Learning With Supermemo PDF
Learning With Supermemo PDF
SuperMemo
See also:
FAQ: Memory
FAQ: SuperMemo Algorithm
Speed-learning techniques
The sad fact is that reading 100 pages daily is really a feat, and even the mere typing in the
material to SuperMemo will limit you to 20-100 questions per day (depending on time
available and the speed of typing). Even this small proportion will still provide you with
amazing build-up of knowledge! It is very important that you intelligently select what must
and what does not have to be memorized
Learning garbage may seem like an anti-thesis of good learning. However, rarely do we face
neat textbook information that can serve as model knowledge requiring no verification. In real
life, we often face chaos of contradictory information coming from different sources. For
example, when working in a fast-growing field of research, you will constantly meet new
findings that do not fit old models. Reconciling the chaos of new information may then
become your primary preoccupation. Cognitive research shows that our predictive capabilities
quickly become saturated with the inflow of additional information. For example, a
handicapper may need good information on horses and jockeys to set the odds. However, his
accuracy does not improve much once his cognitive capacity becomes saturated. The same
extends to other fields where human judgment is involved.
SuperMemo can help you shift the saturation point by making it easier to resolve
contradiction. In conditions of low retention, an individual facing contradictory propositions
A and B will often oscillate between A and B points. Such an oscillation is a function of
exposure over time. However, if you memorize the proposition A, encounter with the
proposition B is unlikely to produce such an oscillation. Instead, a red flag will be raised
signaling the contradiction. You can then rephrase the question on proposition A to include
proposition B with sources and other considerations predicating on validity of A and B.
By resolving contradictions, SuperMemo helps you built coherent models of reality. These in
turn improve your judgment and your problem solving powers.
Still, you need to remain vigilant. When trying to understand the world, you are bound to face
information garbage. Paradoxically, learning garbage can lead to the emergence of improved
models of reality. On the way towards the ultimate model though you may need to face false
information that is often more costly than ignorance. You cannot let your guard down.
advanced users report that acquiring 10,000 new items per year seems rather
effortless
some determined users are able to sustain 1000 repetitions per day for a week or so
(that is a full-time job though)
one user reported memorizing the whole Advanced English (40,000 items) in less than
6 months
very few users report reaching more than 400 repetitions per day for longer than a few
months
incremental reading, where topics are mixed with items, is by far more enjoyable than
pure repetitions, and can lead to far longer hours spent with SuperMemo
As for incremental reading, advanced users report little or no fatigue even in 3-5 hour non-
stop runs (assuming a fresh unstressed mind). This may partly come from the material variety
(randomized presentation of topics has a "TV channel zapping" reward effect). Also, the
passive nature of topic processing may contribute to resolving short-term memory overloads
that quickly result in homeostatic fatigue in traditional SuperMemo.
All in all, if you master all skills related to incremental reading and knowledge formulation, if
you test your personal persistence and self-discipline, you may be able to commit yourself to
100 items per day plus 100-400 topics per day. However, as this may take 2-4 hours of
learning, it is highly recommended you split those high loads into portions. If you give up on
retention (say down to 85-90%), you can maximize the learning speed and reach 30,000-
50,000 new elements per year. Of these, depending on the strategy, 30-60% will be items (still
rather less than 15,000-20,000).
Remember, that you will need to use your best creative hours to sustain this process in the
long run. Assuming you sleep in accordance with you natural circadian rhythm, those hours
would be early in the morning (after breakfast) and perhaps in the evening peak (if you
experience one). If you happen to learn at sub-optimum time (e.g. after work), you may find it
hard to do a quarter of the suggested load
Question:
On what basis do you ground your claim that SuperMemo increases the speed of learning
from 10-50 times?
Answer:
For knowledge retention of 95%, it can be computed that the number of repetitions in an
average learning lifetime (i.e. about 55 years) is roughly 50 times greater for equally spaced
repetitions than for progressive repetitions (as used in SuperMemo). For repetitions with no
regular spacing scheme, this number may even be greater. Moreover, the greater the required
knowledge retention, the greater the increase in the knowledge acquisition rate (classical
forms of learning almost never reach knowledge retention above 10%!!!). In practice, users of
SuperMemo claim that it increases their speed of learning from 50% to 2000%. These values
are, however, highly subjective, as they do not account for so-called intractable items, which
are practically not memorizable without SuperMemo. In other words, students tend to
underestimate the fact that they reach knowledge retention from 90-99%, which would hardly
be achievable using any other method.
