Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 15
Thanks:
0
Hi, everybody I?m from Bolivia (My native language is Spanish) and recently have finished RTK volume 1! To tell you the truth it was one of the most difficult challenges I ever had in my life. That?s why I am starting this post, I want to know how hard it was for the rest of people who finished it.
I have this curiosity because I have read many times in this forum how well everybody did. Of course most of them recognize that it was a difficult task, but I would like to know more about the problems and concerns they had during their learning. I also want to know more about how does it get after finishing RTK1, I mean, how good are you in your daily reviews.
I hope this information will help other people who are still struggling with the book, making them realize that they are not the only ones with difficulties and that there is a light at the end of the tunnel. After I said that, I would like to share my personal experience:
Almost two years ago I started to learn Japanese. At first, I had the naive idea that I wanted/could learn the language without knowing the writing system. A couple of classes later, I realized that I incurred in an error, but then I thought it was impossible for a foreigner to memorize the almost 2000 kanji. Then, I encountered the almighty Heisig?s RTK1 and Fuaburisu?s superb Reviewing the Kanji site.
In the beginning I did not understand the fundamentals of ?imaginative memory? and the ?spaced repetition? method (e.g. I clicked in the green stacks very often thinking this would improve my learning). Another mistake I made was to try to learn kanji the Heisig?s way in conjunction with the kanji I was being taught in classes. That meant I thought I could learn RTK 1 in a non sequential order. I know this was dumb, because the book precisely states you should not to this. Luckily, some months after wasting time with this ?original approach? I got serious about completing RTK 1.
It took me about 6 or maybe 7 months to finish it, studying for about 2 or 3 hours per day. For me this was exhausting! What is more, it is still exhausting, since my cards have not reached the last stacks yet. In many occasions I had to stay home, avoid long travels, and had to study at work (oops, sorry boss). I even lost a girlfriend, because after three weeks of going out with her, she said I prefer kanji over her!
My success rates are variable. Sometimes (learning about 15 kanji per day) I obtain 90%, some other times I get 70%. Most of the time it is around 80-85%, which worries me because the proponents of the spaced repetition method say that the rate should be around 90-95%. I would like to know how you people are doing.
My last concern is about the retention rates for those cards that are placed in the last stacks. Leitner theory predicts that since you have reviewed these cards many opportunities at the right time, you will remember them best. I agree with this ideal scenario, but does this apply in the real world? I would like to get some feedback about your personal experiences.
Thank you very much.
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 367
Thanks:
0
It's good to hear yet another person has stuck with RTK and finished, but did you really need to submit the same thread so many times, I understand if you're excited having finished!
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 4,083
Thanks:
32
I deleted the duplicate posts. Too tired to comment Javier's post now, but congratulations for finishing RtK1!
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 187
Thanks:
0
Congratulations, javiergakusei! I posted about my experiences in the Finished/congratulate thread, but I can say that I too had a success rate of about 80% throughout my reviews (still do, in fact, as I inch towards everything in the last stack). Some days it bugged me, but then I realized I could just let the SRS take care of it for me. I have noticed too that I tend to forget certain kanji I for the first time on the fifth review (second time in the last stack), but those are rare, and then I'll get them the second time around.
And since the ultimate real world scenario is replacing the keywords with Japanese words & compounds, all I can say is that yes, I think you'll be surprised at how the stories & keywords give you a hook to hang those new meanings on.
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 15
Thanks:
0
Sorry about posting this post so many times. I kept receiving error messages from my Internet Explorer, so I thought it was not working. Today, I deleted the last duplicated post so only one will remain. Thanks for your concerns. (I will also take it slow with the coffee, ok Jarvik 7?)
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 15
Thanks:
0
Thanks a lot Pparisi, It?s nice to know we belong to this kanji community, where over 800 (maybe more) people are doing the same thing and trying to succeed with Heisig?s book. In my Japanese school there are probably 170 people studying, but none of them (as far as I know) has considered using the RTK method, although I tried to convince a few. I even got into a discussion with one of my mates who argued that RTK was not good at all. He considers that kanji learning must have an ?integral? approach. This was no surprise for me because we all know that Heisig?s method consists precisely in the ?divide and conquer? approach which is opposite to the traditional way of studying these characters.
I believe that one of the biggest difficulties for the students in my school to start using RTK is that it is almost impossible to get copies in Spanish of the book. Even If they could get them, they wouldn?t be able to use the Reviewing the Kanji site (for it is only in English), which I consider indispensable for completing the book. So the only strategy to get new adepts that is left is to convince other students who know English.
I hope that in the future, I will be able to share my RTK experiences with people from my city. By the time being, I would like to know more about the efforts you guys had to do make to finish the book.
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 147
Thanks:
0
I gotta say that I am starting to find it very very difficult to finish the book. I'm at around 1750 right now meaning I have less then 300 kanji to go. I don't know why but these last 300 just seem impossible. Which is weird because I remember being AT kanji 300 and thinking what a breeze it is. I've been stuck around here for a while now (a week or so). I'm only pounding out like 20 or 15 a day which isn't much, and feels like pulling teeth. Compare that to two months ago where I was packing in 45 or so a day and remembering them!
My reviews range as well. Probably from 75-100% depending on where the stack is coming from.
Any tips on getting over that last kanji hump?
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 103
Thanks:
0
Push. Push hard.
Make ridiculous stories. Utterly ridiculous stories. I'm using Anki and whenever I 0 a kanji, I open up the story page and review all my stories when I'm done.
The problem is that I'm getting hit with anywhere from 50~100 reviews a day and trying to add more kanji to that. So it makes it intense, but knowing that as soon as I finish it will begin to stabilize and then daily amounts will shrink is refreshing.
