Flashcards & review

Chinese Medicine flashcards for steady review

Flashcards work best when they support understanding, not when they become another pile of facts. Shen Study helps students review herbs, formulas, acupuncture points and missed case reasoning in a way that still points back to clinical use.

Built as a study aid for Chinese Medicine students - use alongside lectures, supervision and primary texts.

What to review

Flashcards are most useful when they protect the details you keep losing: herb properties, point actions, formula direction, pattern features and the reasoning mistakes that show up in cases.

Shen Study keeps recall close to clinical practice so memory work does not drift away from the cases, prescriptions and explanations you are trying to write.

Good flashcard targets

Small facts that need precision

Use cards for pinyin, categories, temperatures, tastes, channels, point names and formula names that need quick recall.

Comparisons you keep mixing up

Pair similar herbs, formulas, points or patterns so your review trains the differences, not just the definitions.

Missed reasoning from cases

Turn feedback into short prompts, such as which tongue finding supported the pattern or which treatment principle was missing.

  • Keep cards short enough to answer without rereading a paragraph.
  • Review the missed item soon after a case while the reasoning gap is still clear.
  • Use case practice to check whether memorised details are becoming usable.
  • Group review by topic when preparing for herbs, formulas, points or diagnosis.

A balanced way to study

Flashcards help memory; cases test whether that memory can support a clinical answer.

Use cards for exact recall before opening notes.
Practise a related case or quiz while the material is fresh.
Save only the missed detail, not the whole textbook paragraph.
Return later and check whether the card still helps the case answer.

Questions students ask

Does Shen Study use spaced repetition?

The app includes review/SRS-style study surfaces for material like herbs, formulas, points and missed case reasoning.

Should I make one huge flashcard for each herb?

Usually no. Shorter cards are easier to remember and review. Split herb properties, channels and functions into separate prompts.

Are flashcards enough for Chinese Medicine?

No. They support memory, but case practice and supervised clinical learning are still essential.

Turn missed details into review

Use Shen Study to keep herbs, formulas, points and case feedback active between classes.

Open flashcard review