mafried Wrote:blackmacros Wrote:And I verified that my new way of SRS'ing is sustainable (and way more efficient).Care to elaborate on that (perhaps in a new thread)? I'm interested in anything that can help keep up the pace you're doing.
jreaves Wrote:Congratulations! What did you do to to allow you to add so much material so quickly?A few of you wanted to know a bit more about how I maintain such a high pace adding sentences, so I thought I would elaborate on some changes I've made recently.
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Note: Any and all of the following may be completely obvious and common sense to you. If it is, well good for you! But a small change in the way I did things allowed me to triple how many new cards I added per day (from 60 sentences to just under 200).
Note 2: I'm a Uni student on holiday. I have a *lot* of spare time, which is a part of why I'm able to add so much. But I think the mechanisms I've developed for coping with maintaining such a high workload can be useful to anyone; not just a freak like me

The past few weeks I have been working my way through KO2001. I maintained a consistent pace of 20 kanji per day (~60 sentences) for 2 weeks. During this time I used what I assume is probably the typical review pattern for most people on this forum. That is: review all due cards first. Afterwards, use any remaining time available to add new cards.
With this way of reviewing I would eventually get worn out and lose focus, simply because I had so many reviews to do. Sitting down and doing 200 or 300 reviews first thing in the morning is a daunting, and time consuming task. I would have to take a break quite often or my pace would slow down and I wouldn't get anywhere.
Recently I jumped from adding 20 kanji/day to adding upwards of 50 kanji/day (~190 sentences). At the same time, despite adding more sentences, and facing a proportionately larger review load, SRS'ing actually got a lot easier for me. This increase in efficiency is largely a result of changes to the way I've been SRS'ing.
My new method: Review 30 due cards. Add 15 sentences/1 section from KO. Review 30 cards. Add 15 sentences. Review 30. Add 15. And so on.
Instead of focusing on one task to completion, this way I am constantly alternating focus between reviewing and adding.
The benefits of this change was twofold.
First: The act of changing focus was enough of a refresh to let me keep working. Instead of having to take a break (and lose time) I switched tasks instead. This is the essential reason why it made me so much more efficient. Huge efficiency boost right there.
Second: Since I'm breaking the process down into small chunks I flew threw reviews/adding much faster because they were psychologically less daunting. Reviewing 30 cards is a lot easier than sitting down and reviewing 200 or 300! Even though I reviewed those 200 in blocks of 30 anyway, doing it this way made it seem much easier. It helps that each block of 30 is separated by a different task; it breaks the monotony. The same reasoning applies to adding cards too.
Now this change might sound completely obvious to you, or it might sound like an inconsequential change. But I jumped from adding 20 kanji a day to adding 60 kanji a day- *and* it made SRS'ing easier.I jumped from 300 reviews per day to 600. And its easier to do.
To provide a concrete example of the impact its had:
Old Method-
9:30- Wake up, start monster review load
12:00- Finish all reviews. Completely burnt out.
12:00-4 or 5:00- It takes me all this time to add 20 kanji because I keep getting burnt out, need to take breaks etc.
6:00-9:00- Review all these newly added kanji. Add another 5 or 10 kanji if I was super lucky, had no family interruptions, etc. This almost never happened. Plus, by the end of the day a whole bunch of due cards had built up again and I would slave away knocking them back.
Summary: 20 new kanji. Reviews are hell.
New Method:
9:30- Wake, review my first 30 cards. Add 15 sentences. Continue repeating this pattern.
12:00- By 12:00 I have finished all reviews as well as added my first 20 kanji
12:00-onwards: Since all old due cards are done, I start reviewing my newly added cards. Then I add 15 more sentences. Then I review 30 of my new cards. And so on.
6:00- By 6:00 I've added 60 kanji. Not only that, but all of my reviews are done and I've reviewed all of the new kanji already.
Summary: 60 new kanji. Reviews are easier.
Hopefully this was interesting or helpful to somebody :-)
Edited: 2009-07-05, 9:16 am
