A Nobel prize-winner explained his simple technique for learning anything quickly and effectively

Physicist Richard Feynman believed that simplicity was the key to learning.

When he was 20 years old, he worked on the Manhattan Project.
He was one of three people to win the 1966 Nobel Prize for their work in quantum electrodynamics.

When it comes to truth, it's important that things are simple and easy to learn.

You're less likely to grasp something if it's full of complex explanations and terms taken from textbooks.

"You must not fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool," he was quoted as saying.

The goal of learning is to understand the world. The way we learn doesn't help us achieve this more often than not.
It doesn't take long for this knowledge to disappear because you memorize it exactly as the teacher explained it to you.

This is where the Feynman technique starts.
The goal is to make things easy to understand. You can get a deeper understanding of the topic you're studying by doing this.

The four steps of the Feynman technique are listed here.

1. Pick a topic and begin studying it.

The technique is not limited to mathematics or physics. You can apply it to anything.

2. Explain the topic to a child.

If you've learned what you studied, this step will allow you to establish.

Explain the concept in your own words as if you were teaching it to a child.
If you try to break things down into simple ideas with plainer vocabulary, you'll realize that you don't have enough knowledge of the subject.

It's easy to identify gaps in your knowledge.
3. When you get stuck, go back to the study material.

You have to explain the subject in simple terms.
This means that the knowledge will stay with you even if you try to memorize it.

Take the time to review your notes and study material that you don't understand.

Try to explain it to yourself in a way that is easy to understand. If you have to use terms from a textbook or it's too difficult, then you don't have it.

4. Review and organize.

You can't stop until you can deliver a simple, natural explanation.

Go back to steps two and three multiple times.
It will probably take less than you think.