The J Method: Spaced Repetition Planning | Revizly
Master the J Method (D+1, D+3, D+7, D+14, D+30) for your studies. Complete guide with automated scheduling powered by the FSRS algorithm. Ideal for medical school.
The J Method (méthode des J in French) is the most widely used review scheduling system among medical students in France. Its principle is simple yet devastatingly effective: after learning a lesson, you review it at precise intervals — D+1, D+3, D+7, D+14, D+30 — to anchor information in long-term memory. This guide explains in detail how the J Method works, why it is so effective according to neuroscience, how to apply it concretely (manually or with an automated tool), and why Revizly's FSRS algorithm is the modern version of this legendary method.
If you are preparing for competitive exams or any knowledge-intensive course of study, the J Method is not optional — it is a necessity. Here is how to master it.
What Is the J Method?
The J Method is a review schedule based on spaced repetition. The "J" stands for "jour" (day in French). After learning material (Day 0), you schedule review sessions at increasing intervals:
| Step | Interval | What happens in your brain |
|---|---|---|
| D+0 | Same day | Initial learning. Information enters short-term memory. Synaptic connections are fragile. |
| D+1 | 1 day later | First review. You interrupt the forgetting curve's decline. The memory trace strengthens. |
| D+3 | 3 days later | Second review. Information begins to consolidate. Recall probability rises from ~50% to ~75%. |
| D+7 | 7 days later | Third review. Major consolidation. The memory is now stable for several weeks. |
| D+14 | 14 days later | Fourth review. Long-term reinforcement. Only difficult concepts still need attention. |
| D+30 | 30 days later | Fifth review. Information is anchored in long-term memory. Recall probability exceeds 90%. |
This schedule is not arbitrary. It is directly inspired by Hermann Ebbinghaus's (1885) research on the forgetting curve, Paul Pimsleur's (1967) work on optimal learning intervals, and the Leitner system (1972) that formalized spaced review with flashcards.
The Origin: Ebbinghaus's Forgetting Curve
In 1885, Ebbinghaus demonstrated that without review, we forget approximately 66% of what we learn within 24 hours and nearly 80% within a week. This finding is one of the most replicated in cognitive psychology.
But Ebbinghaus also showed something fundamental: each review "resets" the forgetting curve with a gentler slope. After a first review at D+1, the rate of forgetting slows considerably. After D+3, even more. After D+7, the memory becomes robust. This is exactly what the J Method exploits.
How Pimsleur Refined the Intervals
In 1967, linguist Paul Pimsleur refined Ebbinghaus's research by studying optimal intervals for language learning. He identified an exponential progression — 5 seconds, 25 seconds, 2 minutes, 10 minutes, 1 hour, 5 hours, 1 day, 5 days, 25 days, 4 months — which inspired the simplified intervals of the J Method: D+1, D+3, D+7, D+14, D+30.
Why the J Method Works: The Scientific Evidence
The J Method is not a "student trick" passed down through generations without foundation. It rests on three cognitive mechanisms validated by decades of research.
1. Synaptic Consolidation
When you learn information, your brain creates new synaptic connections. These connections are initially fragile — like paths in a forest that have only been walked once. Each review strengthens these connections through a process called long-term potentiation (LTP).
Research by Kandel (Nobel Prize 2000) showed that spaced repetition triggers the synthesis of new proteins that physically strengthen synapses. A single review is not enough to trigger this process. It requires repeated, spaced stimulations.
2. The Testing Effect
The study by Karpicke and Roediger (2008, Science) demonstrated that testing yourself on information is far more effective than rereading it. The results are dramatic:
- Simple rereading: 33% retention at 1 week
- Spaced rereading: 36% retention at 1 week
- Active recall + spacing: 80% retention at 1 week
The J Method, combined with flashcards or quizzes, leverages this testing effect at every review session. You do not reread your notes — you test yourself, which forces your brain to actively retrieve information and strengthens the memory trace.
3. Desirable Difficulties
Psychologist Robert Bjork identified the concept of "desirable difficulties": a certain level of difficulty during information retrieval strengthens memorization. Reviewing at D+7 is harder than at D+1 (you have forgotten more), but it is precisely this difficulty that makes the review more effective.
The optimal interval is the point where recall probability is approximately 85-90%. Below 60%, the effort is too great and the student must relearn. Above 95%, the exercise is too easy to strengthen memory. The D+1, D+3, D+7, D+14, D+30 intervals approximate this optimal zone for most academic content.
