FlashcardExchange: create and study flashcards
FlashcardExchange is a flashcard-sharing site that lets you create and study digital forms of everyone's favorite 3x5 cards. The directory already has a large list of subjects, from elementary math to high-level pharmacology.
The flashcards are available to study for free via the website, and if you shell out $19.95 (one-time fee) for the full membership, you can print the flashcards and export them to Word or Excel. With a free account you can create your own flashcards by typing or text/Excel import. You can share your flashcard sets, which are maintained via the "My Flashcards" feature, and play a memory game with them.
FlashcardExchange can be helpful for test preparation, certification exam review, and language learning.
[Via MusicBizGuy]
The flashcards are available to study for free via the website, and if you shell out $19.95 (one-time fee) for the full membership, you can print the flashcards and export them to Word or Excel. With a free account you can create your own flashcards by typing or text/Excel import. You can share your flashcard sets, which are maintained via the "My Flashcards" feature, and play a memory game with them.
FlashcardExchange can be helpful for test preparation, certification exam review, and language learning.
[Via MusicBizGuy]













Comments
6
Subscribe to commentstravis wuFeb 25th 2008 12:52PM
I've been using IQFuse for my flashcards. Personally I found it's easier to use and cards look more like real flashcards. : )
http://www.iqfuse.com
OD in trainingFeb 25th 2008 7:37PM
I second IQFuse. My classmates and I all use it in optometry school and it's great. Wish we had IQFuse in undergrad and high school!
One of my classmates makes flashcard sets that we can all use
http://www.iqfuse.com/user/man
David HardinFeb 25th 2008 12:53PM
jMemorize is free, open source, and has more options. It helped me pass Spanish last semester!
blewettFeb 25th 2008 4:23PM
I used to use Flashcard Exchange... I've since switched to jMemorize... The inability to use the cards offline (for free) is what kills Flashcard Exchange (IMO).
Sunny R.Feb 26th 2008 8:51PM
I like using Quizlet. Not only can you go through flash cards, but Quizlet can also create tests and games to help you study and learn the cards.
Quizlet
http://quizlet.com/
John WeidnerFeb 27th 2008 10:46PM
Try out studystack.com too. StudyStack will also take your flashcards and turn them into hangman, matching, word search, crossword, and word scramble activities. The flashcards can also be put on your cell phone, iPod, or PDA. http://www.studystack.com