![]() Don’t create artificial knowledge barriers! As a rule of thumb, you should have one deck for each retrieval context. They keep trying to remember what they haven’t even learned yet. They use shared decks (most of which are ineffective).Why do SO MANY people go into flashcard hell? (Ultimately, this causes even more wasted time.) “If Anki is so effective, then why do so many people fail at using it?” I never skip Anki because in my mind, if I don’t retain all the prerequisite knowledge I’m required to remember, then it’d be hard for me to understand higher-level concepts in the future. Personally, I’ve used it with great success for all kinds of things - From Algebra to Advanced Engineering Mathematics, Physics, Electronics Engineering, Electronic Communications, Marketing, Business, Content Creation, Control Systems Engineering, Birthdays, and so on. ![]() Sound good so far? I’m hearing questions… “Isn’t Anki just good for memorizing small facts?”Ĭontrary to popular belief, just because Anki is a flashcard app doesn’t mean it’s only used for memorizing words or raw facts.Īs I imply in the last section, Anki is also a tool for LEARNING - which means it helps you establish a “library of mental models” for understanding higher-level concepts. Michael Nielsen mentioned that in 20 years, he is 1714.29% (120 minutes/7 minutes * 100%) more efficient for each card when learning using spaced repetition compared to conventional flashcard learning.
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