My gut is usually a good indicator of when I need to go through them again. If I feel confident, I know I'm ready
to take the test. Intervals are not that accurately determinable, and 4 days for the first one, in my experience, is
waaaay too long [in SuperMemo, the first interval will depend on the user and the learning material]. I need to
pass through them every 30 minutes to an hour for at least a day, before they're reasonably secure in my head.
Of course, it all depends on the type of material and how many days I slept in class.
This method [SuperMemo] is hardly unique-- that's how many people study. And the effect is identical to your
unnecessarily complex and rather tedious, I think, worksheets and software. It's surprising to me there seems to
be so much scientific study behind it. I find it fairly simple and obvious
Deductive reasoning feeds on knowledge: We have not yet developed a theory of everything
or a super-brain that could use it to derive all truths via deduction. Reasoning requires
knowledge. Einstein also needed facts and rules developed by his predecessors to arrive at his
theories. Even a genius mathematician working in the attic in detachment from reality will
need a few things in his memory to start with (such as a problem to solve in the first place, or
a few formulas or theories that will shorten his path to the goal). A physician at the scene of
an accident must instantly retrieve seemingly mindless facts from his or her memory such as
the name of the drug and the dosage. Relying on deductive reasoning and smarts will not do
Not only geniuses use SuperMemo: SuperMemo is used by a special lot of people. Primarily
they are a strong-willed and self-disciplined group. Weaker souls drop out very soon. Some
may show obsessive and compulsive attitudes and these will backfire. Some may persist for
months in a strong belief SuperMemo is the right way to go and still make little progress in
areas other than word-pair learning. Like in any group, there are stronger and weaker students.
There are crammers and high-fliers. In other words, the uncritical trust in SuperMemo can
have negative side effects, but the feedback mechanism mentioned earlier acts as a
countermeasure. All in all, with its tangibility and measurability, SuperMemo helps bad
students understand their errors. With time, users of SuperMemo show remarkable progress in
understanding how their memory works and what the role of knowledge in life is. Bad
students will either improve or drop out.
All good things can be used in a bad way: Apart from the side effects of misconstrued
memorization, SuperMemo might also be used by a bad lot for their purposes. Hopefully,
Osama is too contemptuous of "western" technology to make his Pocket PC repetitions in the
cave to extend his knowledge of the best ways of harming his hate targets. But even here we
might hope that a dose of extra learning would bring him closer to seeing that what we share
is more important than what divides us.
All innovations and inventions can be put to bad use. Cars kill and pollute. Airplanes can be
flown into buildings. TV is numbing our knowledge selection skills. Web was branded "a
garbage bin of human knowledge". Even books encourage passive review as opposed to
active processing. SuperMemo does encourage memorization and even the most proficient
user will memorize some ballast of junk knowledge. What matters is the balance of costs and
benefits. The value of knowledge is hard to measure. The lifetime impact of SuperMemo is
hard to measure. To ultimately answer the above question we would need an equivalent of the
longitudinal Terman Study. Will those kids who contracted the bug of SuperMemo in the
early 1990s get bogged down with lifetime of time-wasting repetitions? Or will they become
presidents, Noble winners, and great inventors? Time will tell
Question:
I have an exam for a driver's license in 2 weeks. How can I best memorize the Traffic
Regulations collection for SuperMemo? How can I increase the frequency of repetitions?
Answer:
Although SuperMemo is not a cramming tool, and it would be much safer to start 2-3 months
before the exam, the following shall work pretty well:
SuperMemo uses spaced repetition. Inter-repetition intervals increase gradually in the learning
process. The more you grow your intervals, the less time you spend on repetitions, and the
more time you have to enjoy stable knowledge.
If you compare SuperMemo with reading a book, you will see little difference in retention in
the first week (first intervals in SuperMemo are usually shorter than a week). If you compare
results after a month, an average book reader will have already forgotten a large part of the
learned material, while the user of SuperMemo will stabilize around the programmed level of
retention.
The more time passes, the greater the difference between traditional learning and
SuperMemo.
If you compare SuperMemo with other methods approximating spaced repetition (e.g. priority
system, Leitner system, etc.), it may take even longer to demonstrate the difference in
retention.
The statement "give it a week before you give up" is to alert a new user to the fact that return
on investment in the first week is little. There is a point in time (say several days) before
which using SuperMemo may take more time than learning in a traditional way.
The same refers to incremental reading. Although it may encourage you to import more and
more material, it will painlessly remove the excess import from your view. You can proceed
at your favorite healthy speed without ever worrying that you missed anything important. You
can import everything, and then optimally read and learn only as much as you got time or
patience. The entire process is painless.