The Numbers That Summarize Everything
| Revision Method | Retention at 30 Days | Source |
|---|---|---|
| No revision | ~20% | Ebbinghaus (1885) |
| Last-minute cramming | ~30-40% | Roediger & Karpicke (2006) |
| Regular rereading | ~35-45% | Karpicke & Roediger (2008) |
| J Method (spaced repetition) | ~90-95% | Cepeda et al. (2006), meta-analysis |
How to Apply the J Method: Manual vs Automated
There are two ways to apply the J Method: the traditional manual method and the automated method using a spaced repetition algorithm.
The Manual Method: Planner and Sticky Notes
This is the classic method, used for decades by medical students before the digital era.
Materials needed:
- A planner or calendar
- Colored sticky notes (optional)
- Discipline
How to do it:
- After each class, note the 5 review dates in your planner: D+1, D+3, D+7, D+14, D+30
- Each morning, check your planner to see which courses need reviewing today
- Review actively (no passive rereading!): test yourself, recite, do quizzes
- Check off completed reviews
The problem: with 4-6 classes per week, the schedule quickly becomes a logistical nightmare. After 3 weeks, you simultaneously have D+1, D+3, D+7, D+14, and D+30 reviews from different courses. Without a rigorous system, the method collapses. This is why more and more students use automated tools.
The Automated Method: FSRS and Revizly
The FSRS algorithm (Free Spaced Repetition Scheduler), developed in 2022 by researcher Jarrett Ye, is the modern, scientifically optimized version of the J Method. Instead of applying fixed intervals (D+1, D+3, D+7...), FSRS calculates the optimal timing for each review based on four parameters:
- Memory stability for that specific card
- Intrinsic difficulty of the card
- Time elapsed since the last review
- Your performance history on that card
In practice, FSRS does the same thing as the J Method, but better:
- An easy card you have mastered jumps from D+3 directly to D+14 (instead of going through D+7)
- A difficult card you failed returns to D+1 immediately
- Each student gets a personalized schedule adapted to their learning pace
This is exactly the algorithm used by Revizly. When you review your flashcards on Revizly, you are applying the J Method without having to manage any schedule manually.
Sample Schedule: The J Method for a Medical Student
Here is a concrete example of applying the J Method during a typical week in medical school.
Course Week (Week 1)
| Day | Course Learned (D+0) | Reviews Due |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | Anatomy — musculoskeletal system | — |
| Tuesday | Biochemistry — amino acids | Anatomy (D+1) |
| Wednesday | Histology — epithelial tissues | Biochemistry (D+1) |
| Thursday | Biophysics — optics | Histology (D+1) + Anatomy (D+3) |
| Friday | Organic Chemistry — reactions | Biophysics (D+1) + Biochemistry (D+3) |
| Saturday | — (no class) | Org Chem (D+1) + Histology (D+3) |
| Sunday | — | Biophysics (D+3) |
The Following Week (Week 2)
| Day | Course Learned (D+0) | Reviews Due |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | Anatomy 2 | Org Chem (D+3) + Anatomy 1 (D+7) |
| Tuesday | Biochemistry 2 | Anatomy 2 (D+1) + Biochemistry 1 (D+7) |
| Wednesday | Histology 2 | Biochemistry 2 (D+1) + Histology 1 (D+7) |
| Thursday | Biophysics 2 | Histology 2 (D+1) + Anatomy 2 (D+3) + Biophysics 1 (D+7) |
As you can see, by the second week, reviews stack up. This is normal and manageable if you use flashcards (15-20 minutes per subject). But it is also why an automated tool saves enormous time: instead of managing a spreadsheet with dozens of dates, you open Revizly and the algorithm presents exactly the cards to review today.
J Method + AI Flashcards: Automate Everything
The historic problem with the J Method is twofold: creating review material (turning your courses into flashcards takes hours) and managing the schedule (maintaining a calendar with dozens of subjects is a logistical nightmare).
Revizly solves both problems simultaneously.
Step 1: Import Your Course
Upload your course as a PDF, text, or even a photo (OCR). The AI analyzes the content in seconds and identifies key concepts, definitions, formulas, and mechanisms to memorize.
Step 2: Automatically Generated Flashcards
The AI generates flashcards in question/answer format, optimized for active recall. Each card follows Wozniak's principles: one piece of information per card, question/answer format, contextualization. What took 2 hours manually takes 30 seconds.
Step 3: The FSRS Algorithm Schedules Your Reviews
From your very first review session, the FSRS algorithm takes over. It automatically calculates when each card should be reviewed — D+1, D+3, D+7, D+14, D+30 — adapting to your performance. You have nothing to plan: each day, Revizly shows you exactly the cards that are due.
Step 4: Review 15 Minutes Per Day
Each day, open Revizly and review today's cards. The algorithm adjusts intervals in real time:
- You answer easily → the interval lengthens (from D+3 to D+7 or directly to D+14)
- You hesitate or fail → the card returns to D+1 for immediate reinforcement
- After 3 consecutive successful reviews, the card is marked as "mastered"
This is the J Method on autopilot. The same scientific principle, but without the mental burden of planning.
