Vertech Editorial
Creating flashcards is tedious. Here is how to generate a complete, study-ready deck from your notes in under five minutes.
Flashcards are one of the most evidence-backed study tools. Spaced repetition - reviewing cards at increasing intervals - is proven to dramatically improve long-term retention. The only problem: making good flashcards takes forever.
ChatGPT solves this. You can go from raw notes to a study-ready flashcard deck in under five minutes. Here is the process, including how to format them for Anki, Quizlet, or any other flashcard app.
From Notes to Flashcards in Five Minutes
Paste your notes into ChatGPT - include lecture notes, textbook highlights, or any study material for the topic.
Use the flashcard prompt - ask ChatGPT to create cards in Q&A format, with one clear question per card and a concise answer.
Review and edit the cards - go through the generated cards and remove any that are too easy, too vague, or not relevant to your exam.
Import into your flashcard app - copy the formatted output into Anki, Quizlet, or any app that supports tab-separated import.
The Exact Prompt for Great Flashcards
Copy This Prompt
“Based on the notes I provided, create 30 flashcards. Format: Front: [question] | Back: [answer]. Each question should test one specific concept. Include a mix of definition questions, application questions, and comparison questions. Do not make cards for trivial or obvious information. Format the output as a tab-separated list so I can import it directly into Anki.”
The key instruction is “do not make cards for trivial information.” Without this, ChatGPT tends to create cards for every single fact, which drowns the important material in filler.
What Makes a Good Flashcard (And What to Delete)
✅ Good Cards
- One concept per card
- Questions that require active recall, not recognition
- Cards that test understanding, not just vocabulary
- Application-based questions (“When would you use…”)
❌ Delete These
- Cards with answers you already know by heart
- Cards with answers longer than 2 sentences
- Yes/no questions (too easy to guess)
- Cards about information not covered in your course
Use Spaced Repetition to Make the Cards Stick
Creating the deck is only step one. The real power comes from reviewing with spaced repetition - an algorithm that shows you cards right before you would forget them.
- Anki - the gold standard for medical students and serious studiers. Free on desktop and Android.
- Quizlet - easier to use, better for sharing decks with classmates. Has a free tier.
- RemNote - combines note-taking and flashcards in one tool. Great for building cards as you take notes.
Start your flashcard sessions 2-3 weeks before the exam, not the night before. The whole point of spaced repetition is that it works over time. Our Pocket Quiz prompt can also generate instant quiz sessions from your materials.
