Does Anyone Else Learn Better On Own and Hate Class?

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In summary: For some people, this is more enjoyable. For others, it can be more helpful to have a more direct connection to the material.
  • #1
kyphysics
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This is strictly for math (but feel free to throw in other subjects if you like).

Does anyone else really dislike math lectures and attending class? Do you get more enjoyment and/or productivity out of learning on your own (reading the book, working problems, etc.)?

I know there are times when I do like the feedback and confirmation of my understanding that requires a teacher. But so far I've really disliked sitting in on a math lecture (where the teacher just does sample problems on the board all class). To me, it's a waste of my time and I have trouble getting excited and concentrating. Whereas, when I'm learning at my own pace and asking myself questions along the way when studying on my own, I much more enjoy the process and feel I get more out of it.
 
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  • #2
kyphysics said:
... But so far I've really disliked sitting in on a math lecture (where the teacher just does sample problems on the board all class)

Well that definitely would definitely get old. What math class are we talking about here? Algebra or Stochastic Calculus?

In grad school examples get more rare (But they can still be necessary). You appreciate the examples when you get them.
 
  • #3
kyphysics said:
This is strictly for math (but feel free to throw in other subjects if you like).

Does anyone else really dislike math lectures and attending class? Do you get more enjoyment and/or productivity out of learning on your own (reading the book, working problems, etc.)?

...

No. A student needs the lecture and should study the upcoming classtime lesson before the lecture; and then use lecture of the lesson to help focus concepts, and pick any helpful tips which the teacher or professor shows. Part of what you do in class is take notes according to what you find helpful. Also, class lecture time is good for asking questions which you had when you previously studied before class.

The lecture during class time should be like a double-dose of the written textbook lesson, maybe in a somewhat different form, and the lecture should re-enforce what you studied from the book.

If your teacher or instructor is doing nothing more than solving example problems, then he is not doing enough. The lecture time needs more to be a lesson, like show the concept, show processes, explain definitions.

My point of view is courses for preparation to Calculus, and then three semesters of Calculuses: 1,2,3.
 
  • #4
I've found that the first 2-3 weeks of math/physics/chemistry courses are boring because its all so simple at that point. Usually gets interesting 1/3-1/2 of the way through. I am speaking from experience from calc1-chem1-phys1 types and earlier. Second semesters of these courses are likely to be more challenging from the start.
 
  • #5
symbolipoint said:
If your teacher or instructor is doing nothing more than solving example problems, then he is not doing enough. The lecture time needs more to be a lesson, like show the concept, show processes, explain definitions.

I wouldn't tell him that though :)

Just accept that some lectures are boring, and try to get what you can from them - if he's a kind lecturer, then the solved problems are likely to be similar to those in the exam, so try and concentrate...
 
  • #6
Not really...my motto in college was always "pay attention in class...and you won't have to do so much at home". I found that a good teacher was always better than a book.
 
  • #7
have you ever tried asking a question in class? a good professor is a mathematician who has an enormous reservoir of information to share with you, but may not realize what interests you. a book for a beginning class is usually a measured treatment of a very limited amount of material, nothing in depth, such as the professor could provide if asked.
 
  • #8
I often felt that way about graduate level math. I have no need of lectures to learn anything, although I will say sometimes, the lectures are less formal than the books, which can, at times, make them easier to understand. At least some lecturers feel more free to say things that are more approximately true, but more enlightening when they are just saying it in class and don't have to commit it to writing. So, there's some issue with lecture quality being slightly better than book quality, which is mainly an artifact of the culture in which it's not considered okay to write a good book that talks about things intuitively. A lot of my profs in grad school basically just wrote down all the definition, theorem, proof stuff and that was mostly it, with the occasional commentary thrown in, so it was basically like dictation from a book. So, lectures aren't always better.

There's actual hard data and studies to call lecture methods of teaching into question. It is particularly questionable to lecture to lower-level students because there's a bigger communication barrier. There can be no doubt that one one one tutoring would be much better than lecture, if the teacher-student ratio were much higher.

Many of my fellow grad students agreed that it's often easier to learn on your own because you can go at your own pace and so on.

Not really...my motto in college was always "pay attention in class...and you won't have to do so much at home".

That's true. If you are going to go to class, make the most of it. But that's assuming you are taking a class, so that you are kind of forced to work within that context.
 
  • #9
Hit or miss, generally I learn better on my own than in lecture but I've had a few professors whos style I was very compatible with and then I did benefit a lot from lecture.

My best learning seems to come from self study but with a friend who I may ask questions to freely as need be.
 
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  • #10
One of the better prof's and researchers at my undergrad school openly admitted not having gone to lectures at all as an undergrad, he spent all his time self-studying (and honestly probably ended up learning more than his peers), telling us straight up he would not hold it against us if we chose not to go to his class (which was quantum mechanics). Einstein allegedly earned the dislike from his profs for regularly not attending lectures.

