R/Anki - What Are Your Personal Anki Tips?
@tags:: #lit✍/📰️article/highlights
@links::
@ref:: R/Anki - What Are Your Personal Anki Tips?
@author:: reddit.com
=this.file.name
Reference
=this.ref
Notes
Be Lazy - If creating cards, copy/paste as much as possible to save for time. Optimise each card incrementally (if required as you review.
Tag/Mark all duplicates and revise them as soon as possible
Add sources to cards
Don't skip a day
Use Anki during commutes/mindless tasks.)
- No location available
-
Use an additional "notes" or "extra" field to contextualize the facts you're learning. Be it excerpts from your primary literature, or your own personal remarks and associations, anything goes. This should help you build links between multiple pieces of information.
- No location available
-
For more advanced concepts and interlinked information try the "reinforced concrete" method (not the best analogy, I know, but it helps illustrate things:
First build a steel framework of conceptual flashcards that prompt you on the topic at large and link it to other topics
Then fill that framework with concrete facts)
- No location available
-
For difficult facts, try to create redundant cards that prompt you on the information from multiple different angles (e.g. a combination of multiple different card types: regular flash card, cloze, image occlusion, etc.)
- No location available
-
dg-publish: true
created: 2024-07-01
modified: 2024-07-01
title: R/Anki - What Are Your Personal Anki Tips?
source: hypothesis
@tags:: #lit✍/📰️article/highlights
@links::
@ref:: R/Anki - What Are Your Personal Anki Tips?
@author:: reddit.com
=this.file.name
Reference
=this.ref
Notes
Be Lazy - If creating cards, copy/paste as much as possible to save for time. Optimise each card incrementally (if required as you review.
Tag/Mark all duplicates and revise them as soon as possible
Add sources to cards
Don't skip a day
Use Anki during commutes/mindless tasks.)
- No location available
-
Use an additional "notes" or "extra" field to contextualize the facts you're learning. Be it excerpts from your primary literature, or your own personal remarks and associations, anything goes. This should help you build links between multiple pieces of information.
- No location available
-
For more advanced concepts and interlinked information try the "reinforced concrete" method (not the best analogy, I know, but it helps illustrate things:
First build a steel framework of conceptual flashcards that prompt you on the topic at large and link it to other topics
Then fill that framework with concrete facts)
- No location available
-
For difficult facts, try to create redundant cards that prompt you on the information from multiple different angles (e.g. a combination of multiple different card types: regular flash card, cloze, image occlusion, etc.)
- No location available
-