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Just made a bet with my dad... - Printable Version +- kanji koohii FORUM (http://forum.koohii.com) +-- Forum: Learning Japanese (http://forum.koohii.com/forum-4.html) +--- Forum: Remembering the Kanji (http://forum.koohii.com/forum-7.html) +--- Thread: Just made a bet with my dad... (/thread-10924.html) |
Just made a bet with my dad... - Crawdaddycon - 2013-06-27 dizmox Wrote:I am an intermediate mnemonics user & have a decent rote memory, but by no means the best. I felt that those two coupled together would give me a good shot at pulling this off.blackbrich Wrote:Quite the gamblers. Your gonna need srs, mnemonics, and your gonna need to eat and breathe kanji. Like when your taking a break from using SRS ur gonna need to be doing more kanji on the side. 2000 is a lot, 4000 that's just...He doesn't necessarily need mnemonics... they certainly didn't suit me. Just made a bet with my dad... - Crawdaddycon - 2013-06-27 Stansfield123 Wrote:You should negotiate down the error rate to 90%. And then work your ass off, but don't spend ten hours a day on this. 5-6 hours max, and carefully follow the method. All the extra time will achieve is make you sick of reviewing Kanji, it won't help you remember better. Even if you spend 5-6 hours, you'll have to tweak the Anki settings, to make sure you review each card much more frequently than you would with the default settings. (Anki is set up for learning over a longer period of time, not just one month).I asked, my dad said that would give me a very reasonable shot of actually succeeding, which would defeat the point of the bet. LOL Just made a bet with my dad... - Crawdaddycon - 2013-06-27 uisukii Wrote:We didn't have these specifics listed out initially, but because I changed the initial conditions of the bet he said I needed to write out the kanji with the keyword he gives me. He said the test would consist of 200 random kanji. I talked him down to 100 equally spaced throughout RtK Volume 1. Because of the 95% required retention rate, I'm allowed to make "minor" errors to the kanji when drawing them out. I don't know what minor means.Crawdaddycon Wrote:So how is your old man going to test you at the end? I mean, I started and finished the initial review for RtK1 in 14 days, but I didn't "know" any of them. I mean, I could write them all out, and with (from memory) about 80% retention, or so, using English keywords in Anki. Wouldn't be able to tell you their common readings, though. Well, maybe a few, but that was due to unrelated factors.blackbrich Wrote:Ok that's more manageable. For the love of god ask him not to test the kunyomi. If he does your chances of winning are quite low.At least I am getting a few hopeful words here and there. I appreciate that. Just made a bet with my dad... - bimspramirez - 2013-06-27 Crawdaddycon Wrote:We didn't have these specifics listed out initially, but he said because I changed the initial conditions of the bet he said I needed to write out the kanji with the keyword he gives me. He said the test would consist of 200 random kanji. I talked him down to 100 equally spaced throughout RtK Volume 1.This is good to hear. Better than RTK1 + RTK2 or 4000 Kanji. Crawdaddycon Wrote:Because of the 95% required retention rate, I'm allowed to make "minor" errors to the kanji when drawing them out. I don't know what minor means.I have a feeling your dad will be lenient on your Kanji test. Goodluck and let us know the result.
Just made a bet with my dad... - Crawdaddycon - 2013-06-27 Haych Wrote:I've got some experience with this. I did RTK3 (1000+) in 10 days. It wasn't a painful experience. I was just motivated because I was thinking in terms of progress-- not time spent, and progress was going fast. If you think in terms of hours, and just say "I am going to study 12 hours a day for the next 4 weeks", that will turn into 12 hours of drudgery real fast. Instead, think of getting the most out of every hour. You need to timebox. Try to get the numbers up on a 5 minute window. Monitor how fast it takes for you to do 100 reviews and try to bring that time down. Set up a baseline of 60 new cards a day and do it AFTER your old reviews (because new card adding time varies more than review time). Do more if you feel up to it. If you're using anki, add new cards in batches of 20, and monitor the time for that too. With all this, I bet you could probably reach your goal in about 5 hours/day.Very good advice, Thank you. The test he is giving me will be over only the kanji from RTK Volume 1. Just made a bet with my dad... - Crawdaddycon - 2013-06-27 bimspramirez Wrote:I hope so, but knowing him I still have a very high chance of losing the bet even if I do complete the course, but as you said, he will likely go a bit easy on me if I forget a drop on a rather difficult kanji.Crawdaddycon Wrote:We didn't have these specifics listed out initially, but he said because I changed the initial conditions of the bet he said I needed to write out the kanji with the keyword he gives me. He said the test would consist of 200 random kanji. I talked him down to 100 equally spaced throughout RtK Volume 1.This is good to hear. Better than RTK1 + RTK2 or 4000 Kanji. Just made a bet with my dad... - Crawdaddycon - 2013-06-27 Animosophy Wrote:So that's 2000 kanji in 28 days.Great reply. If you would share that playlist with me that would be awesome. I'll start using your strategy tomorrow as it seems really well thought out. I don't have the money to lose this bet lol. Just made a bet with my dad... - SomeCallMeChris - 2013-06-27 Crawdaddycon Wrote:I don't have the money to lose this bet lol.That would be ... a problem. I suggest you need to be studying -almost- constantly. Whenever your unfocused - just woke up, mind is wandering during studies, etc., set