Spaced Repetition - An Introduction

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • In this video, we have James and Zander discussing the spaced repetition, including some ways you can integrate it with Obsidian.
    Find James' channel over here, where he makes videos going further in-depth into spaced repetition: / @experimentallearning
    You can request topics, or even offer to host a talk or a workshop here: forum.obsidian...
    You can find more information on Obsidian here: www.obsidian.md/

Komentáře • 5

  • @faycallakel8079
    @faycallakel8079 Před 3 lety +6

    Great Video! Thank you guys, I hope you will talk in the next video about how to implement a space repetition system in Obsidian.

    • @ExperimentalLearning
      @ExperimentalLearning Před 3 lety +4

      I recommend Bryan Jenks' video on spaced repetition in Obsidian for this. He goes through all of the available Obsidian plugins / integrations with external SRS systems like Anki.

  • @smoocher
    @smoocher Před 3 lety +1

    I’ve only started watching this, and I”m sure I’ll benefit from watching it, but I already gave it a thumbs up due to the nice accent.

  • @MrRedstonefreedom
    @MrRedstonefreedom Před rokem +1

    Very disappointed that this didn't even attempt to merge with Obsidian knowledge storage. SRS, both SuperMemo & Anki, are rife with problems as far as providing a nice dividing line between notes you *don't* want to memorize, and notes you do. Also, just facilitating the learning phase for any one bit of knowledge. There is really a lot of potential for mending the gap between long-form knowledge structures & engram'able associations with the tooling & extensibility that Obsidian provides... but this didn't even attempt to relate it to obsidian :/
    Until this gap is properly mortared, SRS/Anki will be relegated to the dustbin of language learning & course-cramming. Sad to see no one else interested in integrating the two distinct concern areas of PKBS & decmem-based memory maintenance.

  • @KotleKettle
    @KotleKettle Před 2 lety

    Anki is a great tool to keep your own "dictionary", but has an abomination of an algorithm for learning...