Herb study

TCM herbs quiz for Chinese Medicine students

Herb study can feel endless: names, pinyin, categories, temperatures, tastes, channels, functions and cautions. Shen Study helps turn that detail into active recall you can bring back into formulas and cases.

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

Why herbs need active recall

Herb study can become passive quickly: long lists of categories, temperatures, tastes, channels, functions and cautions. Quiz practice helps you retrieve that information before you look it up.

The goal is not to memorise isolated facts forever. It is to make herb knowledge easier to use when you meet a formula, a pattern or a case that depends on it.

What to practise

Category and core function

Check whether you can place an herb in its broad therapeutic role before reviewing fine detail.

Temperature, taste and channel entry

Use quiz prompts to keep properties available for formula reasoning and pattern fit.

Look-alike herbs

Compare herbs students commonly confuse so the differences become easier to retrieve under pressure.

  • Review one category at a time when you are building foundations.
  • Mix categories later to practise recognition without obvious clues.
  • Connect single herbs back to formulas and treatment principles.
  • Flag cautions or contraindications for supervised classroom review.

Suggested routine

Use herb quizzes as a bridge between notes and case practice, especially before exams or formula revision.

Choose one herb category or formula family.
Quiz the core herbs before rereading your notes.
Mark the herbs you confuse and compare them directly.
Finish with a short case or formula question using the same category.

Questions students ask

What is the best way to memorise TCM herbs?

Use short active-recall prompts, group herbs by category, and regularly compare similar herbs so you learn their differences.

Should I study herbs separately from formulas?

You can start separately, but formulas help show how herbs function together in a treatment strategy.

Can Shen Study help with pinyin and Chinese names?

The study flow can support repeated exposure to herb names and categories, which is useful when building familiarity.

Review the herbs you keep mixing up

Start with active recall, then connect herb facts back to formulas and case reasoning.

Start herb practice