Spaced repetition is one of the most efficient ways to learn new things. (For research citations, see 'Study methods', here.)
The best way to practice spaced repetition is to install Anki to your phone, since you have your phone with you all day long.
I have an Android phone, so here's my 60-second guide to getting started with Anki on Android:
- On your Android phone, open 'Market.'
- Search for 'Anki'.
- Install the 'AnkiDroid Flashcards' app.
- In your app drawer, run 'AnkiDroid'.
- It will prompt that you don't have any decks downloaded. Tap 'Download deck' and choose 'Shared decks.'
- It will take a while to bring up the list of decks available online. Search for 'Less Wrong' and you'll see the deck called 'Less Wrong Sequences.' Download it.
- Go back to the AnkiDroid main screen, choose 'Load other deck.' Choose 'Less Wrong Sequences.'
- Set your options for 'New cards per day', 'session limit (minutes)', and 'session limit (questions)', then tap 'Start Reviewing.'
How do you push content to Anki effectively? I've been thinking about using it to study too, for example scientific papers (with lots of equations), but copying content by hand seems to be tedious... I also thought about converting them to images and then slicing them up, but that doesn't seem to be the best choice for a small phone screen. Or how do your decks look like?
A sample deck made up of my "psychology", "operating systems" and "machine learning" tags.
Note that some of those cards are old, and pretty bad: e.g. I have a card saying "name three things that villain hysterias have in common". I should have broken that up to three separate cards, each of which listed two of those things and told me to fill in the third. And that's what I've done with some of the later cards. It's also worth noting that I probably did too many operating systems cards when studying for that exam - w... (read more)