partner55083777 Wrote:erlog Wrote:Study for this kind of stuff as a foreigner is tough because there's not a lot of material to go from. The drill books are all kind of predicated on the idea that you're reviewing stuff you already learned through normal schooling. The school books are all targeted at the glacial pace the Japanese school system moves at.
So I really worry about the idea of being able to learn by studying for these tests, and that's why I'm not prioritizing this as heavily as I am my reading practice.
How is this going for you? Have you started using an SRS to help you with your studying? Any specific resources that you find helpful (other than the DS game)?
edit: moved this post as per jimmyseal's suggestion
I worked my way up from 10級 using just the DS game until 5級. At around 6級 the trial and error approach of attempting to learn from the game starts to become really inefficient. There's just too much material, and so at that point I started to SRS with the official KanKen Step Books. Other people may need to start SRS'ing material earlier depending on their overall Japanese level. My reading level was quite high before I started caring about KanKen.
I think it's a lot easier to pass if you do both the Step Books and the DS game. This is because the Step Books exist as a review, and aren't really designed to teach you this stuff comprehensively. The DS game, on the other hand, uses the Step Book content, but has more questions for some of the fundamental stuff they don't have space for in the books. So the two balance each other out really well. One is to teach you the majority of things, and the other is to help polish your knowledge of the edge cases.
A good example of this is radicals in the Step Book questions. It won't make sure you know the radicals of every kanji. It will assume that you know, and the Step Book questions just want to remind you of tricky ones. They also like to play silly games with different types of questions when really all you need is a question saying, "HEY! DO YOU KNOW THE RADICAL HERE?"
It's possible to do an Anki-only method, but you need to be more diligent about how you're constructing that Anki deck.
You can't just put all the questions from the Step Book into Anki. If you do that then you're going to know the majority of the material, but you won't know it solidly enough to feel comfortable when it comes to taking the actual test.
That was my experience when I took 準2級, 3級, and 4級 recently. I studied for 4級 by Anki'ing all the Step Book questions, and then I covered about 35% of the 4級 material in Kanken DS3. I think that if I passed 4級 then it will be with a very very close score, and not by a wide margin at all.
Based on my experience taking the test on Sunday I've come up with a new more comprehensive study method that shouldn't really end up taking that much more time. There's a lot of questions in the Step Books that are really kind of worthless once you start approaching things more comprehensively. So the number of questions will probably balance out to be the same, but the actual content of those questions will be better.
Here's my new process for entering information into Anki from the Step Books.
1. Make an Anki card asking for the radical and radical name of every kanji in that step.
2. Input the reading cards, but reverse them so that they're 書き取り cards instead of reading cards.
3. Input the rest of step questions, but ignore the 部首 questions, 訂正 questions, and questions that ask for the production of a word out of context.
4. Make sure all the example words from the step overview are represented as 書き取り flashcards, and if they're not then pull a sentence in from somewhere like ALC, Core6k, or Kanji in Context to make into a 書き取り question.
I think using the Step Books as more of a content and sentence resource is going to be more efficient. Using this method it should be possible to clear each Step Book in 6-8 weeks.
I'm going to take 2級, 準2級, 3級, and 4級 in October, and by that time I should be able to work my way up to passes on all of them except for 2級 which I just want to take as a trial run.
I'm going to remake my Anki decks for the Step Books that I've already put in, but that's going to have to wait another week or two. Right now I'm knee deep in drilling reading for the JLPT N1 coming up on July 1st.
Edited: 2012-06-20, 7:37 pm