humpolec
Member
From: Poland
Registered: 2008-10-23
Posts: 10
My daily schedule goes like this:
1. If I have more than 20 failed cards, I revise some (usually 20) and flag them as learned.
2. If I have time for that, I do a lesson (I try to make the stories myself, but look the kanji up on the site if I have no good idea).
3. Review expired.
4. A short break, do something else (to not jump to the added cards straight away).
5. Review added (failing the cards I forgot)
Now I'm at 1426 cards and so far it worked out somehow, although failing new cards is frustrating (even though I usually remember >80%).
So how (in what order) do you use all the parts of RevTK?
bmherold
New member
From: Madison WI USA
Registered: 2008-12-31
Posts: 2
I'm still trying to figure out how all this all works
So I add cards as I desire, making up stories to help me, and mark them as learned. Then I come back to the site as I desire (at some interval, daily?), and review expired cards, and then add new ones again when I want to progress?
Does the system alert me somehow if I have cards to review, or am I just expected to visit the site daily and check on my situation? Sorry if I'm missing the whole point here - and thanks!
deebo
Member
From: 東京
Registered: 2008-07-31
Posts: 36
Website
bmherold wrote:
Then I come back to the site as I desire (at some interval, daily?), and review expired cards, and then add new ones again when I want to progress?
Does the system alert me somehow if I have cards to review, or am I just expected to visit the site daily and check on my situation? Sorry if I'm missing the whole point here - and thanks!
I think you get most out of the site (and SRS's in general), if you do visit it daily, check your situation, and review all your expired cards. It's going to take at least a month, minimum, to get through Heisig, and probably much more. If you do anything daily for a month, it starts to become a habit; you just do it without thinking and it feels weird those days you can't do it. Once you get to that point, you're really just letting the SRS work for you, and it's plain sailing.
The best part of my day now is when I get up, sit in my beanbag chair with laptop and a cup of coffee, and go through the expired cards on this site for half-an-hour or an hour. It's a real pleasure.
See, learning doesn't have to be a chore!