A very practical background ;) I read tons about it ever since I started learning Mandarin 5 years ago. Eventually I turned the method that worked for me into an app (https://traverse.link/). Source: almost 2 years ago
I agree that spaced repetition is an effective method for studying, particularly when preparing for exams like the MCAT. Going through the r/MCAT subreddit is an excellent idea, as you can discover strategies that have worked for others and adapt them to your personal learning style. Additionally, I'd like to share an app I developed called Traverse, which combines mind mapping, note-taking, and flashcards in one... Source: almost 2 years ago
Visually map them out, and then test yourself on each step using map occlusion cards (you can use sw like traverse to create those). Source: almost 2 years ago
If you're interested in a more visual approach you can try https://traverse.link/ - it's an app I created which has spaced repetition, but really its goal is to cover the whole learning process, so it also has mind mapping and note-taking so you get a big picture view of what you're learning, why reinforcing bottom-up with spaced repetition. - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
It seems like you have a solid study plan in place, using a combination of different resources and techniques. Since you mentioned that you find mind maps helpful, you might find an app called Traverse useful. It combines mind mapping, note-taking, and flashcards, allowing you to build a top-down big picture understanding of the material and then use active recall and spaced repetition flashcards to memorize the... Source: almost 2 years ago
You might find it useful to use a tool like Traverse, which I developed, to create digital mind maps and flashcards in one place. This way, you can easily integrate both methods into your revision strategy. Let me know if you find it helpful or if you have any feedback! Source: almost 2 years ago
Mind maps usually work well to learn things top-down (eg starting from the big picture), whereas flashcards are helpful to learn bottom-up (starting from the single facts). You can even combine both. Source: almost 2 years ago
Maybe you can save time by making the mind maps digitally and then creating flashcards from them directly? That way the mind map can double as a way to build initial understanding as well as be part of your revision strategy. I built a tool called Traverse which makes this easier, let me know if that's helpful. Source: almost 2 years ago
And there's Traverse, which also is compatible with Anki (including scheduling). It has notes (similar to Notion), flashcards and mind maps. I'm the founder, our philosophy is quite the opposite from Obsidian, instead Traverse tries to offer all tools needed for learning out of the box in a nice interface (but doens't have the customizability of Obsidian). Source: almost 2 years ago
I run Traverse ([https://traverse.link/](https://traverse.link/)) - an app which helps students learn faster using mind maps, flashcards and notes. It's been running for over 2 years now and provides steady recurring income - I've prioritized continuity over exponential growth. Have reduced operational work to a minimum now so I can spend most of my time working on marketing strategies to make it big ;). - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
You can do this with Traverse (https://traverse.link, I'm the developer) - let me know if it's helpful, really interested to hear from japanese learners. Source: over 2 years ago
Https://traverse.link/ - Organize your notes, mind maps, and flash cards and quickly reference them using active recall and spaced repetition. Source: almost 3 years ago
I’d say Mandarin Blueprint should fit the bill. Unfortunately they stopped supporting their Anki decks and started transitioning to Traverse because they wanted to have more control over their IP. Source: almost 3 years ago
Wish this article had been written a year ago when when I added Anki import to my learning app (https://traverse.link/)! Especially importing media files and de-renaming them was a pain, as well as handling the different types of cloze deletes (some of this is described quite well in anki's docs, for example here https://docs.ankiweb.net/#/templates/generation) Another link on their DB structure which saved me a... - Source: Hacker News / about 3 years ago
If there is one app that is created specifically for students and is actually proven to work by combining all the factual methods of learning, it will be Traverse. Source: about 3 years ago
Based on features that /u/nameofthedaemon wanted, it is possible that https://traverse.link/ might be the best option. Source: over 3 years ago
The link to the flashcard resource is actually a flash card app itself (https://traverse.link/)! If you just create an account you will be able to study these cards with spaced repetition. Source: almost 4 years ago
With http://traverse.link/ you can build a course for yourself. Source: almost 4 years ago
I've built a spaced repetition app called Traverse, it's a web app only but mobile friendly. It's free, and you can import Anki decks. Let me know if that's helpful. Source: about 4 years ago
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