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Study Tipsby FlashRecall Team

Site Flashcards: The Best Way To Study Online (And The Powerful App Most Students Don’t Know About) – Discover how to turn any website into smart flashcards and actually remember what you read.

Site flashcards turn articles, PDFs, and YouTube into reviewable cards with active recall and spaced repetition using Flashrecall instead of dead bookmarks.

How Flashrecall app helps you remember faster. It's free

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Forget Bookmarking – Turn Sites Into Flashcards Instead

You know when you’re reading an article or a blog post and think, “Wow, this is useful, I should remember this”… and then never do?

That’s where site flashcards come in: instead of just saving a page, you turn the important bits into flashcards you can actually review and remember.

And the easiest way to do that on iPhone/iPad?

Use Flashrecall: a super fast flashcard app that can turn text, screenshots, PDFs, and even YouTube links into flashcards in seconds.

👉 https://apps.apple.com/us/app/flashrecall-study-flashcards/id6746757085

Let’s break down how to use websites as a study goldmine—and how Flashrecall makes the whole thing way less painful.

What Are “Site Flashcards” Exactly?

“Site flashcards” just means:

> Taking information from websites and turning it into flashcards you can review with active recall and spaced repetition.

Instead of:

  • 50 open tabs
  • Random bookmarks you never revisit
  • Screenshots buried in your camera roll

You have:

  • Clean, focused flashcards
  • Organized by topic, subject, or exam
  • That actually pop up again when you’re about to forget them

Flashrecall is perfect for this because it’s designed for fast capture:

  • Copy text from a site → paste into Flashrecall → instant flashcards
  • Screenshot a page → Flashrecall can pull text from the image and make cards
  • Download a PDF from a site → import to Flashrecall → generate cards
  • Watch a YouTube explainer → paste the link → turn it into flashcards

You get the idea: anything you find online can become a memory you keep, not just something you scroll past.

Why Site Flashcards Work Better Than Just Reading

Most people:

  • Read an article once
  • Feel like they “understand it”
  • Forget 90% of it within a week

The problem isn’t the content. It’s the method.

Site flashcards fix that with two key ideas built into Flashrecall:

1. Active Recall (The “Can I Remember It Without Looking?” Test)

Instead of rereading, you test yourself.

Example:

  • You’re learning about photosynthesis from a website.
  • Instead of saving the page, you make a card:

Front:

> What are the main reactants and products of photosynthesis?

Back:

> Reactants: CO₂, water, light energy

> Products: glucose, oxygen

Every time you see that card, your brain has to pull the answer out. That “pull” is what strengthens memory.

Flashrecall has built-in active recall – it literally shows you the front, hides the back, and makes you answer before revealing it.

2. Spaced Repetition (Review Right Before You Forget)

Even if you make flashcards, reviewing them at random times is inefficient.

Flashrecall uses spaced repetition with automatic reminders:

  • You see new cards more often
  • Older, well-known cards less often
  • The app schedules reviews for you so you don’t have to remember when to study

So when you turn website info into flashcards, Flashrecall makes sure it actually sticks in your long-term memory.

How To Turn Any Website Into Flashcards (Step-by-Step)

Let’s say you’re studying from online sources: blogs, Wikipedia, medical sites, business articles, language sites, whatever.

Here’s how to turn that into a powerful site-flashcard workflow with Flashrecall.

Step 1: Grab the Useful Bits From the Site

From a website, pull out:

  • Definitions
  • Key facts
  • Formulas
  • Lists
  • Examples
  • Diagrams (screenshots)

You don’t need the entire page—just the parts you want to remember.

Step 2: Open Flashrecall And Create a Deck

Download Flashrecall here if you haven’t yet:

👉 https://apps.apple.com/us/app/flashrecall-study-flashcards/id6746757085

Then:

  • Create a deck like “Biology – Photosynthesis” or “Marketing – Copywriting Tips”
  • Or make one deck per class/subject: “French Vocabulary”, “Med School – Cardiology”, etc.

Step 3: Turn Website Content Into Cards (Fast)

With Flashrecall, you’ve got multiple options depending on the type of site.

1. Highlight the important paragraph or sentence

2. Copy it

3. In Flashrecall, create a new card

4. Paste text and quickly split into front/back

Example from a history site:

Front:

> What was the main cause of World War I?

Back:

> The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914, combined with existing alliances, militarism, imperialism, and nationalism.

You can do this in seconds, and once you get into a rhythm, it’s fast.

If the site has:

  • Diagrams
  • Charts
  • Complex tables
  • Maps

Just screenshot the relevant part and add it to Flashrecall.

Flashrecall can:

  • Turn images into flashcards instantly
  • Use text recognition to pull text from images (so you can make text-based cards too)

Flashrecall automatically keeps track and reminds you of the cards you don't remember well so you remember faster. Like this :

Flashrecall spaced repetition reminders notification

Example:

  • Screenshot a labeled heart diagram
  • Make a card like:

Front:

> Label the parts of the heart in this diagram.

Back:

> [Same image with labels or a text list of the parts]

Many sites let you download:

  • Lecture notes
  • Research summaries
  • Exam prep booklets

Flashrecall can:

  • Import PDFs
  • Help you turn the important parts into cards quickly (no need to manually type everything)

Reading a blog that links to a YouTube explanation?