J Method vs Other Study Techniques
How does the J Method compare to other approaches? Here is an honest comparison.
J Method vs Cramming
| Criterion | J Method | Cramming |
|---|---|---|
| Retention at 1 week | ~85-90% | ~40-50% |
| Retention at 1 month | ~90-95% | ~15-25% |
| Total time invested | Moderate (distributed) | High (concentrated) |
| Stress | Low (regular) | Very high (night before exam) |
| Suited for medical school | Yes | No (volume too large) |
J Method vs Anki (SM-2)
| Criterion | J Method (fixed) | Anki (SM-2) | Revizly (FSRS) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intervals | Fixed (D+1, D+3...) | Adaptive (SM-2) | Adaptive (FSRS) |
| Personalization | None | Per card | Per card + per student |
| Card creation | Manual | Manual | AI automatic |
| Learning curve | Simple | Complex | Simple |
| Scientific precision | Good | Very good | Excellent (2022) |
The FSRS algorithm, more recent than Anki's SM-2, has been validated by comparative studies showing better prediction of recall probability. Combined with automatic AI flashcard generation, it is the most complete solution for applying the J Method.
Practical Tips for Succeeding with the J Method
The 5 Golden Rules
-
Never skip D+1. The first review is the most crucial. It interrupts the initial drop of the forgetting curve. If you can only do one review, make it D+1.
-
Test yourself, do not reread. Rereading is the least effective study method (33% retention). Use flashcards, quizzes, or recite aloud. Active recall is the key.
-
15 minutes is better than 0. If you do not have time to review everything, at least review D+1 and D+3 cards (the most urgent). D+14 and D+30 cards can wait a day without major consequences.
-
Start from day one. The J Method is a long-term investment. The earlier you start, the more benefits accumulate.
-
Automate everything you can. Time spent managing a schedule is time lost from actual reviewing. Use a tool like Revizly to automate scheduling and flashcard creation.
In Summary
The J Method is a simple, elegant, and scientifically validated revision system. Five spaced review sessions — D+1, D+3, D+7, D+14, D+30 — are enough to transform fragile information into a lasting memory, with a retention rate of 90-95%.
For medical students, it is indispensable. For everyone else, it is the most effective revision method known to date.
Revizly's FSRS algorithm is the J Method 2.0: same scientific principle, but with personalized intervals and 100% automatic AI flashcard creation. Try it free and discover how much time you can save by automating your reviews.
For further reading, see our complete guide to spaced repetition and our PASS revision strategies.
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Preguntas Frecuentes
What exactly is the J Method?
The J Method is a review scheduling system based on spaced repetition. After learning material, you review it at precise intervals: D+1 (the next day), D+3 (3 days later), D+7 (one week), D+14 (two weeks), then D+30 (one month). These intervals correspond to optimal moments identified by cognitive psychology research (Ebbinghaus, Pimsleur) for consolidating information into long-term memory before forgetting sets in.
How do you concretely plan the J Method?
The manual method involves noting each course in a planner with its review dates: if you learn an anatomy chapter on Monday, schedule a review for Tuesday (D+1), Thursday (D+3), the following Monday (D+7), two weeks later (D+14), and one month later (D+30). This requires significant organization. The alternative is to use a tool like Revizly that automates scheduling with the FSRS algorithm: you simply review the cards that are due each day.
Is the J Method effective for medical school (PASS)?
Yes, the J Method is particularly well-suited for PASS and medical studies. The course volume in PASS (5,000 to 8,000 pages) makes last-minute cramming impossible. Top-ranking students almost universally use some form of spaced repetition. Combined with flashcards and quizzes, the J Method allows retention of 90% of content long-term, which is essential for semester exams and clinical rotations.
What is the difference between the J Method and Anki?
The J Method is a scheduling principle (review at D+1, D+3, D+7, D+14, D+30). Anki is software that implements this principle via the SM-2 algorithm: it automatically calculates the next interval based on your answer. The difference is that Anki's intervals adapt to each card individually, while the classic J Method applies the same fixed intervals to everyone. Revizly uses the FSRS algorithm, more recent and more accurate than Anki's SM-2, for even more personalized spacing.
How do you automate the J Method?
To automate the J Method, use a spaced repetition tool like Revizly. Import your courses (PDF, text, photo), the AI automatically generates flashcards, and the FSRS algorithm schedules each review at the optimal time. You no longer need to manage a calendar manually: each day, you open Revizly and review cards that are due. The algorithm adapts to your pace — if you easily retain a concept, the interval automatically lengthens.
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