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Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - Printable Version

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Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - Sebastian - 2012-07-23

I know some people have created spreadsheets for the Kanzen Master books, but I have the Shin Kanzen Master N1 grammar workbook and wonder whether someone has started typing it too.

How different are the Shin Kanzen Master books from the old ones?

If no one has started yet, we could start now. Is anyone interested?


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - kodorakun - 2012-07-23

I have the ShinKM N1 book too and i typed one (favorite) example sentence from each grammar point up -- nothing exhaustive. I might be interested in helping a bit but I'm not terribly interested in SRS'ing tons of boring content Big Grin


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - Bokusenou - 2012-07-24

Sebastian Wrote:How different are the Shin Kanzen Master books from the old ones?
rich_f compared them both here.


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - rich_f - 2012-07-24

A suggestion from doing KM2 and KM3: get some decent JP OCR software, and save yourself a ton of trouble.


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - sikieiki - 2012-07-24

Im interested in finding a spreadsheet of N1 grammar as well. Hell, any grammar is fine.

Theres sites like renshuu.org / jgram with all the data I need, but there doesnt seem to be a way to get at the actual data without browsing several hundred pages - and some of the examples are clearly wrong. I am surprised no one has done this yet.

I've got the KM1 book but typing up the sentences is too much work. Then again, it could probably be done in a few hours.


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - kodorakun - 2012-07-24

There's gotta be at least 5 or 10 people interested in N1 grammar points... If we all organize and type up the details of 1 grammar point each into a grammar anki deck template, we'd be done in about 10 days with minimal daily effort.

However, I'd be interested in either trying to digitize the example test questions or generated a cloze delete set of cards, as opposed to passive reading of grammar examples (I found that simply reading example sentences of grammar points wasn't the best preparation for N2, thought grammar is what I did best on for that test).


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - CerpinTaxt - 2012-07-25

I'd definitely be interested in doing this. Hell I was going to do this eventually anyway. Is there a link to the exact book that you guys are tentatively planning on?

In a few weeks I'm heading home so I can definitely pick up the book at my local kinokuniya.


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - rich_f - 2012-07-25

I'd be interested in this as well. Are you going to do the new N1 or the old 1級? I've got both.

And I second the cloze suggestion. Cloze was much more effective for me for N2 as well.


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - rich_f - 2012-08-04

Just wondering if anybody still wants to do this...


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - CerpinTaxt - 2012-08-04

Once I get my hands on a book (around next week) I'm going to start on this. I'll set up a google doc and all that jazz. If someone wants to do now? That'd be great.

I think right now there's people that want to do this but not no one wants to take the initiative and start.


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - kodorakun - 2012-08-04

Well a good initiative would be discussing an agreed upon template. As I mentioned earlier I'd be interested in a cloze delete deck, but I'm afraid that I'll just end up memorizing the sentence and the associated cloze, so I'm not sure what the best method would be.

As an example, take the 「。。。ようにも。。。ない。。。」 construct (http://jgram.org/pages/viewOne.php?tagE=younimonai), and an example sentence:

頭が痛くて、起きようにも起きられなかった。
I have a terrible headache, and I cannot get up even though I want to

What would be the best way to test this grammar with cloze delete? cloze the whole verb, part of it, only the conjugation? etc Some options would be:

頭が痛くて、起き__にも起きられなかった。
頭が痛くて、起き____起きられなかった。
頭が痛くて、起き__起き__。
頭が痛くて、__ようにも___なかった。
頭が痛くて、起__起__。

I think each of these would have some utility in making the reader think actively about what proper choices could be made.

But, to be honest, I think a lot can be learned from looking at example questions. On N2 the only difficulty came when the multiple choice options had all answers identical save one particle in each option, or two very similar answer choices like fill in the blank with "として" or "としては" and at that instant you're taking the test and think "oh s**t, what is the true difference between the usage of those grammar constructs?" and that's what understanding that problem will demonstrate.

SOOOOO, I'd like to see cards that are more similar to the test problems themselves. Either multiple answer choice and you have to quickly identify _why_ 3 of the 4 options are wrong, and really understand the essence of that selection.

My ideal setup (infinite time assumption):
1) one key example sentence for each grammar point that is cloze-deleted on key grammar point (maybe two sentences if it's one of the more varied grammar points)

2) a collected set of test-like cards (multiple choice answer, sentence arrangement)

Regarding point 2, in the ideal case with the drill books, KM, and the other popular options we could easily get for each grammar point 3 or 4 question cards. That means we'd be prompted with 4 unique sentences that test any N1 grammar point, forcing the student to consider said grammar point against what are the most likely options that would trip one up.

That's more than two cents worth of rambling... Realistically, I'll probably just keep reading books and listening to podcast and not do anything of this, but if this spurs any thoughts or excitement I might be game.


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - kodorakun - 2012-08-04

And as one follow up: If you look at all the N1/一級 questions and categorized all all problems by their right answer, and then looked at the entire distribution of wrong answer options that are paired with each tested grammar point I assume with the statistics available you'd be able to see what grammar constructs are grouped in questions.

That is, obviously if the correct answer uses the (二級) grammar construct "<Verb (plain form)>たび(に)", which means something like "every time", to have the wrong options with meanings wildly different from "every time" would be too easy. More likely options of grammar points that have similar but subtle or obvious differences/applications would be posed.

If anyone wanted to do this, it might be revealing. You might find something like for questions that test the grammar point "たびに" the wrong answer options are always from a specific set of 5 other similar grammar points -- and fairly enough, you, the learner of Japanese, should understand the distinguishing points between these grammar points. Anyway, just some thoughts Big Grin


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - CerpinTaxt - 2012-08-05

I think regarding the cloze deletion, it would be good to use the grammar examples as a passive learning source, and utilize practice sentences as cloze deletion.

For me the passive exposure helps me get the grammar point down and the cloze deletion would help solidify that.


Shin Kanzen Master N1 Grammar spreadsheet - rich_f - 2012-08-07

Yeah, same here. I used the grammar examples as passive (and if I didn't find enough, I grabbed some from some grammar books), and put the multiple choice questions in as-is.

For OCR, I highly recommend e.Typist14.0 for windows. There's a 30 day free trial that works just fine. After that, you need to shell out $130 or so. But of all the commercial OCR programs I've tried, I like it the best. Try the sample version first until you figure out how to use it, though. It's not intuitive. I may have posted some notes about it in a thread somewhere about a year ago.