I say if you're going to do it, you better be good, and I mean really really good at the subject. As in: you can solve absolutely any question on the topic that is thrown at you, of any difficulty level, on the spot. Otherwise go to class, there is always the slight chance you will hear a hint about what may be on an exam. And getting a good working relationship with your profs is never a bad thing, if not absolutely crucial if you're in a purely academic field like math.

I always made the effort to attend even if the prof was not being helpful.
 
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  • #11
It seems to me some of us are talking about relatively low level learning. As a professional mathematician, I felt lucky when a really outstanding researcher, who understood a subject better than anyone else in the world, was willing to lecture on it. In this sort of situation, which is often the case even with basic graduate classes at a good graduate school, it was for me at least impossible to duplicate the level of understanding from any book that could be gained from attending carefully to the lecture. I struggled for years to get a feel for real analysis and measure theory until one day I listened in on the introductory lecture by some who understood it deeply and intuitively.

I suggest that most of us would be kidding ourselves to think we could learn say algebraic topology on our own more effectively and deeply than from listening to Raoul Bott in the old days, or today maybe Curtis McMullen, lecture on it. John Tate was a fantastic lecturer on number theory or anything else he chose to teach. Indeed once he presented a new method of calculating residues in his undergraduate class on algebraic curves, later famously known as the Tate trace, that was unknown to anyone else in the world at the time.

You are virtually guaranteed to learn something from such a lecture that you will not think of on your own or find in most books.

So while it may be true that some or even many lectures are not worth attending, why are you enrolled in such classes? If you want to learn something, find a really good lecturer and attend faithfully.
 
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  • #12
When I was a student, I found most of the lectures pretty useless. Sometimes it was the teachers fault, because some of them were terrible. (Those were all physics classes). Sometimes it was my fault, because I wasn't adequately prepared. The kind of preparation I consider adequate is to just study the definitions in advance, so that I at least understand what the bleep the teacher is talking about. The things I did learn, I learned on my own.

If I was a student today, I think I would handle things very differently. I still think it's useless to go to a math class unprepared. The difference is that I would prepare.
 
  • #13
It seems to me some of us are talking about relatively low level learning. As a professional mathematician, I felt lucky when a really outstanding researcher, who understood a subject better than anyone else in the world, was willing to lecture on it. In this sort of situation, which is often the case even with basic graduate classes at a good graduate school, it was for me at least impossible to duplicate the level of understanding from any book that could be gained from attending carefully to the lecture. I struggled for years to get a feel for real analysis and measure theory until one day I listened in on the introductory lecture by some who understood it deeply and intuitively.

I could say something like that about a lot of the advanced topics courses, but the beginning graduate level classes weren't like that for me. A lot of times, the best I could do was to browse different books to find the best ones. Like I said, a big part of this is that people don't seem to be willing to write good books a lot of the time. I don't think it's a necessity to only rely on oral tradition for certain things. I think you can write it down, but people are too lazy or it isn't fashionable to be more intuitive when it comes to writing things down, which is just unnecessary, especially these days when you can also do websites and software. It's not like back in the 1800s when it was a bit harder to put pictures in and so on. Anything you can say verbally, you can write down on paper.
So while it may be true that some or even many lectures are not worth attending, why are you enrolled in such classes?

Because it's required, and because it takes a while to figure out who is a good lecturer. I always attended faithfully, by the way, except I was late a bit too often, and in grad school, I lost a lot of confidence and was emotionally not doing as well, so it was much harder to concentrate on lectures. That is one of the downsides. It's sort of like a marathon of concentration to follow a lecture for 50-90 minutes. Being able to follow a lecture depends much more critically on things like whether I got enough sleep last night or whether my girlfriend just dumped me. and so on.
 
  • #14
I've seen Stephen Smale say something similar on an interview on youtube,but I think you can get some ''guidance'' from class,but for learning something ,you can't do it except on your own,and yes, I also hate class.
 
  • #15
kyphysics said:
This is strictly for math (but feel free to throw in other subjects if you like).

Does anyone else really dislike math lectures and attending class? Do you get more enjoyment and/or productivity out of learning on your own (reading the book, working problems, etc.)?

I know there are times when I do like the feedback and confirmation of my understanding that requires a teacher. But so far I've really disliked sitting in on a math lecture (where the teacher just does sample problems on the board all class). To me, it's a waste of my time and I have trouble getting excited and concentrating. Whereas, when I'm learning at my own pace and asking myself questions along the way when studying on my own, I much more enjoy the process and feel I get more out of it.

Sure, it happens a lot of time with me. However, it is not the same for most of my friends, so maybe we have a worse time following a lecture than them. And I must say that there are some lecturers that are worth their time.
 
