Hey y'all,
Although this forum is surprisingly hardened against the need for TL;DR's, here it is: This is a journal for my progress of completing RTK LITE at a pace of 63 kanji a day. Come watch my progress.
Too long have I been illiterate in Japanese. The height of my non-applicable kanji knowledge was the summer of 2013-- where I had gotten all the way to kanji number 1000 in normal keyword-to-kanji RTK. A short study abroad in Japan proved this knowledge to be less useful than I thought.
In an effort to increase my vocabulary, practical kanji knowledge, and to pass the JLPT N2 this December I will learn the 1115 of kanji and primitives in RTK LITE in 17 days.
The following is the method:
1115 Kanji + Radicals are required to complete RTK LITE.
I will spend 15 days studying and 2 days resting at my discretion.
Every day I will "learn" 63 kanji.
Two months ago I played around with this idea, and reviewed 180 kanji and have been actively reviewing them in Anki. This leaves me 935 to study in 15 days. A completed day consists of reviewing/re-learning 63 kanji and an associated vocabulary word for the kanji I don't know. Because my university schedule is top-heavy throughout the week, any kanji I learn during my two days off will roll over into fulfilling the next day's requirements. This about learning the kanji after all.
I vaguely know a lot of kanji from my past RTK expeditions. Because of this not every kanji will be added into my Anki deck. I will simply gloss over many as review, but with every kanji that I can't instantly connect a Japanese word to or can't pick apart into primitives will go into my Anki deck. I will also add a sentence containing an example word composed of that kanji to another deck. I'll probably get most of the example words from KanjiDamage.com
My card will be formatted as such:
Front:
-- Multiple words written in hiragana that contain the specified kanji
-- The RTK and possibly Kanji Damage keyword
Back:
-- Kanji
-- Radicals
-- Stories
-- Example words written with kanji
The review will be successful if I can write the kanji correctly with the reference to the vocabulary on the front of the card. I know learning to correctly write them is not required in the JLPT, but we all just use the JLPT as a prop to actually become fluent, right?
I will begin day 1 on October 6th, 2014 and finish day 17 on October 23rd, 2014.
Love to get feedback on this plan. Thanks y'all! <3
Although this forum is surprisingly hardened against the need for TL;DR's, here it is: This is a journal for my progress of completing RTK LITE at a pace of 63 kanji a day. Come watch my progress.
Too long have I been illiterate in Japanese. The height of my non-applicable kanji knowledge was the summer of 2013-- where I had gotten all the way to kanji number 1000 in normal keyword-to-kanji RTK. A short study abroad in Japan proved this knowledge to be less useful than I thought.
In an effort to increase my vocabulary, practical kanji knowledge, and to pass the JLPT N2 this December I will learn the 1115 of kanji and primitives in RTK LITE in 17 days.
The following is the method:
1115 Kanji + Radicals are required to complete RTK LITE.
I will spend 15 days studying and 2 days resting at my discretion.
Every day I will "learn" 63 kanji.
Two months ago I played around with this idea, and reviewed 180 kanji and have been actively reviewing them in Anki. This leaves me 935 to study in 15 days. A completed day consists of reviewing/re-learning 63 kanji and an associated vocabulary word for the kanji I don't know. Because my university schedule is top-heavy throughout the week, any kanji I learn during my two days off will roll over into fulfilling the next day's requirements. This about learning the kanji after all.
I vaguely know a lot of kanji from my past RTK expeditions. Because of this not every kanji will be added into my Anki deck. I will simply gloss over many as review, but with every kanji that I can't instantly connect a Japanese word to or can't pick apart into primitives will go into my Anki deck. I will also add a sentence containing an example word composed of that kanji to another deck. I'll probably get most of the example words from KanjiDamage.com
My card will be formatted as such:
Front:
-- Multiple words written in hiragana that contain the specified kanji
-- The RTK and possibly Kanji Damage keyword
Back:
-- Kanji
-- Radicals
-- Stories
-- Example words written with kanji
The review will be successful if I can write the kanji correctly with the reference to the vocabulary on the front of the card. I know learning to correctly write them is not required in the JLPT, but we all just use the JLPT as a prop to actually become fluent, right?
I will begin day 1 on October 6th, 2014 and finish day 17 on October 23rd, 2014.
Love to get feedback on this plan. Thanks y'all! <3

