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About Flash Cards


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Flash Cards


Definition: Cards (pieces of paper) with question and answer on opposite sides.

Usually you have a deck of cards, e.g. 50 question-answer pairs (more than about 100 becomes unhandy). The subjects can be almost anything, for instance a foreign language. You might have English words or phrases on one side and French on the other.

A quiz made with GMT, Griebel's Mobile Tutor, is really an electronical equivalent of flash cards. (And, you can print out ordinary flash cards with GMT).


  1. use flash cards

    Any problems?

  2. How do I make "page shifts" in a browser?
  3. Page shifts don't work for you?

    How to make flash cards:

  4. print
  5. fold
  6. glue
  7. (skip the folding and gluing part...)
  8. cut







Use Flash Cards -- Top


There are so many ways to use flash cards. Here are a few suggestions.

 +-----+            +-----+            +-----+
+!     !           +!     !           +!     !
!!  Q  !           !!  A  !           !!  A  !
!!     !           !!     !           !!     !
!+-----+           !+-----+           !+-----+
+-----+            +-----+            +-----+

Coming             Incorrectly        Correctly
Question           answered           answered


You hold a deck of cards with a question and answer on opposite sides. You hold up one card, look at the question, think to yourself: "The answer is...", turn the card, and see the correct answer.


Put the card in one of two decks on the table: The ones you knew, or the ones you didn't know. (or alternatively, if your answer was incorrect you may also put the card right back into the deck you are holding, and perhaps reshuffle).


When your hand is empty, you pick up the deck with the questions you didn't know, and start over. For each time you do that the "did know" pile on the table will be a little bit bigger. Finally, when your hand is completely empty, you may simply start all over again. You will be surprised to see how quickly you learn.


If you are studying a new subject, you should limit yourself to a maximum of 100 cards, better 40 to begin with.


But if the stack contains more than 100 cards, you might begin by dividing them into groups which make best sense to you. If you are studying a foreign language, you might divide the cards into nouns, verbs, adjectives, other -- or any other way that you prefer, e.g. time, persons, food. Whatever. It really doesn't matter much how you divide the deck, as long as the division makes sense to you. When you are done with each of the smaller piles you have created, you can put them together again. Now it is not an entirely new subject, now you know something, a little bit, about it, and now 100 cards, or 250 cards, is not too many.


Sometimes it makes sense to make the answer the question and vice versa. Not always, but sometimes. For instance, a French-English vocabulary quiz. What is French for horse? What does the French word cheval mean? etc.

In other cases it doesn't make sense. An example: You have a deck of cards of animals. A lion is...a mammal. A goat is...also a mammal. You cannot reverse that: "Which animal is a mammal?"

Many quizzes of this kind appear to be reversible, but in fact aren't. A French-English, or any foreign language quiz, is almost reversible, but not quite. You can make some experiments for yourself.







How do I make "page shifts" in a browser? -- Top

Page shifts affect only your print, of course. I am using tables, like this:

[table style="page-break-before:always" ]
  [tr height='222']
    [td width='50%']the question[/td]
    [td width='50%']the answer[/td]
  [/tr]

       :
      (4 Q/A pairs, in this case)
       :

[/table]
[table style="page-break-before:always" ]
  [tr height='222']
    [td width='50%']the question[/td]
    [td width='50%']the answer[/td]
  [/tr]

       :
     (etc.)
       :


'222' in the code above is an example; it works if the available space on the page is at least 888 pixels, and you have 4 questions on each page.

An older implementation used table row height="25%", say. This doesn't work too well with Netscape, and MSIE ignores it completely. The remainder of this paper describes the new version.



Page shifts don't work for you? -- Top


Browsers work differently, and this is an experimental system. Page shifts seem to work as intended with the two "big" browsers version something. Remarks about the browsers:


MSIE: When you print a page, especially flash cards for the chess quizzes, remember to turn on printing of background images and colours (it's in the advanced settings somewhere). Or else the result will look silly. Actually, in a future implementation I am going to make the background colour all white, you will have to deduce the colour of each field yourself. This is much to prefer when print out is copied on some other material, for instance.


Netscape Navigator: No problems reported yet.




Print Flash Cards -- Top


You can print the file directly, or save it to disk to print at a later time (except for the chess flash cards which must be printed right away).


Each page has two coloumns: Questions on the left side, answers on the right, like this:

+---------+
!  Q   A  !
!  Q   A  !
!  Q   A  !
!  Q   A  !
!  Q   A  !
+---------+

Last page fills with "empty" questions so that there is the same number of questions on each page.





Fold Flash Cards -- Top


Fold each and every printed page precisely along the central vertical axis of the paper so that the questions and the answers end up on opposite pages.

+----:----+
!  Q : A  !
!  Q : A  !
!  Q : A  !
!  Q : A  !
!  Q : A  !
+----:----+

     ^ Fold here




Glue Flash Cards -- Top


Unfold, apply glue to the back of the paper. Fold again, glue the back of the paper onto itself.




(a way to skip the folding and gluing part...) -- Top


Using a photo copier you can copy the printed pages on both the front and the back of the resulting page. You can use quality paper instead of the usual stuff. When you cut the questions apart, you will end up with two sets instead of one.




Cut out Flash Cards -- Top


Cut along the lines.


You can use a scissor. You can also use a special cutting device as the ones most print houses have. Some can cut very precisely. You might be able to cut the whole stack at once.




xxx Flash Cards -- Top














Mike L. Griebel, mgriebel@hotmail.com
Griebel's Homepage
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