  • #16
It's important to realize that people learn in different ways. Some people don't get much out of lectures.

For me, lectures were usually good up to a point. What would often happen is the instructor would present something that didn't quite make sense or that I needed time to absorb and play with. Everything that came after that was often just me scrambling to copy notes and so there wasn't a lot of benefit afterwards. Sometimes you can ask questions, but this can be hard when you're shy and in a large class. And, often the instructor can't wait for every student to "get it" before moving on. (Doing so ends up teaching to the lowest common denominator).

I usually caution against adopting the "waste of time" conclusion too quickly though. Certainly there are some lectures that are worse than others. But if you're not getting anything out of the majority of them, it can be valueable to figure out why.

If its a question of quality, remember you have a right to demand quality in most cases when you're paying for lectures.

If it's a question of too much assumed knowledge, you may have to assess whether you're at the right level, whether you need to do more preparation work prior to attending, or if this is something to talk to the instructor about.
 
  • #17
If its a question of quality, remember you have a right to demand quality in most cases when you're paying for lectures.

Hopefully, this doesn't mean complaining to the department and getting them in trouble. There are more considerate ways, like transferring to a different class or waiting until someone else teaches it. Man up and tell the professor directly, so they can take it into account themselves, rather than complaining to the department. You just have to ask what are you really going to accomplish. Chances are, you're not going to get a replacement teacher. You'll just end up creating a stressful situation for the prof, which will make it even harder for him to do his job, especially if you don't even have anything constructive to say. Anyway, demanding quality isn't any kind of a guarantee of anything. The guy who teaches it next time may just end up being the same.

These days, for lower level subjects, you can often just find video lectures online, if you want quality, so you can take your pick because quality is in the eye of the beholder. Video lectures also have many of the advantages of books, in that you can still follow the lecture if you missed something and get thrown off halfway through because you just rewatch that part.
 
  • #18
homeomorphic said:
Hopefully, this doesn't mean complaining to the department and getting them in trouble. There are more considerate ways, like transferring to a different class or waiting until someone else teaches it. Man up and tell the professor directly, so they can take it into account themselves, rather than complaining to the department. You just have to ask what are you really going to accomplish. Chances are, you're not going to get a replacement teacher. You'll just end up creating a stressful situation for the prof, which will make it even harder for him to do his job, especially if you don't even have anything constructive to say. Anyway, demanding quality isn't any kind of a guarantee of anything. The guy who teaches it next time may just end up being the same.

Demanding quality doesn't mean doing it in a disrespectful way.

I used the strong language because I think too often people feel stuck with whatever situation they are in and too often choose to accept it rather than do something to change it.

You're right in that doing something doesn't guarantee change. But doing nothing in these kinds of situations is the best way to keep the instruction quality from changing.
 
  • #19
It varies of course, but for me I always learned math best by attending a lecture and just writing down what was said. Then I went home, wrote them out again and thought. I went through the examples, deriving my own way of doing it, or more elegant proof, and re-wrote it. Then I did the tutorial questions. Finally I always went through my answers and variations on examples or proofs at the tutorial.

What really helped was actually picking up errors in the lecture notes. In my experience there were often some - if you looked hard enough. That really sharpens your comprehension.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #20
I'm surprised no one has mentioned one of the greatest benefits of lectures in my eyes: you can't afford to stand still. Whenever I try to learn stuff on my own I try to do it very deeply, which makes it a very slow process, sometimes even so slow that my interest wanes a bit. Lectures generally go pretty fast and force you to continue even if you don't get it at the first go. In essence lectures make for a "multiple layer" learning, like painting in coats, and I find this more efficient than doing everything in detail from the first time, yet when self-studying I find the latter more tempting than the former (although through years of lectures I've begun to feel more comfortable with it).

(I think the main reason is that when you're self-studying it's nearly impossible to "feel" what parts are essential and what is circumstantial, but in a lecture you can often easily tell.)
 
  • #21
I didn't do it in college, but in high school, I regularly tuned the teacher out and just did the assignment during class so I wouldn't have homework. In college, I had a couple of classes that I skipped the majority of days, but I did all of the homework, and got As.

The thing I like about lecture (for some teachers), is that I can see the problem as it's being solved (or try to preempt the next step to solving it), which is something you don't always get from a book. Also, the teachers may present a proof that's not in the text. I learn best from a book, but I still got stuff out of lecture.
 
  • #22
Whenever I try to learn stuff on my own I try to do it very deeply, which makes it a very slow process, sometimes even so slow that my interest wanes a bit. Lectures generally go pretty fast and force you to continue even if you don't get it at the first go. In essence lectures make for a "multiple layer" learning, like painting in coats, and I find this more efficient than doing everything in detail from the first time, yet when self-studying I find the latter more tempting than the former (although through years of lectures I've begun to feel more comfortable with it).