Plus, I've been purposely withholding myself from doing some things until I finish the book as sort of a reward. Your mileage will vary on that one.
Little note. It seems almost as if at this point Heisig is giving you element keywords that you won't want to use. Er, that is perhaps there were two or three keywords for an element and he'll choose the on you'd be better off not using. Really forces me to think about my stories, but that's probably a good thing as it makes it more personal and likely to stick.
Edited: 2007-12-10, 8:46 am
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 212
Thanks:
4
It's not just psychological--the last kanji really are harder because they tend to be an assorted hodgepodge that don't easily fit into clear groupings like those kanji in the earlier chapters. The only thing I can say is suck it up and just do it. Set a reasonable number of kanji to complete each day and stick to it no matter what. Even if you have to stay up late while half asleep. Just keep going. You won't regret it.
Edited: 2007-12-10, 10:38 am
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 606
Thanks:
0
Yeah, basically you don't have to think them as hard kanji. They're just kanji, after all! You've done 1700 of them, so just keep doing them like you did until now, one at a time.
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 274
Thanks:
0
I personally found that from around 1700-1880 was really tough and had some of the most boring primitives of the book (funnel, tremedously, scrapbook, drag*).
From 1880 up the kanji get more colorful and have interesting primitives like tiger, ghost, bear, elephant. And although Heisig says that Lesson 51 is the hardest in the book, I actually thought it was pretty fun to work through.
It took me a month from 1600-1880 then I finished 1880-2042 in about 3-4 days. So just try to keep struggling through because the end should be a bit more refreshing.
Edited: 2007-12-10, 7:44 pm
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 109
Thanks:
0
Total agreement, the last few hundred seemed to take ages, like above poster says "just keep going!!". Don't fret about the rate of progress, just make sure there is progress! It'll be done before you know it.
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 7
Thanks:
0
I'm also on the last few hundred (about 200 left now) and at one point I got really lazy. But being so close and thinking about finishing by the end of next week makes me want to continue. So just think about how you'd feel in the end and keep going.
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 103
Thanks:
0
17 pages and 91 kanji remaining.
I can taste it. I don't want to plow through these, but the stories are clicking almost too easily. I fear for my retention rate tomorrow, but I think I'll be able to do the majority of these tonight.
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 244
Thanks:
0
I haven't been on this forum for ages but at least I've been working away slowly at RTK1. After about three years, I've now finished. I learnt about 1000 new kanji as a result. I already knew around 400, and there are 600 that refuse to be learned.
With regard to people who argue against Heisig's method, you have to explain that it's not meant to be a complete kanji course. All you learn is familiarization with the most common kanji and a rough idea of their meaning. That's it. No readings, not always an accurate meaning, and no multiple meanings.
The real benefit is that you obtain a good feel for the subject. You get to recognize the kanji themselves, which I suspect is the most significant problem in learning them. It's then a matter of associating more and more with each kanji as you go deeper into the language: once you know one meaning, it's often not too hard to associate more meanings and readings to match. And of course it makes it easier to learn new kanji as you encounter them.
The biggest problem I have found with the method is that it doesn't always work. You need to come up with a mnemonic to help you relate the keyword to the character based on its components. Sometimes it's easy, sometimes it's hard, but often I find nothing comes up, at least nothing that sticks. My red pile is 600 high and refuses to go down.
Anyway, congratulations for finishing RTK1.
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,022
Thanks:
1
Hi Raichu.
Congratulations for finishing. Can you name some that are refusing to be learned? Maybe we can offer some advice on how to make better stories or something.
I am using Anki, and well... there is no red pile in Anki. Rather, Anki will keep bugging you every 10 minutes when you get something wrong. It encourages you not to give up on any kanji.
I found that there have been really no kanji that I didn't eventually learn using this "bug me later" method. I studied nearly 1800 frames, and have nothing like a huge red stack. At any one time I have only a handful of failed kanji bugging me. Maybe you could try it too by adding your failed cards to Anki?
I owe everything to the great people like Fabrice and Resolve and those who shared so many great stories. Since Fabrice added the vote system the golden stories have gotten a lot easier to find.
Edited: 2007-12-11, 4:06 am
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 103
Thanks:
0
Yeah, there are definitely a handful of kanji I feel like I've learned through rote memorization as opposed to stories...but if 10% of the kanji are rote memorization and the rest flow through via the stories, is that all that bad?
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 147
Thanks:
0
I meant to post this earlier. Thanks for all the encouragement! I've slowly made my way up to the 1850's with my sights on finishing up this month. Until stehr pointed out that the kanji in the 16 going onto 1700's were really obscure, but now I think I see that. It makes sense to me that I was getting bogged down. But I can see the light at the end of the tunnel! Again thanks for the encouragement!
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 99
Thanks:
0
Excellent. That's great news. I'm pushing for the same goal. I'm in the high 1900s now, just a few days away. I was where you are only a week ago, so you can easily meet your target. You have all of January to let the reviews settle down after the big push.
How long has it taken to get to this stage?
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 21
Thanks:
0
Im starting to enter the 1850's...these Kanji are beginning to get really difficult. For the first time in the long time I forgot some keywords nearly 2 minutes after 'learning' the kanji, even though I didnt do anything different than what I normally do. These arent clicking very well. I mean...parcel post? Bulrush? Sequential? Whatever...
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 40
Thanks:
0
I am stranded at 1805. I had wished to finish this year but the past few days I didn't find the time to learn new kanji and from tomorrow I will go on a 16 day trip with limited internet access. I will just try to limit the damage (= orange cards). Anyway I am satisfied with the progress I made the past few weeks. Good luck for those also trying to finish this year.