[this page is still a big mess; these links are either articles or random blog posts I scavenged to assess the current stance on SRS protocols. I'll get back at this in due time; until then, well β ]
- Building a better memory system
- Effective learning: Twenty rules of formulating knowledge
- gwern's article on spaced repetition
- How to write good prompts: using spaced repetition to create understanding
- Spaced Repetition for Efficient Learning
- the working memory overload; a book vs. the internet in a nice bathtub metaphor
from Gwern's,
- the research favors questions which force the user to use their memory as much as possible; in descending order of preference:
- free recall
- short answers
- multiple-choice
- Cloze deletion
- recognition
- the most common mistakes with spaced repetition are
- formulating poor questions and answers
- assuming it will help you learn, as opposed to maintain and preserve what one already learnedβ . (Itβs hard to learn from cards, but if you have learned something, itβs much easier to then devise a set of flashcards that will test your weak points.)