March 31, 2022
This is Kei and Kazuki,
founders of Glasp 👋
We send you 3 good articles to highlight this week.
Hopefully, it will bring new perspectives and help
you develop your career and learning journey.
📚 This Week's Reading List
Thinking
in maps: from the Lascaux caves to knowledge
graphs by Anne-Laure Le
Cunff (18min)
“Thinking in maps is substantively different from
thinking in sentences.” When thinking in maps,
word maps are often amalgamated with world maps to
create visual representations of our knowledge,
beliefs, or questions.
See: Glasp
Community Highlights
Speed-reading is for skimmers. Slow-reading is for
scholars. Research paper after research paper
has concluded that as reading speed goes up as a
result of effortful speed-reading, comprehension
goes down. If you’re reading to learn, you need
to engage with the content and associate the new
concepts with your existing knowledge.
See: Glasp
Community Highlights
Read It Later apps help with (1) increasing
consumption of long-form content and (2) better
filtering by procrastination. "I’m creating a pool
of options drawn from a longer time period, which
allows me to make decisions from a higher
perspective, where those decisions are much better
aligned with what truly matters to me."
See: Glasp
Community Highlights
👀 Featured Curators on Glasp
1️⃣ Michael
Simmons
Michael teaches people to learn HOW to learn. He's a
serial entrepreneur, bestselling author, and
contributor: Time, Fortune, and Harvard Business
Review.
2️⃣ Ev
Chapman
Ev teaches creators how to leverage the notes
they take every day to create effortless, endless
ideas for content.
3️⃣ Anders
Sporring
Anders is a digital writer, creator, and
atomicaster. He's an editor of In My Own Words &
Opinions And Discussions and Taking Notes.
See you next week ;)
Best,
Kei and Kazuki
--
Today's
Quote: "I didn't fail the test. I just
found 100 ways to do it wrong." - Benjamin
Franklin
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