Joined: Apr 2008
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*short cards, i+1 system
*do reps while wide awake, not when you're tired
*listen to motivational music
*caffeine
*don't write anything down
*avoid distractions ...
Anything else?
Joined: Mar 2010
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*don't use a file from a usb (I only just realised this one :$)
*set small goals - ie. I'll make a cup of coffee when i get down to 100 left, I'll look at tumblr for 5 mins when I get down to 50
*do reps out of your normal study environment (I always seem to go faster if I'm on the train, at work or in a cafe... not sure why)
Joined: Jun 2009
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take breaks,play around. Nothing really more to add.I usual do 2 decks (finish my reviews) and i'm all good. I take a break and come back later for my last deck.
Joined: Feb 2009
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Timebox small sessions, like 5-10 minutes. And race against your "average time per answer" for the day.
Joined: Apr 2009
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* Install Windows 7
* "Snap" a Japanese movie/anime/drama to left part of your desktop
* "Snap" Anki to right part of your desktop
* Use keyboard shortcuts to operate Anki
* Enjoy your show+immersion while doing reps in a good pace
Not the fastest way to do reps but I find it fun & it doesn't wear me out like other attempts.
Joined: Sep 2008
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Do it in several sessions throughout the day. I never usually have to do more than 100 cards at a time despite doing about 500 a day. 100 is easy to do so you just blast through them.
It's all about short bursts of intense focus rather than long drawn out sluggish sessions.
Joined: Oct 2010
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My god mode is:
#Rep up my new words in cram mode for 1 week prior to adding. (or anything marked)
#Leechs are set to 10, so that stuff gets marked and reviewed.
#I only do 140 new words a week (keep it realistic and easy), which means my cards reviews are actually reducing to the point they are 140 or less (this is something I have noticed recently)!
result
The result is everything is so well known that I virtually skim through the reps in one go. Also, as there is a low failure rate 95%+ on a good day, there is nearly no failed cards, so no rereview needed.
Moral:
# Cramming shouldn't be overlooked.
# Keep it small
# time /over/ effort FTW (20 x 365 = 7300)
Vocabulary has become such a side issue for me using the above that I barely notice the time that I spend doing it (30-45 minutes total).
I wish I knew that on day 1.
By the way, the new Wii game "the last story" looks super sexy!
Joined: Apr 2008
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What is the best brake?
Dramas take too long and get me addicted, so it's not effective.
Push-ups and letting in some fresh air from the window is good. But it gets boring...
Joined: Feb 2010
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What had me slowed down was that I tried too hard to judge how well I knew a card. Usually I would use hard/good/easy in fairly equal amounts (perhaps even used 'hard' too much, especially with RTK). Now I mainly use the spacebar ('good') (and 1 for wrong cards) and only in rare cases press 'hard', for in the end it doesn't really matter that much and does speed up the reviewing process for me.
Joined: Apr 2008
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Holy crap!
I can't believe it, but this interval timer thing works too well for me!
Yesterday I spent the same amount on studying & trying to study japanese as today.
I'm doing core 6k
Yesterday: 630 reps, 3.7 h, 200 new cards studied.
After discovering this method in the middle of the day:
Today: 1550 reps, 5.6 h, 400 new cards studied.
2 times more new cards studied.
about 2,5 times more reps in 1,5 x the time.
I was struggling to study with the old method, and was always burnt out. Today it seems that this timer's logically repetitious speed makes it more of a effortless routine.
Of course it's all speed. I don't know yet about how efficient it is, but I'm definitely saying it's worth a try.
Joined: Nov 2008
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My reps are slow because I write the new words, I read the sentence out loud, I analyse the sentence, my reading velocity is increasing thanks to this (I think). That takes time. Don't you write the kanji? You just know what the sentece means and move on?
I was thinking about trying that approach because other than speeding my review time I could learn much more new cards a day, but my writing skills would decrease a lot, so I'm still "thinking" about it. I think it is the best option for JLPT takers (like me) but I have japanese classes, and the more kanji I can write the better, so I don't know...