving Lives at Scale: Part One
88. Monitoring Productivity through IoT
87. Living with Landing
86. Innovations in Business Modeling
85. The New Definition of Frontend Development
84. Salesforce for Heroku Developers
83. SEO and Accessibility
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Insight Story: Tech Trends Unpacked
Zero-Shot
Fast Forward by Tomorrow Unlocked: Tech past, tech future
The Unbelivable Truth - Series 1 - 26 including specials and pilot
Lex Fridman Podcast