Archive for 'Heisig'
Heisig RTK1 Complete!
Yesssss! Exciting! See that tracker to the right? The one which shows how many Kanji I’ve covered in Heisig and how many there are to cover, in total? Those are showing the same number! That means I’ve FINISHED! Yes!
OK, so, what does “finished” mean, exactly? Well, I still have to review them every day, but [...]
Posted: 5月 8th, 2009 under Heisig.
Tags: Heisig, milestone, success, win
Comments: 2
A lapse in study… and a return to form
How many people could have predicted from my last post that this would happen? Probably quite a few, I suspect. The problem with “taking a break” is that you intend to do it for a couple of days or a week, but then that week becomes two weeks, which becomes a month, and before you [...]
Posted: 3月 22nd, 2009 under Heisig.
Comments: none
Too many Kanji!
I think my brain might melt.
I’ve had a good run recently, and learned a lot of new Kanji, but after a pretty lazy weekend my number of Anki reps has increased manyfold, and I’ve started to struggle to take them in. A couple of days after learning them, they come up again and I find [...]
Posted: 1月 26th, 2009 under Heisig.
Comments: none
RTK1 Parts 1+2 Complete!
Hooray! Today I completed part 2 of Heisig’s Remembering the Kanji 1, hitting 508 Kanji. That seemed like a reasonable enough landmark to note here, so here it is.
I’ve really slowed in the past few weeks, when it comes to learning new Kanji. When I first started, forty Kanji per day was easy, because there [...]
Posted: 1月 18th, 2009 under Heisig.
Comments: 4
New shiny Heisig widget!
If you look to the right, at the top of the sidebar, you should see a new widget that is both exciting and attractive – a tracker to monitor my progress through Heisig’s two Kanji books, RTK1 and RTK3. The strange numbering owes itself to the second book containing the same kanji as the first, [...]
Posted: 1月 11th, 2009 under Heisig.
Comments: none
A game involving beads
As explained in my previous post, the method I am following to learn Japanese requires that you learn at least 2,042 Kanji before you even start to learn any actual Japanese. I’m working at a rate of 40 Kanji per day at present, at which rate I should have finished RTK1 by the end of [...]
Posted: 1月 8th, 2009 under Heisig.
Comments: none