Finally, tasklists might belong to the greatest de-stressors of all. Instead of rushing through
your to-do list that always grows longer, you can safely focus on top-priority tasks and live
with the conviction: "I did not do everything, but at least I did my best".
All in all, tools offered by SuperMemo can be abused and multiply your stress level; however,
when used as designed they are supposed to achieve the exact opposite: maximum efficiency
at your chosen speed at minimum stress
Question:
Which learning method is more effective: traditional SuperMemo with questions and answers,
or the new hypermedia SuperMemo with videos, games, puzzles, and tests?
Answer:
Simple questions and answers are extremely effective and easy to create; however, some users
find classic SuperMemo too boring. If the psychological factor plays a part, the variety
provided by SuperMemo 8 or later may substantially add to the effectiveness of learning. The
answer to the question will depend on the application domain and the mentality of the student.
1. knowledge which is closely associated with facts and rules you keep in SuperMemo
will often be reinforced even if it is not actually stored in the program. For example, if
you memorize a few items about John D. Rockefeller without including his
photograph and later see his face on TV, it may happen that you will indefinitely be
able to recognize his face. You will notice that Rockefeller's face will subconsciously
be brought to your imagination at each repetition related to his life
2. SuperMemo will enhance your mnemonic skills and help you improve your short-term
memory. This is the case not only with SuperMemo but also with all other forms of
learning
3. Similarly, learning is likely to have a positive trophic effect on your brain tissue. This
should also enhance your general intellectual performance. The scope of this effect is
difficult to quantify but it has been proved in a number of experiments that rodents
bred in enriched environment grow more neurons, learn faster and live longer
It seems my entire life is centered on SuperMemo. In making any decision about my life--my
choice of job, my choice of transportation means, my choice of social activities--almost
invariably I begin with the question, "How will this affect my ability to do repetitions and to
add new items?" Clearly I have an obsession with learning and with SuperMemo. My
concern, and the subject of my post, is over whether or not this obsession is a healthy one.
In the first six months of using SuperMemo, my focus was strictly on the goal of inputting my
total present knowledge (at risk of being forgotten). From a certain perspective, particularly
after completing four successful years of college, I am saddened to think I reached that once
"monstrous" goal in the space of only six months. Now, after only a year and a half, my
collection contains 15,000 memorized items, and my level of knowledge has increased 300%!
(That means I feel like I have gone to college three times!) It is a remarkable feeling knowing
precisely how much you know.
Clearly, SuperMemo is an addiction I cannot shake. The question, again, is whether that
addiction is unhealthy and whether I must learn to temper it more. The clichs we throw about
would suggest not: knowledge is power and learning what life is all about, right? If the clichs
are correct, then anything that helps further my learning is healthy. Perhaps the measure of my
obsession's unhealthiness is the extent to which it jeopardizes personal relationships. No, I am
not married, but to be fair I have always been somewhat averse to the idea of marriage. I have
friends, though my friends have always numbered few. And those relationships I do retain are
enhanced, I think, by the increase in confidence and self-esteem attributable to SuperMemo.
Despite whatever balance I have managed to maintain, however, I think I would give much of
it up if only by doing so could I continue to use SuperMemo. To be sure, knowing now that
the program exists, I think if ever I were to lose access to SuperMemo and my collection, I
would become suicidal. That is no joke. God, family, and SuperMemo: that is the order of my
priorities.
You might be heading for disaster, but you might also be heading for greatness. It all depends
how well you rationalize your attitude and learn to employ new knowledge in accomplishing
your goals.
First you might want to figure out if you are indeed dealing with an addiction. Some
researchers argue: "No harm, no addiction". However, there might be a neurophysiologic
process that may lead to harm in the future. If you were to, as per your own words, become
suicidal at withdrawal, you would indeed meet a key criterion of addiction, but your
description seems to indicate that you are rather dealing with a variant of a compulsive
behavior. You do not mention tolerance (diminishing satisfaction), lack of control, or desire to
reduce the addictive behavior (i.e. conflicting rewarding and punishing stimuli). Interestingly,
you are definitely not prone to hide your addiction from the world or lie about it. The fact that
you posed the question on a public forum might even indicate that, to a degree, you are proud
of your attitude (e.g. while mentioning "doing college in 6 months").
