Why I Still Use Flashcards

in Silver Bloggers23 hours ago

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Yeah, I know we live in an age where there is an app for everything. Quizlet exists. and may even have a cult following. But here I am, a wanna be doc student, sitting at my laptop with a stack of index cards and a pen that is running out of ink.

And honestly? It works better than anything else I have tried.

and I've been doing it successfully for years.

The Method Behind the Madness
There is something about physically writing information on a flashcard that burns it into my brain. I am not just copying words. I am taking a photograph of it in my brain. When I sit down for an exam and need to recall a concept, I do not just remember the answer. I see the card. I see my handwriting. I see the coffee stain in the corner, or that specific scribble from the mistake I made.

This is not just me being nostalgic for analog tools. There is actual science that backs my luddite ways. Mueller and Oppenheimer (2014) found that students who take handwritten notes process information more deeply than those who type. The physical act of writing forces you to synthesize and summarize because you simply cannot write as fast as you can type. Your brain has to engage with the material differently.

How I Actually Use Them
I do not use flashcards in isolation. That would be a waste of good index cards. Here is my process:

First, I go through the study guide. I identify what I need to know versus what I already know. No point making a flashcard for something I learned three semesters ago.

Second, I cross reference with the textbook. The study guide tells me what to learn. The textbook tells me how to understand it. Big difference.

Third, I write the cards. Question on the front, answer on the back. Nothing fancy. But here is the key: I write them by hand. Every single one. No printing from a template. No copying and pasting into some flashcard generator.

Why? Because the writing is half the learning. By the time I finish making a deck of fifty cards, I have already reviewed that material fifty times. The actual flashcard review becomes reinforcement, not first exposure.

The Visual Memory Thing
Here is what most people do not talk about when they discuss flashcards. Your brain remembers more than just the words you wrote. It remembers context. Location on the card. The color of ink you used. Whether you underlined something or put it in quotes.

When I take an exam and hit a question I am not immediately sure about, I close my eyes for half a second. And there it is. The card. I can see the answer sitting on the right side of the card, written in blue or black ink, with a little asterisk next to it because I knew it was important.

The Catch
I am not going to pretend this method is fast. It takes time to write out cards by hand. It takes discipline to actually review them instead of letting them sit in a pile on your desk, not judging you.

But for me, the investment pays off. I retain more. I recall faster. And I walk into exams feeling like I actually know the material instead of hoping I crammed enough the night before.

So yes, I still use flashcards. The paper kind. With my own terrible handwriting. And I have no plans to stop.

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References
Mueller, P. A., & Oppenheimer, D. M. (2014). The pen is mightier than the keyboard: Advantages of longhand over laptop note taking. Psychological Science, 25(6), 1159–1168. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797614524581

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Thanks for reading,
Joe

Notes:
-All content is mine unless otherwise annotated.
-Images are my own unless otherwise noted.
-Photos edited using MS Paint and/or iPhone SE.
-Page Dividers from The Terminal Discord.

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 19 hours ago (edited) 

Yep, writing it down is "burning" it onto the brainDrive. There is a methode called 'brain-mapping' i use for most notes. Even directly marked in books i want to learn or remember stuff from.

MindMap Festival Kitchen

My son has recommended this to me before. HE says it may help to connect my thoughts, especially when I am not at my best times of the day. Thanks for sharing it Dudebro.

With pleasure dear John... and i kind of agree with your son. It made me finish my commercial diploma as 'best of the class' and i didn't really spend time on learning... i just watched my mindMaps in the books. keywords and colours with the brainy waves do what you said in your post. You watch it and you instantly get the message, which then stays - like burned into the brain.

Happy days to you and your family !

That's part of the reason I bought my SuperNote for my notes in my office. It's still digital, but I like the process of physically writing it down.

Yeah, there is something about writing it down that makes me feel like I am actually "absorbing" it somehow. I might check out this Supernote you speak of.

I agree! I love my super note I just used it during a meeting today. Kindle makes one too as well as a company called remarkable.

galenkp mentioned getting a KIndle the other day and I've been looking for my wife's since. I didn't know kindle made something like that too.

I think it's called the Kindle Scribe. You should check it out.

Yeah man, we were just talking to my son about this same concept. For me, writing things down was a really important way for me to learn. In the digital age, another aspect of it for me was figuring out a place where I could take practice tests. I would rather take a 200 question test 25 times with varying arrangement of the questions than studying a book 5 times. It was much more effective for my discipline which was great!

What are you studying? I have had the itch to do some more academic stuff but need to find out where to channel it to!

If I can find practice tests, I like to do the same thing. I am using the flashcards to study for a cert exam from ISACA, the CGEIT.

I like writing things down as well even if I jot things down on a bit of scrap paper. It's like a recording process, when I write it down it forces me to transfer it from my eyes to brain to hands. For me it works a lot better than just looking at it and it may not register

That is me 100%. I have such a hard time just reading something, especially boring material, and absorbing it.

𝕴 𝖈𝖔𝖚𝖑𝖉 𝖜𝖗𝖎𝖙𝖊 𝖔𝖚𝖙 𝖞𝖔𝖚𝖗 𝖈𝖆𝖗𝖉𝖘 𝖋𝖔𝖗 𝖞𝖔𝖚 𝖎𝖓 𝖒𝖞 𝖇𝖊𝖘𝖙 𝕻𝖊𝖓𝖒𝖆𝖓 𝖔𝖗 𝖌𝖔𝖙𝖍𝖎𝖈 𝖘𝖙𝖞𝖑𝖊 𝖙𝖍𝖊𝖓 𝖘𝖊𝖓𝖉 𝖎𝖙 𝖙𝖔 𝖞𝖔𝖚.
But then you'd miss out a part of the memory exercise in actually making the effort.

You are correct, but I do love me some creative writing style.

Writing things down is great. Visual memory is great and you can use it associate. I remember learning Spanish we visually associated words ... for example think of a camel in a bed for bed ... cama!
Good luck with your studies Joe and Merry Christmas

Thanks, Merry Christmas!