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Spaced repetition vs cramming: what the research says

Cramming feels productive. Spaced repetition feels boring. The research is clear about which one your brain actually keeps.

13 March 2026

Hermann Ebbinghaus discovered the 'forgetting curve' in 1885: without review, we forget about half of what we learn within an hour, and 70% within a day. Cramming the night before an exam works just well enough that we keep doing it, but the material is gone within a week.

Spaced repetition flips that. By reviewing material at increasing intervals — one day, three days, a week, a month — you re-set the forgetting curve every time. Each review is shorter than the last, and the material moves into long-term memory.

A 2013 meta-analysis covering more than 14,000 students found spaced practice produced significantly better long-term retention than massed practice (cramming) across every subject and age group studied. The effect was largest for material that needs to be remembered for more than a few days — exactly the situation most students are in.

The downside: it requires planning. You can't decide to use spaced repetition the night before. That's why every effective spaced-repetition tool — Anki, Quizlet, My-Prompt's flashcards — schedules reviews for you. Trust the algorithm; do the reviews when it asks; the rest takes care of itself.