Active recall means retrieving information from memory rather than rereading it — and it is consistently rated the most effective revision technique in the research literature. Flashcards are one of the most practical tools for practising active recall: a question on one side, an answer on the other, reviewed repeatedly until the answer comes automatically. When combined with spaced practice, they produce stronger, longer-lasting learning than any passive technique.
What is active recall?
Active recall is the process of testing yourself from memory, without looking at notes. Every time you struggle to retrieve a piece of information and succeed, the memory trace is strengthened — a phenomenon researchers call the testing effect.
A landmark 2013 review by Dunlosky and colleagues, published in Psychological Science in the Public Interest, rated practice testing (active recall) as one of only two techniques with high utility across a wide range of subjects and age groups. Rereading and highlighting, by contrast, were rated as low utility — they feel productive but produce much weaker memory.
The difference is effort. Passive revision (rereading, watching videos, copying notes) feels easier because it is easier. The brain is not doing the hard work of retrieval. Active recall is uncomfortable at first, but that discomfort is the learning happening.
What makes flashcards an effective tool?
Flashcards work because they force active recall in a simple, repeatable format. The question on the front creates a retrieval cue; attempting to answer before flipping the card is the retrieval effort; checking the back gives immediate feedback.
Good flashcards are:
- Specific — one fact or concept per card, not a whole page of notes
- Question-based — the front poses a question or gives a cue; the back answers it
- Used actively — you attempt to recall before looking at the answer
Flashcards become even more powerful when combined with spaced repetition — reviewing cards at increasing intervals based on how confidently you recalled them.
How to make effective flashcards
Step 1 — Choose what to put on them
Not everything belongs on a flashcard. Good candidates:
- Definitions (key vocabulary in science, English, history, geography)
- Dates and events
- Formulae and their applications (maths, physics, chemistry)
- Quotes for English literature
- Foreign language vocabulary
Avoid: long explanations, extended descriptions, or anything that requires more than one or two sentences to answer. Break those into multiple cards.
Step 2 — Write the question on the front
The question should require active retrieval, not just recognition. Compare:
| Weak (passive) | Strong (active recall) |
|---|---|
| "Photosynthesis is the process by which…" | "What is photosynthesis?" |
| "The Battle of Hastings was in 1066" | "When was the Battle of Hastings?" |
| "pi ≈ 3.14159" | "What is the formula for the circumference of a circle?" |
The stronger version forces you to produce the answer, not just recognise it.
Step 3 — Keep the answer short and precise
The back of the card should give the minimum correct answer. Short answers are easier to check and harder to fudge. If the answer is long, either break it into two cards or use bullet points for the key points only.
Step 4 — Make the cards yourself
There is learning value in the act of making flashcards — it requires you to identify what is important and rephrase it in your own words. Pre-made decks (from websites or friends) skip this step. For the highest benefit, write your own cards from your class notes. You can still use pre-made decks to supplement, but do not rely on them entirely.
How to use flashcards with spaced repetition
The most common mistake with flashcards is reviewing all of them in the same session every day. Spaced repetition improves on this by reviewing cards more or less frequently based on how well you know them.
A simple three-pile system:
- Pile A — Don't know: Cards you got wrong. Review every day.
- Pile B — Getting there: Cards you got right but were slow or uncertain. Review every two to three days.
- Pile C — Confident: Cards you answered immediately and correctly. Review once a week.
Cards move between piles based on how you perform. A card that stumps you moves back to Pile A, regardless of where it was before.
This system means you spend your time on the cards you actually need to practise, not the ones you already know — a much more efficient use of study time.
A practical weekly flashcard routine
| Day | Activity |
|---|---|
| Monday | Make new cards for this week's topics; review Pile A |
| Tuesday | Review Piles A and B |
| Wednesday | Review Pile A; move confident cards to B or C |
| Thursday | Review all three piles; no new cards |
| Friday | Self-test: go through Pile C without looking (just checking) |
| Saturday | Review Piles A and B; make any new cards needed |
| Sunday | Rest |
Adapt this to your schedule, but the principle — frequent short reviews, spaced over the week — should remain.
Common flashcard mistakes to avoid
| Mistake | Why it is a problem | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Peeking before attempting to recall | Skips the retrieval step entirely | Cover the back and attempt to answer first |
| Too much text on one card | Makes it hard to check and easy to half-know | One fact per card |
| Only reviewing the cards you already know | Feels good but wastes time | Prioritise Pile A cards |
| Copying text word-for-word | Misses the benefit of processing in your own words | Paraphrase when possible |
| Making too many cards about one topic | Unbalanced coverage | Check you have cards across all assessed topics |
What the research says about testing yourself
Dunlosky's 2013 review is clear: practice testing is high utility across subjects, ages and levels of study. The EEF's metacognition and self-regulation toolkit — which rates approaches by months of additional progress — emphasises that students who actively monitor their own learning (including self-testing) make significantly more progress than those who rely on passive review.
A 2006 study by Roediger and Karpicke, widely cited in the revision literature, found that students who studied material and then tested themselves retained 61% of the material after one week. Students who studied the material repeatedly (no testing) retained only 40%. Testing is not just for checking learning — it is a learning method in itself.
Beyond flashcards: other active recall methods
Flashcards are not the only way to practise active recall. Other effective methods include:
- Brain dumps: write down everything you can remember about a topic on a blank page, then compare to notes.
- Past-paper questions: retrieved under timed conditions before reading the mark scheme.
- Teach it: explain a concept aloud to a parent, sibling or friend. Any gaps in your explanation reveal gaps in your knowledge.
- Cover-and-recite: cover your notes and try to reproduce a diagram, equation or key point from memory.
All of these share the same mechanism: forcing retrieval rather than reading. The form matters less than the principle.
Frequently asked questions
What is active recall and why does it work?
Active recall is testing yourself from memory, rather than passively rereading notes. It works because retrieving a memory strengthens it — an effect called the testing effect. Research by Dunlosky and colleagues (2013) rated it as one of the two highest-utility revision techniques for school students.
How do you use flashcards effectively?
Write one fact or question per card, attempt to answer from memory before looking at the back, and sort cards into piles based on how confidently you recalled them. Review difficult cards daily and confident cards once a week. This spaced repetition approach is far more effective than reviewing all cards every day.
Should I make my own flashcards or use pre-made ones?
Making your own is better, because the process of deciding what to write and rephrasing it in your own words is itself a form of active learning. Pre-made decks can supplement your revision but should not replace the card-making step entirely.
How many flashcards should I make per subject?
This depends on the subject and the number of assessable facts, but 20–50 cards per major topic is a reasonable target for KS3. Quality matters more than quantity — 20 well-written, specific cards are more useful than 100 cards copied verbatim from a textbook.
Is active recall better than rereading?
Yes, according to a significant body of research. Dunlosky's 2013 review gave rereading a low utility rating and practice testing (active recall) a high utility rating. Students who reread frequently often overestimate how well they know the material — a phenomenon known as the illusion of fluency.
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