That's both a strength and a weakness. I found it to be a weakness a lot of times because it was just too fast, so that I didn't have time to do any review or think about things deeply in order to plant them in my brain. If you compare my grad school experience to my much slower-paced undergraduate experience, I remember a ridiculous amount of the undergrad material, but not so much of the graduate material because it just flew by too fast for me to process effectively.

At any rate, if you are disciplined enough, all you need to do is a little goal-setting and you can easily duplicate this "advantage" of lectures on your own, with the extra flexibility that results in not having to stick to a certain pace if it ends up being too fast.
 
  • #23
homeomorphic said:
At any rate, if you are disciplined enough, all you need to do is a little goal-setting and you can easily duplicate this "advantage" of lectures on your own, with the extra flexibility that results in not having to stick to a certain pace if it ends up being too fast.

I agree. This is a skill that I did not acquire until grad school and it is one that I still am working on. Great points!
 
  • #24
I've encountered numerous lectures where the lecturer makes statements which can't really be truly understood unless one already has an intuition for the underlying concept, which is an extremely easy mistake to make.

But the actual format of a lecture interferes with the natural solution to this problem, which is to ask the lecturer questions. Having a fixed amount of time to give the lecture combined with the fear of appearing clueless renders ineffective the best method to handle this common and difficult to avoid problem.

Worse is when the lecturer gets carried away and begins to make use of concepts which he does not intend to elaborate much upon and/or hasn't already elaborated much upon.

There are lots of methods to extract information from textbooks which, on the one hand, need to be mastered for professional research (reading papers), and on the other make the process more efficient than sitting in a lecture. Combining the two can resolve the problem I mentioned in the first paragraph for you.
 
  • #25
i agree with nonequilibrium. the amount one can learn in a one hour lecture usually exceeds what one can learn on one's own in 3-4 hours, at least for me. it is just more efficient to let someone point you to exactly the most important ideas and explain how to see them, than to struggle through every word in a book and then try to understand what is most important. A good lecturer can tell you in one sentence the main idea of a whole chapter of a book. then you can go read it with a great advantage over a cold reading. of course learning from a lecture is a skill, and it will repay practice. i.e. one can learn a lot from lectures and if you are unable to do so, you lack a valuable skill that you would be well advised to acquire. i.e. the point is to try continually to increase your ability to learn in various ways. in grad school i had a friend who absorbed much more from lectures than i did. of course he was smarter than i was, but more importantly, he listened better as well. from knowing him i began to see what i was doing mentally that interfered with hearing the lecture. you have to sort of make your mind clear and open to what is being said and really take it in. there was a lot of mental interference in my case. e.g. thinking to oneself that the lecturer is boring is a form of judgmental interference that can hinder maximal learning. as said earlier, being prepared also helps, such as reading the chapter being lectured on in advance of the lecture. then you do not have to focus on remembering the facts, and can focus on getting insight into those facts.
 
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  • #26
A good lecturer can tell you in one sentence the main idea of a whole chapter of a book.

Which begs the question of why that one sentence wasn't written in the book in the first place, continuing along with my previous points.

All the things you can say about good lectures also apply to good books. I've often had exactly the reverse experience of having the lecturer completely obscure the subject, whereas I intuitively perceive it can be done better, so I browse around, find the best book, and voila, problem solved. Admittedly, such books can be hard to find, but it shouldn't be that way.

Most of the time with lectures, even when I understood them perfectly, I would still have to ponder the meaning behind the math quite extensively to get my own take on it. I'm quite skilled at listening to lectures when I'm having a good day, and the lecture is good. I'd rather not have to count on having a good day every time, though.
 

1. How do I know if I learn better on my own?

There are a few indicators that you may learn better on your own. These include feeling bored or unengaged during lectures, struggling to retain information presented in class, and feeling more motivated when studying independently.

2. Can learning on my own be as effective as attending class?

Yes, for some individuals, learning on their own can be just as effective as attending class. It ultimately depends on your learning style and preferences. Some people may thrive in a classroom setting, while others may find that they can absorb information better when studying independently.

3. What are some strategies for learning on my own?

There are many strategies you can use to learn on your own. Some effective methods include creating a study schedule, breaking up material into manageable chunks, using visual aids like diagrams or flashcards, and practicing active recall by quizzing yourself on the material.

4. How can I make the most out of my time in class if I learn better on my own?

If you prefer learning on your own, it can be challenging to stay engaged during class. To make the most out of your time in class, try taking notes and actively participating in discussions. This can help you stay focused and retain information that may be useful for your independent studies.

5. Are there any downsides to learning on my own?

While learning on your own may be effective for some individuals, it may not work for others. Some potential downsides may include feeling isolated or lacking the structure and guidance provided by a classroom setting. It's important to assess your own learning needs and find a balance between independent learning and attending class.

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