Few people realize how powerful a role genes play in behavior. Thus you might be surprised
with a claim that your compulsion is quite likely to have a genetic background. You will
certainly notice that none of your friends is prone to acquire a similar habit, and that you will
find it hard to locate the roots of the habit in your childhood or upbringing (except where
personality traits are amplified, e.g. by inspirational tutoring). Compulsive behaviors do run in
families. In this context it would be interesting to study your predisposition to other
addictions (as these often correlate). However, this should not be a reason to worry per se.
Just the opposite. The history of invention and scientific discovery proves that those traits
might be responsible for quite a portion of mankind's progress. In the end, your compulsion
may be injurious to your own life, and, at the same time, bring immense benefits to others.
This has often been the outcome in the life of great inventors or scientists who changed the
world while living in utter misery. Unlike animals, humans seem to have strong anti-entropy
mechanisms imprinted in their brains. In other words, they tend to marvel over art, music,
patterns, structures, models, abstract concepts, beauty of science, etc. Compulsive behaviors
may be a strong expression of these mechanisms. You love the fact of being in control over
what you learn and that must be rooted in the beauty of building a neat structure of
knowledge. The "rage to learn" is one of primary characteristics of gifted children. If you now
employ this compulsion to accomplishing lofty goals, greatness is likely to outrun disaster as
the likely outcome. In other words, you must resolutely plan against learning for art stake.
Instead, your learning, targeted at specific goals, should make up a rational proportion of your
time with the rest filled out largely by creative activities targeted at specific productive goals.
In Stephen Covey's terminology, you should balance your production to production capacity
ratio (P/PC). If you accept well-selected knowledge as valuable you should be able to avoid
conflicting stimuli and an internal battle of conscience.
This is an interesting material for more than just an FAQ. It would be nice if you stayed in
touch to develop this into a case study.
SuperMemo will not help you bring things to mind without a trigger
(D.M., Jan 26, 2006, 06:54:40)
Question:
How can I use SuperMemo to remember to remember something?
Answer:
SuperMemo will not help you much in bringing things to your mind without a behavioral
trigger. It only helps you remember the association between the stimulus and the desired
response. It will not help you generate a response without a stimulus. You cannot use it to
remember to turn off the gas, unless you associate the turning off the gas with a specific
trigger. For example:
With some training, checking the gas will become a habit. SuperMemo will only ensure that
you do not forget about forming the habit
It is possible to roughly estimate the amount of time needed for learning a portion of
material
(Patrik Nilsson, Tuesday, December 18, 2001 11:53 AM)
Question:
Can Tools : Statistics : Simulation help me figure out the date when it is expected that I
manage my learning material?
Answer:
Once you introduce an item into the learning process and execute all outstanding repetitions,
it is SuperMemo's responsibility to ensure the desired level of retention. For that reason, you
can assume that you "managed" your material as soon as it has been introduced into the
learning process. Consequently, you do not need to run Simulation. If you want to memorize
1000 items and you decide to introduce 10 items per day into the learning process, you will
"manage" the material in 1000/10=100 days. Now you can use Simulation to try to estimate
how much work this will require. A rule of thumb is that you need 10x more effort for
repetitions than for learning new material. This could indicate that if you memorize 10 items
per day, you may expect 100 repetitions per day (at least in the initial period). This number
may vary greatly depending on the difficulty of the material and your learning skills and
techniques. Use Simulation to get a better estimate. With rescheduling tools (e.g. Postpone),
you can also reduce the daily load of repetitions; however, you will then suffer some loss in
retention. Another rule of thumb is that to increase your forgetting index from 10% to 20%
you would need to either (1) massively overload the learning process (e.g. by increasing the
inflow of material 10-fold), or (2) dramatically cut down on the learning effort (e.g. by 90%).
