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Generate Flashcards from Notes
Turn your notes into flashcards automatically - generate flashcards from notes in seconds
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Frequently Asked Questions
Generate flashcards from notes automatically converts your existing notes into study-ready flashcards. It extracts key facts, definitions, and Q&A pairs from the text you provide and formats them into cards you can review with spaced repetition. Evernote stores the source material and keeps flashcard metadata linked.
Notes with clear facts, definitions, Q&A, or step-by-step explanations convert best into flashcards. Lecture notes, meeting decisions, research summaries, and procedural SOPs are good examples. The AI can also extract cloze deletions and multiple-choice items from denser material.
Yes. You can choose formats such as single Q/A, cloze deletions, multiple-choice, or audio cards. The tool provides templates and lets you edit front/back content, add tags, and include source links before finalizing the deck in Evernote or exporting to a CSV for your review app.
You can set difficulty levels during the card review step or let the assistant assign initial difficulty tags based on context and wording complexity. These tags map to your spaced repetition schedule so you see harder cards more frequently until they fall into longer intervals.
Yes. The system supports embedding images and audio excerpts into cards when those assets are present in your note. Audio clips are useful for language practice, and images help with diagrams or charts. You can trim or replace assets during card editing.
The assistant can automatically suggest cloze deletions for sentences that contain key terms or figures. You can accept, modify, or reject suggested clozes, and the tool will batch-create cloze-style cards to reinforce conceptual gaps without manual editing.
Yes. The assistant can propose multiple-choice questions with plausible distractors derived from your notes. Each question includes the correct answer, explanation, and references back to the original content so you can validate and adjust choices before finalizing.
You can generate large decks from long notes, but it's best to stage creation to manage review load. The assistant suggests reasonable daily new-card limits (for example, 10-20 cards/day) and can chunk the deck into themed subsets to make onboarding to the deck manageable.
Yes. Evernote enables sharing and collaborative editing of the source notes and the generated flashcard drafts. Teams can review, comment, and approve cards before they are published to the shared deck or exported for an LMS or SRS platform.
After generating flashcards, you can export them as CSV with fields like front, back, tags, and source_url. This format is widely accepted by review apps and LMS platforms. Evernote keeps the original note linked so you can always trace a card back to its source.
Absolutely. Generated cards are editable: change wording, tags, media, or difficulty. Edits sync back to the card record and any connected deck exports. Evernote retains the original note, so you can re-generate updated cards if source content changes.
Yes. The assistant can produce spaced repetition schedules and study plans tailored to deck size and your available time. Plans include daily new-card limits, review intervals, and checkpoints for practice tests, and can be exported or synced to your calendar.
Yes. The assistant supports audio-based cards: you can attach recordings in your note or record directly, and the tool will create cards that play audio on the front. These are ideal for pronunciation drills and listening comprehension practice.
The assistant is designed to work with unstructured notes by identifying key sentences, definitions, and Q&A patterns. It will propose candidate cards and let you approve or refine them; that way, messy or lengthy notes become manageable study material without manual rewriting.
While the assistant generates high-quality flashcards from your notes, it relies on the clarity and accuracy of the source material. It may need human review for nuanced judgments, proprietary terminology, or highly contextual decisions. Evernote makes it easy to edit and validate generated cards before study.