I've just starting doing this new method with RTK, and for me so far it is:
-a bit faster than the traditional Heisig way and/or using others' stories
-more fun, thus far at least lol
-usually simpler for to review
-most importantly, easier to review
OVERVIEW
In short, you look to form a story using the kanji key words that immediately follow a newly introduced radical in Heisig. You think of the setting/context and how the subsequent key words could be strung together into a story. Then you focus on the individual parts, coming up with images for the subsequent kanji.
I will call the kanji that immediately follow the radical "followers."
HOW TO
1. Choose a setting/context for a given radical.
-Look at the follower key words, look for any relation between them, imagine some setting/event/context based on what you think of. See the example bellow to see how I come up with settings. The order Heisig lists the elements is unimportant.
-Your setting can also be based on the radical itself, but it doesn't really matter - through repetition, you learn to quickly associate the radical with any arbitrary setting.
-You can break the followers into multiple settings. Mine usually use about 10-15 followers. Note: I don't bother coming up with a setting if there are <4 followers.
-The above point means that if there is a follower that itself has 4+ followers, then you can turn that into either a separate setting or a distinct sub-story of the original.
-You can also use multiple settings to distinguish between WHERE in the kanji the focus radical lies. Personally, I don't really have a problem with this.
-Memories you have are very good to use (despite the fact that the story you come up with may deviate from what you really remember; what's important is the context and scenery).
2. Formulate in your mind a story by selecting specific followers.
-This is pretty vague, look at the example.
-Feel free to leave out certain followers. You can come back to them in the next step or just do normal Heisig method on them.
3. Look at one specific follower, relate it's components to the key word in the normal Heisig way; however, don't include anything about the main focus radical, as it is implied by the setting.
-Images are particularly powerful - it is a story. In the example below, immature turkeys might seem arbitrary and lame - why are the immature turkeys, specifically? Well, it doesn't really matter, just make sure to make that image vivid.
EXAMPLE
1. Radical "wheat." I look at the followers' key words (NOT their radicals) and see things like "draft", "earnings", "private", "regularity." I think of World War I, though this could literally be anything so long as it makes sense to you. Usually I do a specific scene where the story takes place. In this case World War I isn't really specific location that you picture when review, but this doesn't really matter - I'm not really sure why, it just works. I guess maybe because you learn to associate the followers with the given radical anyways.
2. Write or think of a sequence that these followers can be used in to make a sensible story. "Draft" men into the army. Men make "earnings." To what "extent" are they patriotic? At first they are "immature." After awhile the "regularity" of being in the army sets in. They are now "privates." Have a mission involving alternating "shifts." And so on...
3. Focus on the individual parts pretty much in the same way you would normally with Heisig, but don't include anything about the main radical. At first they only DRAFT the "tall", fit men, which soon changed when they realized how brutal the war was. The men get EARNINGS and send them "home." The EXTENT of their patriotism can only be seen by how they "display" it in their actions. At first they are a bunch of IMMATURE "turkeys." They "drop" down to do some push ups and come up with an air of REGULARITY about them. And so on...
OTHER NOTES
-As I said in the beginning, this method has be advantageous for a few reasons. The main one is that my reviewing success has dramatically increased. I learn the kanji, and after that I rarely fail cards.
-Experiment yourself with this method. I haven't been doing it too long and I'm sure it's imperfect. Let me know what your results are.
-a bit faster than the traditional Heisig way and/or using others' stories
-more fun, thus far at least lol
-usually simpler for to review
-most importantly, easier to review
OVERVIEW
In short, you look to form a story using the kanji key words that immediately follow a newly introduced radical in Heisig. You think of the setting/context and how the subsequent key words could be strung together into a story. Then you focus on the individual parts, coming up with images for the subsequent kanji.
I will call the kanji that immediately follow the radical "followers."
HOW TO
1. Choose a setting/context for a given radical.
-Look at the follower key words, look for any relation between them, imagine some setting/event/context based on what you think of. See the example bellow to see how I come up with settings. The order Heisig lists the elements is unimportant.
-Your setting can also be based on the radical itself, but it doesn't really matter - through repetition, you learn to quickly associate the radical with any arbitrary setting.
-You can break the followers into multiple settings. Mine usually use about 10-15 followers. Note: I don't bother coming up with a setting if there are <4 followers.
-The above point means that if there is a follower that itself has 4+ followers, then you can turn that into either a separate setting or a distinct sub-story of the original.
-You can also use multiple settings to distinguish between WHERE in the kanji the focus radical lies. Personally, I don't really have a problem with this.
-Memories you have are very good to use (despite the fact that the story you come up with may deviate from what you really remember; what's important is the context and scenery).
2. Formulate in your mind a story by selecting specific followers.
-This is pretty vague, look at the example.
-Feel free to leave out certain followers. You can come back to them in the next step or just do normal Heisig method on them.
3. Look at one specific follower, relate it's components to the key word in the normal Heisig way; however, don't include anything about the main focus radical, as it is implied by the setting.
-Images are particularly powerful - it is a story. In the example below, immature turkeys might seem arbitrary and lame - why are the immature turkeys, specifically? Well, it doesn't really matter, just make sure to make that image vivid.
EXAMPLE
1. Radical "wheat." I look at the followers' key words (NOT their radicals) and see things like "draft", "earnings", "private", "regularity." I think of World War I, though this could literally be anything so long as it makes sense to you. Usually I do a specific scene where the story takes place. In this case World War I isn't really specific location that you picture when review, but this doesn't really matter - I'm not really sure why, it just works. I guess maybe because you learn to associate the followers with the given radical anyways.
2. Write or think of a sequence that these followers can be used in to make a sensible story. "Draft" men into the army. Men make "earnings." To what "extent" are they patriotic? At first they are "immature." After awhile the "regularity" of being in the army sets in. They are now "privates." Have a mission involving alternating "shifts." And so on...
3. Focus on the individual parts pretty much in the same way you would normally with Heisig, but don't include anything about the main radical. At first they only DRAFT the "tall", fit men, which soon changed when they realized how brutal the war was. The men get EARNINGS and send them "home." The EXTENT of their patriotism can only be seen by how they "display" it in their actions. At first they are a bunch of IMMATURE "turkeys." They "drop" down to do some push ups and come up with an air of REGULARITY about them. And so on...
OTHER NOTES
-As I said in the beginning, this method has be advantageous for a few reasons. The main one is that my reviewing success has dramatically increased. I learn the kanji, and after that I rarely fail cards.
-Experiment yourself with this method. I haven't been doing it too long and I'm sure it's imperfect. Let me know what your results are.
Edited: 2012-07-16, 10:15 pm

, but I do think it is somewhat clearer than before.