A 10-minute video can cover the equivalent of five pages of a textbook. Because the visual memory lasts longer than rote memorization, you spend less time re-learning the same material. How to Use Sketchy Videos Effectively
: The humorous and creative nature of the videos provides a much-needed mental break from the traditional, dense medical curriculum. Conclusion
Sketchy Medical did not begin in a corporate boardroom. It began with a group of medical students at the University of California, Irvine. Sandy Liu, one of the co-founders, found herself struggling to memorize the endless lists of pathogens required for Step 1 of the USMLE (United States Medical Licensing Examination).
If you’d like, I can:
Every single detail in the frame correlates to a fact you need to know for exams: virulence factors, diseases, treatments, and lab identification.
Traditional studying relies on verbal encoding—reading text in a textbook. The brain often struggles to attach emotional or visual significance to plain text. Sketchy forces the student to use visual encoding.
A 10-minute video can cover the equivalent of five pages of a textbook. Because the visual memory lasts longer than rote memorization, you spend less time re-learning the same material. How to Use Sketchy Videos Effectively
: The humorous and creative nature of the videos provides a much-needed mental break from the traditional, dense medical curriculum. Conclusion Sketchy Videos Microbiology
Sketchy Medical did not begin in a corporate boardroom. It began with a group of medical students at the University of California, Irvine. Sandy Liu, one of the co-founders, found herself struggling to memorize the endless lists of pathogens required for Step 1 of the USMLE (United States Medical Licensing Examination). A 10-minute video can cover the equivalent of
If you’d like, I can:
Every single detail in the frame correlates to a fact you need to know for exams: virulence factors, diseases, treatments, and lab identification. Conclusion Sketchy Medical did not begin in a
Traditional studying relies on verbal encoding—reading text in a textbook. The brain often struggles to attach emotional or visual significance to plain text. Sketchy forces the student to use visual encoding.
Release Date: 2024-11-24
The third version of the project was launched, and it includes new features, bug fixes and improvements
1
Add book covers