a timer (kitchen timer, desktop timer, cel-phone timer, whatever) for a 20 minute break and then return to studying for at -least- 20 minutes. (You can play with times, but... to be honest... you don't have the free time to have the luxury of working it out. 30 days from now you can search around the web for 'timeboxing' strategies for future studies.) Physical exercise in some of those 20-minute mental breaks will probably help. If you have school, work, sports teams, etc, then you're basically screwed, because you don't really have time for that. I do agree that learning keyword->kanji is the -only- way to learn to write the kanji and is the better way -long-term- to recognize the kanji, however I definitely -don't- think it's a good idea to review -only- keyword->kanji and then be tested kanji->keyword. I've never tested kanji->keyword and I found my kanji->keyword recognition was quite low in general reading, even though the character would feel familiar. After looking up a character just once or twice the keyword becomes quite recognizable for me (until forgotten in favor of actually Japanese vocabulary but that's a longer-term story). I think reviewing kanji->keyword just a couple times near the end is enough, but to go into a test cold with -no- practice quizzing in the same direction as the test would, IMO, be suicide. (perhaps my brain doesn't work like other human brains though. I only have my own learning experience to draw on here.) Just made a bet with my dad... - Arupan - 2013-06-27 . Just made a bet with my dad... - SomeCallMeChris - 2013-06-27 Arupan Wrote:And I don't see why he has to spend more than 3-4 hours a day. It's just the writing people...Following a standard SRS schedule, the number of reviews quickly becomes -very- large when you're learning hundreds of items per day. -Not- following the standard SRS schedule or a similarly rigorous schedule of a different pattern means not reaching the 95% success rate. I don't know of anybody that has completed RTK1 in 30 days in 3-4 hours per day with a 95% success rate. Just made a bet with my dad... - Crawdaddycon - 2013-06-27 SomeCallMeChris Wrote:I have a treadmill I run on daily but other than that I have no obligations for the next month.Crawdaddycon Wrote:I don't have the money to lose this bet lol.That would be ... a problem. I suggest you need to be studying -almost- constantly. Whenever your unfocused - just woke up, mind is wandering during studies, etc., set a timer (kitchen timer, desktop timer, cel-phone timer, whatever) for a 20 minute break and then return to studying for at -least- 20 minutes. (You can play with times, but... to be honest... you don't have the free time to have the luxury of working it out. 30 days from now you can search around the web for 'timeboxing' strategies for future studies.) Physical exercise in some of those 20-minute mental breaks will probably help. I also get what you're saying. When I learned spanish the translation from spanish to english would be difficult if my method was to learn english to spanish. When I practice I'll make sure I confront it from both keyword-->kanji and kanji-->keyword. Thanks for the advice. Just made a bet with my dad... - Crawdaddycon - 2013-06-28 I'm sure someone knows where to find the RtK Volume 1 Anki deck. I can't find it in english... German, ja, but not English. Just made a bet with my dad... - Arupan - 2013-06-28 . Just made a bet with my dad... - Crawdaddycon - 2013-06-28 SomeCallMeChris Wrote:Could you please explain to me what a "SRS schedule" is?Arupan Wrote:And I don't see why he has to spend more than 3-4 hours a day. It's just the writing people...Following a standard SRS schedule, the number of reviews quickly becomes -very- large when you're learning hundreds of items per day. -Not- following the standard SRS schedule or a similarly rigorous schedule of a different pattern means not reaching the 95% success rate. Just made a bet with my dad... - SomeCallMeChris - 2013-06-28 Arupan Wrote:Why does he has to use any kind of software? He just has to learn X new kanji and review those he learnt the previous day. He'll finish in 2-3 weeks anyway, so he'll be left with 1+ week for general review.He doesn't -have- to use software, but unless he already understands SRS theory and how to arrange physical cards and is willing to take the effort to move physical cards from box to box, he won't get the benefits of SRS scheduling. Ultimately the only reason to use software over moving physical cards around is because software is faster and more accurate, but SRS is in fact a scheduling plan not a computer program. If, OTOH, rather than software vs. physical, you're suggesting he spend 3 weeks inventing mnemonics and 1 week reviewing them at the end, I think that won't work well as studies do suggest that material learned once and then not reviewed until 3 weeks later is unlikely to be remembered, so he'll lose those early characters that aren't also primitives. As for an Anki deck, try this, https://ankiweb.net/shared/info/2654705267 Of course, you'll want in this case to suspend all cards after 2000. Edit: SRS is a complicate topic, but most people mean something derived from the Leitner system when they say SRS, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leitner_system Essentially, the idea is to review newly learned material the next day, two days later, four days later, eight days later, etc. resetting any individual fact that isn't remembered on review. Software can adjust timing more subtly than simple doubling (or simply multiplying by any other factor.) Plus physical cards means maintaining a written list or well-organized box. Just made a bet with my dad... - Arupan - 2013-06-28 . Just made a bet with my dad... - dizmox - 2013-06-28 uisukii Wrote:The first onedizmox Wrote:How