High Yield Tag

Hi Franciscom,

Let me help you with your questions about the AnKing deck’s High Yield tags and study strategy. I’ll search for some relevant information to give you a proper answer.

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Reading: 🏷️ What do all the tags mean in the AnKing Step Deck?

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Reading: 🧑‍💻 How do I use the AnKing Step Deck?

Hi Franciscom,

Thank you for your questions about the AnKing deck and High Yield tags. Let me address both of your concerns:

Regarding High Yield Tags:

The High Yield tag in the AnKing deck is an ongoing project that’s currently about 85% complete. According to information from the AnKing team, these tags are determined by users who evaluated cards based on the question: “How much do I need this card to answer practice questions?”

From the AnKing wiki post, the High Yield tags are marked with ^HighYield and are specifically mentioned as:

A project initiated with the goal of identifying whether cards are High Yield for the purposes of Step 1 study. This was initiated after the P/F exam scoring transition to help make studying easier for users. This project is not complete.

So yes, the High Yield tags are maintained and updated, but they’re still a work in progress.

Regarding Study Strategy for AnKing V12:

For your question about which cards to unsuspend, there are several approaches you might consider:

  1. High Yield Focus: Studying only the High Yield tagged cards (around 8K cards) can be sufficient to pass Step 1, especially since it’s now pass/fail. However, as the AnKing team notes:

    “Someone who does 50% of the cards for Step 1 can pass but the certainty of that is not the same as someone who has covered and done 90% of the cards in the Step 1 deck. So the person who does 90% has a much higher certainty of passing Step 1.”

  2. Resource-Based Approach: Many students unsuspend cards based on resources they’re using (like First Aid, Pathoma, Sketchy, etc.) as they study through those materials.

  3. System-Based Approach: Study cards organized by organ systems, focusing on one system at a time.

  4. Combined Approach: Start with High Yield cards, then gradually expand to include more cards as time permits.

The AnKing team has created a free course that explains how to use the deck effectively, which might give you more detailed guidance.

If you’re tight on time, focusing on the High Yield cards is reasonable, but if you have the capacity, expanding beyond just those cards will give you a more comprehensive understanding and higher confidence for the exam.

Would you like more specific advice about structuring your study schedule with these cards?