Perfect.

With Flashrecall you can:

  • Paste the YouTube link
  • Generate cards from the content
  • Then review those key points instead of rewatching the entire video every time

What Makes Flashrecall Better Than Just A “Site Flashcard Generator”?

There are tons of tools that say they can make flashcards from websites.

But most of them:

  • Just dump text into ugly cards
  • Don’t help you review at the right time
  • Are clunky or slow on mobile

Flashrecall is built to be actually usable daily:

  • Super fast, modern, and easy to use – feels like a 2025 app, not something from 2010
  • Works offline – once your cards are saved, you can study anywhere (bus, plane, bad Wi-Fi)
  • Free to start – you can try it without committing to anything
  • Works on iPhone and iPad – perfect if you like reading sites on your iPad and studying on your phone
  • Built-in spaced repetition & reminders – you get study reminders so you don’t forget to review
  • Chat with your flashcards – stuck on a concept? You can literally chat with the flashcard to get explanations, clarifications, or examples

So it’s not just a “site to flashcard” converter. It’s a full learning system.

Real Examples: How People Use Site Flashcards With Flashrecall

Here are a few realistic scenarios.

1. Language Learners Using Online Articles

You’re learning French and reading news on a French site.

You can:

  • Copy new vocabulary and phrases
  • Paste into Flashrecall as Q/A cards

Example:

Front:

> What does “faire le point” mean in English?

Back:

> To take stock / to review the situation

Over time, those words stop being “just on a page” and become part of your actual vocabulary.

2. Med Students Using Online Resources

You’re reading a cardiology article or UpToDate-style page.

You can create cards like:

Front:

> What are the main risk factors for myocardial infarction?

Back:

> Hypertension, smoking, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, family history, obesity, sedentary lifestyle, etc.

Flashrecall’s spaced repetition makes sure you see these again before exams, not just the day you read the site.

3. Business / Marketing Learners Using Blogs

Reading a long marketing blog post with “10 copywriting tips”?

Instead of saving the link, make flashcards:

Front:

> What are 3 proven elements of a high-converting headline?

Back:

> Clarity, curiosity, and a specific benefit or outcome.

Over time, your brain starts thinking in these principles because you’ve actively recalled them multiple times.

Why Most People Waste Websites (And How Not To)

Most people:

  • Bookmark articles
  • Save PDFs
  • Screenshot threads
  • And then never see them again

The mistake: collecting, not learning.

Site flashcards fix that by forcing you to:

1. Pick what matters

2. Turn it into a question

3. Review it over time

Flashrecall makes this painless by:

  • Letting you make flashcards from images, text, audio, PDFs, YouTube links, or just typing
  • Handling the spaced repetition + reminders for you
  • Letting you chat with your cards if you’re confused about something

So you don’t just hoard information—you actually master it.

Tips To Make Better Site Flashcards (So You Don’t Overwhelm Yourself)

A few quick guidelines:

1. One Idea Per Card

Don’t cram a whole paragraph on the back.

Split it into multiple cards if needed.

Bad:

> Q: What are photosynthesis, cellular respiration, and fermentation, and how do they differ?

> A: 3 long paragraphs…

Better:

  • Card 1: What is photosynthesis?
  • Card 2: What is cellular respiration?
  • Card 3: Key differences between photosynthesis and cellular respiration?

2. Turn Headings Into Questions

If a site heading says:

> “Causes of Inflation”

Your card can be:

Front:

> What are the main causes of inflation?

Back:

> Demand-pull, cost-push, and built-in inflation, plus monetary factors, etc.

3. Use Your Own Words

Don’t just copy-paste huge chunks.

Rewrite in your own language when possible—this deepens understanding.

4. Add Examples

If a site gives an example, put it on the back of the card.

Front:

> What is opportunity cost?

Back:

> The value of the next best alternative you give up.

> Example: If you study instead of working a paid shift, the opportunity cost is the money you would have earned.

Turn The Whole Internet Into Your Personal Study Deck

Every useful site you visit can either be:

  • A tab you forget
  • Or a memory you keep

If you want the second option, start turning websites into flashcards and let spaced repetition handle the rest.

Flashrecall makes it ridiculously easy to:

  • Create flashcards from sites, PDFs, screenshots, YouTube, and more
  • Study with active recall + spaced repetition
  • Get automatic study reminders
  • Learn languages, exam content, medicine, business, school subjects—literally anything

Try it on your next article or study session and feel the difference between just reading and actually remembering:

👉 https://apps.apple.com/us/app/flashrecall-study-flashcards/id6746757085

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the fastest way to create flashcards?

Manually typing cards works but takes time. Many students now use AI generators that turn notes into flashcards instantly. Flashrecall does this automatically from text, images, or PDFs.

Is there a free flashcard app?

Yes. Flashrecall is free and lets you create flashcards from images, text, prompts, audio, PDFs, and YouTube videos.

How do I start spaced repetition?

You can manually schedule your reviews, but most people use apps that automate this. Flashrecall uses built-in spaced repetition so you review cards at the perfect time.

What is active recall and how does it work?

Active recall is the process of actively retrieving information from memory rather than passively reviewing it. Flashrecall forces proper active recall by making you think before revealing answers, then uses spaced repetition to optimize your review schedule.

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