Difference between revisions of "List of experiments with Anki"
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Writing down answers on a piece of paper || || | | Writing down answers on a piece of paper || || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | circling things on paper to flag things that need to be fixed || [https://github.com/riceissa/issarice.com/blob/master/drafts/spaced-repetition.md#flagging-things-to-fix-during-review] || | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Linked list to remember lists || e.g. to memorize A, B, C, you have the cards (blank)->A, A->B, then B->C, and maybe also a card that asks the length of the list. || | | Linked list to remember lists || e.g. to memorize A, B, C, you have the cards (blank)->A, A->B, then B->C, and maybe also a card that asks the length of the list. || |
Revision as of 01:19, 27 March 2020
On this page, I want to keep a list of experiments that I have tried or am currently trying with Anki. These experiments aren't formal (I don't do any rigorous data collection or blinding or randomizing or anything like that); instead, they're just ideas I have or read about and decided was worth trying for a while to see whether it worked.
Name | Description | Result |
---|---|---|
Writing down answers on a piece of paper | ||
circling things on paper to flag things that need to be fixed | [1] | |
Linked list to remember lists | e.g. to memorize A, B, C, you have the cards (blank)->A, A->B, then B->C, and maybe also a card that asks the length of the list. | |
Cumulative prompts to remember lists | e.g. to memorize A, B, C, you have the cards (blank)->A, A->B, (A,B)->C. | |
Full proof cards | The front side is a theorem statement or exercise description, and the back side is the full proof or exercise solution. | |
Poor man's incremental reading | ||
Adding not-fully-digested quotes or online comments | ||
Cloze deletion for quotes/definitions | ||
burying cards to speed up review | [2] |