For more see: Theoretical aspects of SuperMemo
Question:
I used SuperMemo 2 shareware, and was accustomed to repeating forgotten items on the next
day. It is very irritating that in SuperMemo for Windows I do not have this possibility
Answer:
SuperMemo will schedule forgotten items in intervals that are determined by the forgetting
index. The greatest increase in the speed of learning in newer versions of SuperMemo as
compared with SuperMemo 2 resulted from substantially increasing the length of the first
interval. The student may be left with the feeling that he is likely to forget the item again if it
is not repeated on the next day. Statistically, however, he will forget no more than the
proportion defined by the forgetting index (specified in Tools : Options : Learning :
Forgetting index). By reducing the forgetting index to less than 5%, the length of the first
interval is likely to drop to 1-2 days in most cases. Moreover, if you are particular about
repeating a given item on the next day, you can choose Ctrl+M to commit or recommit an
item with a selected first interval
1. for low-priority material, Forget the item and place it at the selected location of the
pending queue (Ctrl+R)
2. for more important material, postpone the item until the time you believe you are
likely to understand it (Ctrl+J)
3. for vital material, review your collection for the "missing link" (Search and Review)
or import new articles discussing the subject
Ideally, you should create your collections on your own; however, ready-made material may
also be useful if it belongs to a well-defined and well-targeted subset, or if it is used as a
complementary inspiration rather than a supplement for wider study. Medical Biology is
sorted by difficulty but it is unlikely to be fully understood even by students of medicine. For
that reason, complementary research and incremental reading will always make a vital
addition to studying this material
Rd=e(ln(1-FI/100)*dp)
where:
The table below shows that even a large number of postpones is insignificant as long as the
delay factor d is low (you can choose this number in the postpone dialog box). However, the
default delay factor of 1.1 will increase the forgetting index from 10% to 20% if postpone is
executed successfully seven times in succession.
Table: Increase in the measured forgetting index as a result of using Postpone among items
with the requested forgetting index equal to 10%. Grey column headers: delay factor. Yellow
row headers: number of postpones. Table body: measured forgetting index. Blue area:
measured forgetting index above 20%
1. wait until SuperMemo discovers the fact that your first 200 items were unusually easy
2. use Tools : Statistics : Reset parameters : Optimization matrices to begin building
your memory model anew
A good practice is to keep all your knowledge in one collection to avoid similar deviant
behavior. All forms of intermittent learning (e.g. relearning the material, breaks in learning,
etc.) make it difficult for SuperMemo to build a good memory model
1. random shuffling of final drill queue with Tools : Randomize : Drill, and
2. concentration (not grading well items that were remembered only due to appearing in
a given context).
For example, import your mind map as graphics to an image component and check Answer
on the image component menu. Add a text component, e.g. "What is the structure of mind
map X?".
During repetitions grade yourself less than Pass (3) each time your forget any part of the mind
map! Do not forget that you should reinforce "weak links" in the mind map with separately
formulated items of simple question-answer or question-picture form. Each time you forget
part of the mind map, see if you have reinforced the forgotten links in separate items!
It is difficult to determine exactly what forgetting index brings the highest acquisition rate.
Simulation experiments have consistently pointed to the value of 25-30%. You can even plot
speed-vs.-forgetting graph using your own actual learning material in SuperMemo using
Tools : Statistics : Simulation. You will probably also arrive to similar results
As you perhaps know, SuperMemo disallows of the forgetting index above 20%. This comes
from the fact that you should aim at achieving high speed of learning combined with high
retention of the learned material. Setting the forgetting index above 20% would be like giving
up SuperMemo altogether and coming back to remembering only that what is easy to
remember. In highly interlinked material where new knowledge depends on the previously
acquired knowledge, high forgetting rate can even be more harmful
Nevertheless, if you want to maximize the speed of learning with little control over what
actually stays in your memory, set the forgetting index to 20%
Breaking one long repetition session into a few smaller ones is generally beneficial
(Robert Szumilo, Poland, Jan 3, 1999)
Question:
What is the optimum approach to making repetitions with SuperMemo: one long session or a
few smaller sessions (e.g. main repetitions in the morning and the final drill in the evening)?
Answer:
For psychological reasons, the quality of learning should increase substantially when working
in separate sessions, esp. if the number of repetitions surpasses 100 per day. Additionally, a
break before final drill is useful due to the spacing effect. The danger of this approach is ...
you can easily drive yourself into a situation in which you will spend excessive proportion of
your day on repetitions (in the future when your schedule changes you might have problems
with keeping up with your present pace)
Five-day exposure is not enough to retain 65% of knowledge for 15 years to life
(Tony D'Angelo, USA, Feb 3, 1999)
Question:
I am a management consultant who uses professional development programs from a company
called Resource Associates Corporation. These programs are based upon spaced repetition
learning. In their literature they cite an unnamed study that suggests that people will generally
only retain 2% of information they are exposed to in a one time event after 2 weeks. In
contrast they suggest that at least 65% of information delivered over 5 consecutive days may
be retained for 15 years to life. Can you confirm those claims?
