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by Version467
1350 days ago
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I agree completely. Creating good cards, or thinking about how to cover a topic/fact with cards well forces you to break it down into very small pieces. Otherwise the cards get bulky, aren't precise enough and are generally annoying. Breaking it down into such small bits makes it immediately obvious if I haven't understood something, because I either wouldn't understand the answer for one of my own cards, or wouldn't even know how to create an answer.
If done properly, it's much harder for something to "slip through the cracks" so to speak. When I first started properly integrating this into my day to day life I also noticed that I was interested in remembering many more mundane things than I would've expected. Simple stuff that I really didn't have a place to write them down for, but that also weren't really important enough to take time out of my day to actively memorize it. There's a place for that now. It's been really interesting to see how broadly applicable spaced repetition is and that it's not just useful to learn for college exams. |
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