Spaced repetition explained: the science behind smarter revision

Study Techniques6 min readBy Jono Ellis

If you've ever crammed for an exam the night before, you already know the result: you might scrape through, but within days you've forgotten almost everything. Spaced repetition is the antidote to cramming. It's a revision technique grounded in decades of cognitive science research, and it's one of the most powerful tools you can use to move information from short-term to long-term memory.


Retain up to

85%

of material after 30 days when using spaced repetition, compared to ~20% with cramming


What is spaced repetition?

Spaced repetition is a learning technique where you review material at gradually increasing intervals. Instead of studying a topic once and moving on, you return to it after a day, then after three days, then a week, then a fortnight, and so on. Each review strengthens the memory trace, making it harder to forget.

The technique is based on the forgetting curve, first described by Hermann Ebbinghaus in the 1880s. Ebbinghaus showed that we forget new information rapidly — roughly 50% within an hour — unless we actively reinforce it.

The forgetting curve: without review, we lose most new information within days.
Tip

You don't need a fancy app to start using spaced repetition. A simple calendar and a stack of flashcards will do. The key is consistency: review at the scheduled time, even when you feel like you already know the material.

How does it compare to other techniques?

TechniqueRetention after 30 daysTime investment
Spaced repetition~85%Low (short daily sessions)
Massed practice (cramming)~20%High (long single session)
Re-reading notes~30%Medium
Practice testing~70%Medium
Approximate retention rates based on cognitive science literature.

How to implement spaced repetition

The simplest way to begin is with flashcards. Write a question on one side and the answer on the other. Test yourself daily, and sort cards into piles based on how well you know them. Cards you get right move to a longer interval; cards you get wrong come back sooner.

Digital tools like Anki or Cognito's built-in flashcard system automate this scheduling for you, but the underlying principle is the same: test, wait, test again.

Getting started with spaced repetition

Follow these steps to set up an effective spaced repetition routine.

  • Choose your tool: physical flashcards, Anki, or Cognito's flashcard system
  • Create cards for one subject or topic at a time
  • Write clear, specific questions (one fact per card)
  • Review daily for 15–20 minutes at a consistent time
  • Trust the schedule — don't skip easy cards

Common questions


The spacing effect is one of the most reliable and robust findings in experimental psychology.

D

Dr Robert Bjork

Professor at UCLA

Why most students don't use it

Despite overwhelming evidence, most students still default to re-reading and highlighting. The reason is simple: spaced repetition feels harder. When you test yourself at increasing intervals, you often struggle to recall the answer — and that struggle feels like failure. In reality, it's the struggle itself that strengthens the memory.

Watch: How spaced repetition works in practice

I resisted using flashcards for ages because it felt too simple. But after two weeks of spaced repetition with Cognito, I was remembering things I'd failed to learn in months of re-reading.


Desirable difficulty

The effort of retrieving a fading memory is what makes it stick. Easy review doesn't build lasting knowledge.

Time efficient

Short daily sessions replace long, ineffective study marathons. You spend less total time for better results.

Automatic prioritisation

Topics you struggle with come back sooner. Topics you know well are spaced further apart. Your time is always optimally spent.


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