Concept Maps für Vorlesungen und Videos: aus Zuschauen wird aktives Lernen
Ein praktischer Workflow für Vorlesungen, Webinare und Lernvideos mit Vorlagen, Beispielen und FAQ.
Concept Maps für Vorlesungen und Videos: aus Zuschauen wird aktives Lernen
Ein Video fühlt sich verständlich an, weil die Lehrperson die Struktur liefert. Lernen beginnt, wenn Sie diese Struktur ohne Folien wieder aufbauen können. Eine Concept Map hält Beziehungen, Beispiele, Ausnahmen und offene Fragen fest, statt jedes Wort mitzuschreiben. Starten Sie mit dem Leitfaden, öffnen Sie den Editor, und nutzen Sie Vorlagen.
Kurz gefasst
- Watch in focused blocks of 6 to 12 minutes, then pause with a purpose.
- Capture relationships, examples, exceptions, and questions instead of every sentence.
- Use three passes: preview map, live capture, memory rebuild.
- Turn timestamps into questions or practice tasks, not only bookmarks.
- Review after 24 hours and again within 7 days.
Eine Concept Map ist ein Diagramm aus Begriffen und benannten Beziehungen; der Überblick zu Concept map erklärt das Grundprinzip. Note-taking wirkt besser, wenn es Verarbeitung erzwingt. Für Videos passt der Segmentierungsansatz aus multimedia learning.
"The most expensive lecture note is the sentence you copied perfectly but cannot connect to anything 24 hours later."
— Hommer Zhao, Knowledge Mapping Researcher
Workflow
Before the video, make a preview map with 5 to 8 nodes: focus question, main claim, prerequisite, example, exception, application, and open question. While watching, add short link verbs such as causes, explains, depends on, contrasts with, and is tested by. After each segment, hide the notes and rebuild the branch from memory in 2 to 4 minutes.
| Method | Best use | Risk | Review move |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transcript | exact wording | shallow processing | mark only definitions |
| Outline | sequence | weak cross-links | rewrite headings as claims |
| Cornell notes | cues and summaries | still linear | convert cues to retrieval prompts |
| Timestamps | replaying examples | video index only | attach one question |
| Concept map | relationships | needs pauses | redraw from memory |
Templates and examples
For a 20-minute lecture, map the focus question, main claim, evidence, example, confusion, exception, and application. In a regression lesson, the map can say: residual measures prediction error, outliers can distort the line, and assumption violations weaken interpretation.
For a tutorial, map goal, input, decision point, check signal, common failure, and finished output. This helps you transfer the process instead of copying clicks. For messy notes, combine this with turn notes into concept maps. For team training, connect the final map to project management concept maps.
"A pause button is not a break button. Used well, it is a diagnostic tool: can you rebuild the last idea without the instructor holding it together?"
— Hommer Zhao, Knowledge Mapping Researcher
FAQ
How often should I pause?
For dense material, pause every 6 to 12 minutes. If the branch takes more than 4 minutes to rebuild, shorten the next segment.
Should I replace Cornell notes?
No. Cornell Notes are useful for cue questions; concept maps are stronger for relationships and dependencies.
How many nodes are enough?
A 20-minute lecture usually needs 10 to 18 nodes. A 60-minute lecture may need 25 to 40 nodes split into branches.
What if the lecturer is too fast?
Write the minute mark, 3 to 5 words, and one question. After class, return only to the highest-value timestamps.
How do I know it worked?
After 24 hours, explain the focus question, redraw 5 links, give 2 examples, and answer 3 retrieval prompts without the video.
Start with one segment in the editor, reuse templates, or use the contact page for a course or team workflow.