Different Styles of Making Flashcards
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- Kimahri
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Different Styles of Making Flashcards
I'm wondering if there's an ideal way to make flashcards. For example, I've always just flashcarded common clues on QuizDB by writing 2-3 clues into a cohesive question on the back with an answer on the front. As in:
Back: John Foster Dulles refused to shake what man's hand at the 1954 Geneva Conference?
Front: Zhou Enlai
How do you find what clues to card, and how do you write your cards?
Back: John Foster Dulles refused to shake what man's hand at the 1954 Geneva Conference?
Front: Zhou Enlai
How do you find what clues to card, and how do you write your cards?
Jerry Lin
Leland '19
Duke '23
Leland '19
Duke '23
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- Auron
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Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
Max Schindler has some useful insight here
Andrew Wang
Illinois 2016
Illinois 2016
Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
I've talked about how I approach flashcarding here. I hope it can be helpful. The whole thread is actually pretty useful.
Jon Suh
Wheaton Warrenville South High School '16
Harvard '20
Wheaton Warrenville South High School '16
Harvard '20
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Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
This is the foremost guide to using flash cards: https://www.gwern.net/Spaced-repetition
Arjun Panickssery (he/his)
President, American Quizbowl League
President, American Quizbowl League
Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
I am by no means an elite player, but I have done quite a bit of studying over the years, and have never used nor seen the appeal of flashcards. I take bulleted pencil-and-paper notes on the harder details of everything I study, and I don't understand how flashcards could be more helpful for me. Is there something I'm missing, or is it just a strategy that's not for everyone?
David Bass (he)
Johns Hopkins University
University of Virginia '23
Jamestown High School '19
Member, PACE
Johns Hopkins University
University of Virginia '23
Jamestown High School '19
Member, PACE
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- Auron
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Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
The primary reason is that a lot of flashcard apps help you regularly review the information to keep it freshDavidB256 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 25, 2019 9:39 am I am by no means an elite player, but I have done quite a bit of studying over the years, and have never used nor seen the appeal of flashcards. I take bulleted pencil-and-paper notes on the harder details of everything I study, and I don't understand how flashcards could be more helpful for me. Is there something I'm missing, or is it just a strategy that's not for everyone?
Andrew Wang
Illinois 2016
Illinois 2016
Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
Not everybody uses flashcards. A good litmus test: they're most useful if you often find yourself frustrated that you know what something is but can't remember its name. If you don't, sounds like your other memorization techniques are working pretty well for you.DavidB256 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 25, 2019 9:39 am I am by no means an elite player, but I have done quite a bit of studying over the years, and have never used nor seen the appeal of flashcards. I take bulleted pencil-and-paper notes on the harder details of everything I study, and I don't understand how flashcards could be more helpful for me. Is there something I'm missing, or is it just a strategy that's not for everyone?
Jacob R., ex-Chicago
- ryanrosenberg
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Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
When studying, I do the same thing (pencil-and-paper notes, occasionally some sort of longer paragraph-type thing if I'm trying to synthesize a lot of conceptual things). I then will occasionally read back through my notes to refresh myself. Flashcard programs are a similar system but with a more rigorous system of spaced repetition which is designed to maximize retention. So if you prefer taking notes manually, all power to you -- it's not the most efficient system, but a slightly less efficient studying method that you enjoy and will do regularly is far superior to a studying method that you have to force yourself to do.Banned Tiny Toon Adventures Episode wrote: ↑Thu Jul 25, 2019 9:50 amThe primary reason is that a lot of flashcard apps help you regularly review the information to keep it freshDavidB256 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 25, 2019 9:39 am I am by no means an elite player, but I have done quite a bit of studying over the years, and have never used nor seen the appeal of flashcards. I take bulleted pencil-and-paper notes on the harder details of everything I study, and I don't understand how flashcards could be more helpful for me. Is there something I'm missing, or is it just a strategy that's not for everyone?
Ryan Rosenberg
North Carolina '16
NYU '26 (ideally)
ACF
North Carolina '16
NYU '26 (ideally)
ACF
Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
The key in any form of studying is what works for you. If you find yourself loath to use flashcards of any sort, no matter the efficiency, this is presumably going to at some point cause you to not want to do quizbowl. I've never used flashcards, but I know plenty of players who do. I usually get my studying done by reading through questions.
Mike Cheyne
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
- heterodyne
- Rikku
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Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
In addition to the great points other have made above, one reason you might want to use flashcards is if you have trouble regulating your studying. A given number of flashcards is an easily measurable daily benchmark, and will keep you from having to think about study time and efficiency in the same way, assuming your cards are well made. If you don't have problems with this or with remembering specific named details, you probably don't need them
Alston [Montgomery] Boyd
Bloomington High School '15
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they
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Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
Flashcards embody some of the core principles of memorization, mainly:DavidB256 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 25, 2019 9:39 am I am by no means an elite player, but I have done quite a bit of studying over the years, and have never used nor seen the appeal of flashcards. I take bulleted pencil-and-paper notes on the harder details of everything I study, and I don't understand how flashcards could be more helpful for me. Is there something I'm missing, or is it just a strategy that's not for everyone?
1. Spaced repetition
2. Recall practice
Writing quiz bowl questions embodies:
1. Putting information in your own words
2. Elaboration -- adding on to what you already know / making connections.
3. Recall practice*
*assuming you're not just transferring info from one source into a question
With note taking, you can certainly do all the same things you could do with writing (you lose out on some "quizbowlification"), but it puts the onus on you to do spaced repetition on said recall practice. From what I understand, this is significantly different than just rereading your notes; you need to actually be /recalling/ the information from memory. Playing quiz bowl naturally tests your recall, but not systematically, hence the great appeal of carding.
Michael Etzkorn
Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy '16
UIUC '21
Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy '16
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Re: Different Styles of Making Flashcards
I never used flashcards. I tried making them once (I think I made actual index card flashcards where the front was an object from Norse myth and the back was the owner of that object) and I found that I found the process of making flashcards to be boring and unpleasant. It was more fun to just read books, practice packets, or write questions. I'm fairly confident that a lot of quizbowl's greatest players of all time never used flashcards, but I also know that there are people who credit flashcards with helping them to become among the greatest players of all time.
So yeah, one more vote for whatever works for you. Give it a try and see how you like it.
So yeah, one more vote for whatever works for you. Give it a try and see how you like it.
Bruce
Harvard '10 / UChicago '07 / Roycemore School '04
ACF Member emeritus
My guide to using Wikipedia as a question source
Harvard '10 / UChicago '07 / Roycemore School '04
ACF Member emeritus
My guide to using Wikipedia as a question source