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well i currently try to do about 25 kanji everyday but do you think i should put more? because i see some people that add liek 50 to like 100 everyday do you thik thats a bit much? and can anki really help you remember all these kanji you put in in one day? should i add more? im home schooled so i have a bunch of free time during the I Mean A BUNCH.
Edited: 2008-09-02, 9:58 pm
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The answer to any questions about how many kanji you SHOULD do a day remains the same: as many as you CAN do. Can you do 50? And take everything into account; not just the learning itself, but the increase in reviews that follow. And not just free time, but your will and drive; you can have 30 free hours in a day (!?), but you may only have enough drive to get you through an hour of review a day, every day.
If you can, then I suppose you should. If you can't, then you shouldn't.
(The heart of a former fellow victim of homeschooling goes out to you)
Edited: 2008-09-02, 10:38 pm
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I go by lesson, and I rarely do more than a lesson per day. That's a pretty good measure. There are only a few lessons with ridiculous numbers of kanji, and so I would just split those in two.
Joined: Apr 2008
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Think about how many kanji you did per day in the early stages of starting Heisig (when most of your kanji were in pile 1). That's probably your maximum kanji per day.
Now as you progress, you will be reviewing from other piles as well.
So take your maximum number of kanji per day and divide it by 4 (the number of piles) and that's how many *new* to add per day.
For me, I found that in the beginning, I was doing about 40 a day. Now, I'm only adding about 10 (or under) a day.
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I did about 45 kanji one day, and I felt it just took WAY too long to read through em all in the book. While I doubt I have any problem remembering them now, I still think it was too much, it just wasn't fun. So from now on, I'll probably stick to 20 new kanji a day. I already know tons of kanji from my japanese studies before I found this site and I can already read japanese decently, so I'm in no rush. If you have the motivation though, 50 a day is very impressive and will get you done with the book in less than 2 months.
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Its really easy to start off fast, but if you keep up that pace, you will see days where you have to review hundreds of kanji. When I started, I studied about 20 a day, and when I would have 20 in my fail stack I would study those instead. Anytime my fail stack was less than 20 I would study new ones.
It's an okay method, but I seem to always be reviewing and studying failed kanji now. I'm at 750 or so. Good luck.
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You should just do as many as you are comfortable with. This isn't a race and it's not about who is learning more kanji fastest. So what is some other guy is doing a hundred a day, the important thing is to not give up and to keep moving forward in your studies. Also don't feel like you have to add kanji everyday. I know that sometimes when I hit a section I keep failing then I'll take a few days off of adding new material and just concentrate on the old, that way I don't end up with big stacks of failed kanji. Keep at it, and good luck.
-Luo
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I disagree. I think RTK should be done fast.
That's because the later kanji support the ones that came before.
While studying the very complicated kanji, you are studying also its radicals and kanjis that are part of it.
If you take too long in the beggining, you are wasting time, because you'll end up doing them twice.
25 kanjis/day is a reasonable schedule. If you do it, you'll finnish RTK in less than 3 months.
I've done the first 500 in a pace of 50/day. Then I got with 25/day till the 1200. Then I stoped for 2 weeks for clearing the failed stacks. Then I've done about 30/day till the end.
It was very hard and very painful. That's why I wanned it to be quick.
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What I noticed: You start of very quick. You could do 50 or even 100 a day. However, after 250 to 500 kanji, any mistakes you made in your story process begins to show up. Soon you realize you need to change up your stories to account for new keywords and primitives. Maybe you find out that visual or at least visually striking stories work better than simple mnemonics. Your fail pile begins growing pretty fast and you have to decide how to balance keeping up on what you already have and adding in new items.
I always thought that every 10 kanji your add a day equates to 1 hour overall of studying. That means reviewing your older kanji, adding and testing your new kanji, then studying your missed kanji. So if you have 2 hours a day, do 20 new kanji a day. Got 8 hours? Then do 80. Eventually, you get done and move on, forgetting how difficult it was and the time invested.
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"Go until I don't feel like doing anymore" each day worked just fine for me even though I had a few days were that number was 0. Finished in about 3 months.
Some days you're just more motivated than others.
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I decided I'd try upping my new kanji to 13 per day to finish by the end of the year. Adding new kanji/stories, review, and study and re-jiggering stories comes out to maybe 1-2 hours a day now. And if something happens and I miss a day, woe to me. I'll keep that number, though I know it won't happen. I'll probably finish end of Jan.