to write the kanji and their general meaning..Which volume of Remember the Kanji are you referring to? Just made a bet with my dad... - SomeCallMeChris - 2013-06-28 Arupan Wrote:Oh, you just had to write -have- there. Look at the the edit time.??? My edit time or yours? I don't know what you're talking about. Quote:I see. People can't determine which kanji they suck at by themselves for 1 week, so they have to use a software. That sums it up.Well, yes, basically. If you have an enough personal organization with physical cards or mental organization with hundreds of facts, then perhaps the software is not a great benefit. If you don't have that much organization, then it is a great benefit. But when I said you don't -have- to use the software I meant it. There are other ways to learn, they just may not be as efficient and may involve more effort in personally doing record-keeping instead of letting the software track records for you. For this sort of cramming of facts though, I think the software is of benefit to the vast majority of people. If we were discussing 'learning Japanese' in general, maybe not, but when you discuss 'learning 2000 facts in 30 days' ... SRS is good at that and it's easier to SRS with software than with personal record keeping. Just made a bet with my dad... - uisukii - 2013-06-28 dizmox Wrote:I see. I've got a few questions in mind but they would only disrupt the thread. Might look to see if the search function could answer a few of them.uisukii Wrote:The first onedizmox Wrote:How to write the kanji and their general meaning..Which volume of Remember the Kanji are you referring to?
Just made a bet with my dad... - Stansfield123 - 2013-06-28 Vempele Wrote:Do you have a source for your claim that production is better than recognition for learning to recognize?Yes, Heisig's book. He makes it very clear how it should be used (by producing the Kanji). As for whether that will lead to recognition of the Kanji, I tested it myself. So has everyone on this site who did RtK and is now recommending it to others. We all did the method by producing the Kanji, and at the end we were all able to recognize the Kanji. Note that recognizing the Kanji is not the same thing as being able to read Japanese (or any other language written with Kanji). That, of course, requires practice. Vempele Wrote:It also presents the kanji in a convenient order, tells you what they're made up of and gives them names.The Kanji are made up of strokes, written in a specific order. They're also organized by radicals. But they're not "made up" of Heisig's primitives. Heisig's named primitives are his own invention: they ARE a mnemonic device, not actual components of Kanji. If you told a Chinese or Japanese person about them, you'd have the same reaction as mentioning any other mnemonic device you came up with yourself, to learn the Kanji.. If someone learns the Kanji using Heisig's primitives but not any stories, they are using Heisig's mnemonics, they're just not using them to their full potential. Splatted Wrote:It's no worse than listening to someone who gives a bogus reason for an arbitrary claim. As for my reasoning, I thought it was obvious: doing something you haven't practiced is harder than doing something you have practiced.Is it? Would climbing Mount Everest be easier with practice than eating a muffin without practice? Not everything requires practice. Some things you can do without practice. For instance, if you know the names of the primitives and have a good story associating them with a keyword, you can recognize a Kanji and name its keyword. No practice is required. As for the most efficient way to learn something, according to James Heisig (who writes specifically about learning the Kanji) and almost every expert on learning I've ever heard from (speaking about learning in general or about learning various specific things), it's by producing that something, not by recognizing it. That is also true in my personal experience. Just made a bet with my dad... - Stansfield123 - 2013-06-28 Crawdaddycon Wrote:I asked, my dad said that would give me a very reasonable shot of actually succeeding, which would defeat the point of the bet. LOLYeah, from the sound of it, you've been trying to con a hustler . Just get a job and fill your own damn wishlist, instead.
Just made a bet with my dad... - uisukii - 2013-06-28 Ahahah... sorry, found that more amusing than I probably should have. Just made a bet with my dad... - Vempele - 2013-06-28 Stansfield123 Wrote:We all did the method by producing the Kanji, and at the end we were all able to recognize the Kanji.Of course. But were you able to do so faster, with less total effort or with a higher retention rate than than someone who only did recognition? I did RTK1 in 5 weeks, recognition only, about two hours a day with inferior tools (laggy website, uncustomizable SRS schedule, ready-made stories were scarce after 1500 or so). From what I gather (and from what Heisig says - "20 or 25 characters per day would not be excessive for someone who has only a couple of hours to give to study"), it takes most people a lot more effort than that to learn the kanji by learning to write them. Just made a bet with my dad... - pauro02 - 2013-06-28 Just an out of the topic maybe advice.. But I can swear it's effective... Don't think that you have a bet with your dad.. Think of it as a challenge to yourself,.. Just saying though... Just made a bet with my dad... - Stansfield123 - 2013-06-28 Vempele Wrote:Of course. But were you able to do so faster, with less total effort or with a higher retention rate than than someone who only did recognition?All I can tell you is that I'm confident that I would have had a harder time doing it that way. All the evidence I have (and mentioned in my previous posts) points to that. |