Struggling with Caption Fatigue While Studying for Exams

Comments

2 comments

  • Avatar
    kkgalicinao

    Rahil I can’t speak from personal experience, but I wonder if shifting some video content into a text-based format might help. For example, if transcripts are available, you could skim or annotate them first, then watch the video afterward to reinforce the concepts rather than trying to read captions and learn new material simultaneously.

    You might also try breaking videos into shorter 10–15 minute segments and pausing frequently to take notes. If you haven't already, it may also be worth reaching out to NCARB about testing accommodations.

    Wishing you the best of luck!

    Kiara | Black Spectacles | Community

    0
    Comment actions Permalink
  • Avatar
    Ralph Hale

    Hi Rahil, 

    Offhand, I know I've seen one or two licensure candidates who were deaf/hard of hearing study for (and complete!) the ARE.  

    A lot of video players will let you slow the video down - if your current obstacle is fatigue from reading/trying to watch, you might try two passes at a 20-ish minute chunk of video.  For the first pass, slow everything down to the point that you can read the captions comfortably and keep up with the visuals - don't take notes or anything on this pass, just watch/read.  Then make a second pass to identify topics or areas that are particularly important or that you are having trouble with/need more study of to make your notes.  

    If that helps (or doesn't) let me know!

    Thanks, 
    Ralph, the Amber Book Team

    0
    Comment actions Permalink

Please sign in to leave a comment.

Powered by Zendesk