Spaced Repetition Works. Here Is How to Build Better Flashcards.
The science on flashcards is not ambiguous. Spaced repetition -- reviewing material at increasing intervals -- is one of the most rigorously validated learning techniques in cognitive psychology. H...

Source: DEV Community
The science on flashcards is not ambiguous. Spaced repetition -- reviewing material at increasing intervals -- is one of the most rigorously validated learning techniques in cognitive psychology. Hundreds of studies over decades consistently show it outperforms re-reading, highlighting, and summarizing by wide margins. But most people make terrible flashcards. And a bad flashcard system is not just inefficient; it actively teaches you the wrong things. Why most flashcards fail The most common mistake is putting too much information on a single card. A card that reads "Explain the TCP three-way handshake including all flags, sequence numbers, and state transitions" is not a flashcard. It is an exam question. When you see it, your brain does not retrieve a crisp fact -- it struggles to reconstruct a paragraph, gets discouraged, and marks the card as "hard" even when you mostly know the material. Effective flashcards follow what spaced repetition researchers call the "minimum information