Answer:
If you look at the graphs generated by SuperMemo during the learning process, you will
notice that the 2% figure might be true depending on how the material has been presented and
its difficulty. However, the claim that 65% of knowledge can be retained for 15 years as a
result of five-day exposure must be false in the same light. Even if we consider perfectly
formulated knowledge (i.e. knowledge characterized by the highest possible A-Factor), you
might need to space the quoted five exposures in the period of 2-3 years to make the 65%
figure realistic. If the quoted figures were accurate, you would probably never need to use
SuperMemo! For more details on the speed of learning, see Theoretical aspects of
SuperMemo
Postpone is a tool for those unable to spend time on learning on certain days
(M.R.W., Poland, March 24, 2000)
Question:
SuperMemo does not seem to provide enough support for those who cannot afford to spend
their time daily on regular repetitions. The daily regimen may discourage a large number of
potential users. Sometimes one would like to double the effort. On other occasions, one might
not feel like working with the program at all. For example, I could never convince my father
to use SuperMemo. When he comes back from work, he is often too tired to watch TV, let
alone make repetitions. Do you plan to include special tools that would make it possible to
learn only on weekends or exclude certain days of the week?
Answer:
Weekly calendar of repetitions is in consideration; however, this option adds complexity
without actually providing much learning benefit. It may actually appear harmful:
1. daily repetition regimen comes from the properties of human memory, not from the
design of SuperMemo. All delays in making repetitions are unwelcome and should be
discouraged
2. we have documented dozens of cases in which users regularly abused Tools : Mercy
and ultimately concluded that SuperMemo does not work! Those users blamed
SuperMemo, not their own lack of regularity! We have even removed an infamous
tool from SuperMemo 7 called Wipe that made it possible to reduce workload by
removing the most difficult items. This tool, despite warnings, have ruined the
learning process of many users who used it as the shortest way to spending less time
on repetitions
3. most of users who prefer SuperMemo for Palm Pilot as opposed to SuperMemo for
Windows list its simplicity as an advantage second only to portability. Despite its high
satisfaction ratings, the main complaint about SuperMemo for Windows is its
complexity and featuritis (i.e. too many features)
4. there is a very simple way towards freeing the user from the daily regimen of
repetitions: hiding the statistics. With statistics hidden, the student can delay
repetitions without the sense of guilt. He or she can also triple the workload on good
days. However, experiments show that in such cases, users add much more learning
material that they are able to repeat. This results in significant repetition delays, and a
dramatic increase in forgetting. Consequently, the learning process becomes similar to
traditional learning, learning results unimpressive and a drop-out rate very high
5. users who are truly unable to spend their time on learning on certain days are
encouraged to use Postpone
Two methods can be used to easily illustrate how university knowledge exceeds human
capacity to learn:
5 years after graduation, nearly all students would fail nearly all exams they have
passed previously (with exceptions for those who specialize in given areas, or for
exams that cover the foundations of other branches of knowledge). This is true for
other types of schools as well. It can be demonstrated in an even more dramatic
manner when top graduates may have problems with pointing to a single fact or rule
they have learned in a given course as soon as a decade later (even though they may
still retain a great deal of passive knowledge in the subject)
It is pretty hard to sustain the rate of 30 new items/day in SuperMemo during the
whole college or university period. And yet a student with 50,000 well-remembered,
well-structured and well-understood items will easily meet the criteria of a stellar
graduate (using knowledge as the sole criterion). 30 items/day cover only a tiny
fraction of what students get fed daily with a teacher's emphasis: this is the knowledge
that is absolutely necessary (implying: your graduation, your honor, and people's lives
will depend on it)
Teachers may be right when placing the emphasis on the value of knowledge. Yet students, to
avoid frustration, must also understand the limitations of the human mind. Anyone who hopes
to cover the entire material required in medical school exams in SuperMemo will face a
breaking point sooner or later. This breakdown should not be interpreted as a failure, but as an
incentive to make a reasonable selection in what is absolutely necessary to know, and what
can be left to the unreliable traditional way of learning. And yes, the traditionall learning
carries the benefits that include the basis for the selective survival of the fittest students. The
present message is not targeted at schools to de-emphasize the value of knowledge, but to
students to plan early for material overflow and for the resulting need to prioritize.
The term "staggered learning" may sometimes be used to describe "spaced learning"
(SKlein, Holland, Tuesday, December 05, 2000 7:32 AM)
Question:
What is the difference between staggered learning and learning based on spaced repetition?
Answer:
The term "staggered learning" is not used often. It may refer to intermittent learning or
learning based on repetition and review. It is used in reference to the curriculum rather than
the method of learning. Probably, its association with spaced repetition comes from the fact
that it was used in the context of the Leitner method which is a very old form of spaced
repetition