Although my 8-year-old son likes his teacher, he is frequently bored at school. He attends a high quality suburban public school in the United States. He has a lot of traits in common with LessWrong readers, and we would like advice for what he can do to counter his boredom. Many of you must have found grade school more or less tedious. What were your coping strategies?
At the moment I find that the cards I made in my first year of using Anki haven't been what I know consider to be simple facts.
I frequently delete old cards where when I think they don't make sense anymore.
For example I used to belief that the card: ?(port is red)? with the possible answer Yes and No is simple. ?()? was a shorthand for not having to write the sentence.
Now I find that "port is ?(green/red)?" is much more simple. The ?(X)? gets colored blue to make it stand out to the eye when I see the card. Sister cards:
Starboard is ?(green/red)?
?(starboard/port )? is green
?(starboard/port )? is red
It seems to be very near to the ideal of redundant minimum information chuncks. Formatting might be improved but the information of every card seems close to optimum.
It took me years to learn the Zen of making simple Anki cards. Old cards that get badly formatted or represent knowledge that isn't useful get either reformated or deleted.
In the last week I had to relearn the meaning of dative and accusative. I think I probably learned those concepts in school. But I didn't make any Anki cards for it. I forgot that knowledge.
I also lost a lot of French vocubulary. Take animals.
[fr->en] ?(chien/chat/vache/cheval)? means dog
[fr->en] ?(chien/chat/vache/cheval)? means cat
[fr->en] ?(chien/chat/vache/cheval)? means cow
[fr->en] ?(chien/chat/vache/cheval)? means horse
Four very simple cards. I would also make the reverse English to French cards. I could have written them easily to learn French in school. I think a 8 year old might have enough cognitive capacity to write those four cards and learn them. He might have a challenge to learn them and might not be as fast as I'm now when I'm learning them, but they wouldn't provide him trouble.
When it comes to teaching the 8-year-old Anki I would encourage them to write cards in that style that have 2 to 6 choices and that require the user to write down his choice every time when a computer is available. When he uses Anki via a phone of course writing down the words isn't necessary.
If you follow that principle learning languages, learning biology or learning whatever gets a nice game. Seperate the knowledge into groups and put them into Anki.
Research indicates that brainspace isn't limited. On the contary, saving a lot of information in your brain makes it less likely that you will get Alzheimer's. Badly formatted cards that cost time because they get forgotten are a issue brainspace isn't.
This post will be less confusing to English speakers if you replace "backboard" (presumably backformed from the German 'Backbord') with 'port'. :)
Which does raise the etymological question of why English has the Germanic starboard meaning "right, but on a ship" (German Steuerbord, Norwegian styrbord) but not the corresponding "left" - German Backbord, Norwegian babord. What's this "port" stuff?