You study something for hours, feel confident, and then forget most of it a week later. This is not a personal failing — it is how human memory works. The good news: there is a technique that works with your brain’s natural forgetting pattern instead of against it.
Spaced repetition is a learning strategy where you review information at increasing intervals over time. Instead of cramming everything in one session, you spread your reviews out — and each review strengthens the memory further.
The Science Behind Spaced Repetition
The Forgetting Curve
In 1885, psychologist Hermann Ebbinghaus discovered that memory decays exponentially after learning. Without review, you forget roughly:
- 50% within one hour
- 70% within 24 hours
- 90% within one week
This is the forgetting curve — and it explains why cramming does not work for long-term retention.
How Spaced Repetition Fights Forgetting
Each time you successfully recall a piece of information, the memory becomes stronger and the forgetting curve flattens. Spaced repetition exploits this by scheduling reviews at the optimal moment — just before you are about to forget.
A typical schedule looks like this:
| Review | Interval |
|---|---|
| 1st review | 1 day after learning |
| 2nd review | 3 days later |
| 3rd review | 7 days later |
| 4th review | 14 days later |
| 5th review | 30 days later |
After several successful reviews, the information moves into long-term memory and needs only occasional refreshes.
What Research Says
Spaced repetition is one of the most well-supported techniques in cognitive science. As highlighted in the popular Learning How to Learn course by Dr. Barbara Oakley, spacing your practice over time is far more effective than massed practice (cramming) for building durable memories.
How to Use Spaced Repetition
Step 1: Create Flashcards
Break information into small, testable pieces. Each flashcard should have:
- One question or prompt on the front
- One clear answer on the back
Good flashcard examples:
- Front: “What is the capital of Portugal?” → Back: “Lisbon”
- Front: “What does the HTTP status code 404 mean?” → Back: “Not Found — the requested resource does not exist”
Step 2: Review with a Spaced Repetition System
A spaced repetition system (SRS) tracks when each card is due for review and adjusts intervals based on your performance:
- Got it right easily? The interval increases (review it later).
- Got it right with effort? The interval stays the same or increases slightly.
- Got it wrong? The interval resets (review it again soon).
You can use a dedicated app like Memwiz to handle the scheduling automatically — so you always review the right cards at the right time.
Step 3: Keep Sessions Short and Consistent
Spaced repetition works best in short daily sessions:
- 10–20 minutes per day is enough for most people
- Consistency matters more than session length
- Review daily — even 5 minutes is better than skipping a day
What Spaced Repetition Is Great For
- Language learning — vocabulary, grammar rules, characters
- Medical and science studies — terminology, anatomy, formulas
- Programming — syntax, API methods, algorithms
- Exam preparation — any subject with factual content
- Professional certifications — laws, regulations, procedures
Tips for Effective Spaced Repetition
Write your own cards
Creating cards forces you to process the material actively. Copying someone else’s deck skips this important step.
Keep cards atomic
One fact per card. A card asking “List all the planets” is harder to review than eight separate cards, one for each planet with a related fact.
Use images and context
Adding a relevant image or example makes cards more memorable. The brain encodes visual information more effectively than text alone.
Be honest when reviewing
If you had to guess or were not fully confident, mark the card as “hard” or “wrong.” Overrating your recall leads to premature intervals and weaker retention.
Common Spaced Repetition Mistakes
- Adding too many new cards at once — Start with 10–20 new cards per day. Reviews accumulate fast.
- Making cards too complex — If a card takes more than 10 seconds to answer, break it into smaller pieces.
- Skipping review days — Even a short session maintains momentum. Missing days causes a backlog.
- Only using it for rote facts — Spaced repetition also works for concepts if you frame cards as “explain” or “compare” prompts.
Getting Started Today
- Pick a subject you want to remember long-term.
- Create 10 flashcards with simple question-and-answer pairs.
- Review them using a spaced repetition app like Memwiz.
- Add 5–10 new cards each day while reviewing your existing ones.
Within a few weeks, you will be amazed at how much you retain with minimal daily effort. Spaced repetition is not about studying harder — it is about studying smarter.
Watch: How Spaced Repetition Works
Video: “How to Remember More of What You Learn with Spaced Repetition” — Thomas Frank
Cover image by Nicklas Millard on Unsplash.