Silty Wrote:Warp2243 Wrote:Be careful, anything written on the back side of an Anki card should be treated as information that won't be learned. Either you're skipping this information too fast to be remembered, either you're spending time on it trying to remember it by "brute memory", which defeats the purpose of SRS. All information on the back side of a card should be solely designed to help you rate your own answer, and plug some holes in your understanding for the young cards.
Thanks for the in-depth response! I know this is covered elsewhere on the forums, but I'm sorry to say that I've read a bunch of topics about how Core is used, and I still don't quite understand what exactly we're supposed to do. What do you mean by "won't be learned" - isn't the whole purpose to learn it?
I was differentiating the "question side" ("front side") and the "answer side" (what I called "back side") here. The point of SRS is that you spend most of the time on a card analyzing the information on the question side, and then there are a few seconds of
active thinking in order to find the answer (e.g. active recall of the readings of the kanjis displayed in the sentences). Those seconds of active thinking are extremely precious, because they are the only sure way to commit something to memory. Then you show the answer side of the card, which is supposed to contain information to check if you were right (so it would have the same sentence with furigana over all kanjis + an English translation to get the idea).
Nothing in they way Anki works forces you to have an active attitude towards the answer side (contrary to the question side since you need to evaluate yourself on it). That's why it's a very bad idea to put information that you do want to remember on the answer side. And
de facto, you will spend only a few seconds checking the info on the answer side for the young cards (< 10 or 20 days), and the better you'll know your cards, the faster you'll skip the answer side. After 1.5 years of sentence mining, I read the English translation for less than 5% of the cards and I have an extremely quick look at the furigana, because most likely there's only one syllable I need to check, or even nothing at all, since the question side only had common kanjis whose readings I'm sure I know perfectly. The first steps in Japanese/sentence mining (when everything takes some time), and this behavior I have nowadays when doing SRS, are somewhat the two extremes. There's a spectra of other behaviors in-between, and the more you learn words/sentences, the less time you'll spend on the answer side.
Silty Wrote:I mean, I tried to start Anki with the optimized Core deck yesterday. I kept repeating the same cards over and over at least 5 times, because I kept failing to remember them each time. And that was just simple things like "that" and "one". Sometimes, I just can't remember something if I don't try to remember it with "brute memory" plus a good mnemonic.
So what is supposed to be on the front and the back of the Anki cards? Did you just use the defaults, or did you put particular things on the front and particular things on the back? What worked best for you?
Okay, now on to a more concrete discussion about the Core deck. Unfortunately there's not (any more) one "Core deck", originally it's just raw data that has been arranged in different ways. You're not being very specific about the card format you're using, but I suspect you are using cloze deletion (one word is hidden in the sentence of the question side). A few months ago, some friends who finished RtK got the Core deck themselves, so I thought they had the same as mine (passive reading only), but I discovered recently they were doing cloze deletion. I told them to try passive reading instead and they said it was better/easier and felt more natural. Though their production skills may go down a little of course. So it seems the Core deck people find nowadays is not the same as the one I downloaded 1.5 years ago (on this forum).
There's no way you can fail 5 times reading words like これ and ひとつ since it's full hiragana, so I assume you're using cloze deletion... And your case goes to show that you're actually spending time and effort trying to memorize which Japanese word should fit into which card, rather than actually memorizing the words themselves, which is the main drawback of cloze deletion and the one reason I don't understand how it can work... But I don't want to say too much about cloze deletion since I haven't experimented it myself. It obviously is of some interest to improve production ability. I just don't understand how you make it efficient on thousands of words.
Anyway I can only talk about what I've used since the very beginning (sentence reading). I never felt the need to change my card format or method and it steadily brought me to a quite advanced level (though I'm still far from what I would like). I'm using the same pattern for Mandarin Chinese (there's also an awesome Core deck with 5.5k sentences) and it's working great, exactly how it was with Japanese in the beginner/intermediate stages. At the time I just downloaded the data of Core 10k and made my own card format, though it's really classic.
Question side : Japanese sentence with kanjis. I associate a unique Japanese word to each card, so that I avoid having redundant information in my sentence deck (at the very least each card contains this word as new information).
Self-evaluation criteria : I need to be able to read aloud (actually I do this in my head...) the whole sentence, without mistaking any kanji reading. One mistake, even on a dakuten (e.g. こう vs ごう, せい vs ぜい), I fail the card. I've always been super strict on that, since the beginning and up to now. I also need to understand the meaning of each word (at least vaguely on young cards, and with accuracy on mature cards), and the grammar and sentence structure. I wasn't very strict for the first 5k-6k and it turned out ok. Nowadays grammar or precision in vocab understanding (even for new words, thanks to kanjis) is not so much of a problem anymore.
Answer side : dictionary look-up of the "keyword", English translation of the sentence, the audio of the Japanese sentence is automatically played (and this is super important, it impacted hugely my listening comprehension level over the months), and there's a dictionary look-up of all words in the sentence (only for the first 6k sentences).
Here's a screenshot :
![[Image: anki_kore_deck_appearance_MAY_2013.jpg]](http://s7.postimg.org/dh2ksdmsn/anki_kore_deck_appearance_MAY_2013.jpg)
(the only reason I failed this one is because I read とうさい instead of とうざい, eheh)
Silty Wrote:Warp2243 Wrote:But actually, if you've tried the method for a too short time, you're enthusiastic because it worked well in that short period and because you're motivated by the novelty.
Maybe I'm completely off the mark here, but I feel like short term is just as important as long term. Before committing something to long term, I need to have a good handle on it short term. For example, before making a kanji stick with me long term, I need to actually be able to completely see it in my mind in the short term (which RTK indubitably makes easier). I don't see what's wrong with having a separate method for short-term comprehension, and then relying on something else to make it stick.
I was referring to the misleading enthusiasm one may experience when discovering a new method, whereas it could be beneficial to thoroughly investigate it on a 1-month period before sharing it publicly. Presenting actual results would be more interesting/convincing for others who haven't try the method. I was more talking about methodology than actual learning, really.
Edited: 2013-05-24, 12:56 pm