Hello Reader, If you’ve tried using Anki for your problem-based subjects, you’ve probably asked the following…
And I really appreciate it when you ask questions like this because it shows how you value understanding over just memorization. (both are good!) But perhaps the most important question: How do I make sure that I understand the question itself, and not just memorize the answer? Well, that’s exactly what we’re gonna talk about in today’s email. You’re going to learn:
The “thinking mistake” most people makeAs you may know, I’ve personally used Anki to help me finish at the top 5% of passers in my Engineer Board Exam. We LITERALLY eat formulas for breakfast and word problems for dinner. And I’m (kinda?) happy to tell you that I did this even though I’ve even failed Integral Calculus almost twice back in College, and barely passed the other Math subjects. Here’s what I discovered… Most people who can’t use Anki effectively for problem-solving subjects are just stuck in “tool-first thinking*” rather than thinking about the real GOAL in the first place. (*See my write-up on Tool First Thinking) Here’s what they’d say, for example:
Now let’s validate:
It’s no wonder why they aren’t getting great results. They’re focusing too much on “being able to regurgitate” rather than “being able to become a better problem solver.” Instead of looking for band-aids like “using Anki to remember answers/solutions”... Think of “using Anki to remember the KNOWLEDGE I need to train my PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS”. Visually, here’s what that looks like: In short:
Now let’s make a workflow for that. Step 1. Plan
Step 2. EncodeBefore I continue I want you to make a promise to yourself… “I will NEVER EVER practice with direct substitution formulas again.” It’s fine to use them to learn the formulas but if you will do practice with them then that’s like reciting ABC’s all day long thinking you’re gonna get better at speaking a language. ALWAYS practice with next-level problems. But in this phase, the principles are:
It’s important to know that whenever you get stuck, it’s NOT BAD AT ALL to look at solutions…with a condition: You must understand why they use a solution before moving forward. You gotta know the essence. Step 3. Ankify (and creating problem sets)You should know that simply understanding a solution once isn’t enough — you need to maintain knowledge, too. There are two things you need to do here:
Step 4. Spaced RepetitionFew tips for these:
Step 5. ImproveImproving here will not necessarily mean “improving your flashcards” but also improving the way you think. I’ve shared a few bits here and there, but just to emphasize:
Again, if you want examples for the cards, just visit the blog post. So how exactly do you move forward?I know these sound pretty vague, but this is the best way I know of to share them in a single email with all the points covered. The most important thing is to try to apply this workflow for yourself, and then work from there 🙂 Did you learn something new? Realized something?If your answer is a big “YES,” then I have a question for you: What is your biggest takeaway/realization from this lesson? Just reply to this email if you want to let me know :) To smarter studying, P.S. Apologies for the delays! I also haven't replied to a lot of you yet, but I'll make time sooner or later to reconnect :) |
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