Remembering The Kanji

  1. Remembering The Kanji 3
  2. Remembering The Kanji Pdf

Kanji Koohii helps you remember the kanji

Remembering the meaning and the writing of the kanji—perhaps the single most difficult barrier to learning Japanese—can be greatly simplified if the two are isolated and studied apart from everything else. Forgetting kanji, remembering kanji What makes forgetting the kanji so natural is their lack of connec. Aug 01, 2017 Most kanji have a straightforward meaning. The popular resource, Heisig's Remembering the Kanji, focuses mainly on learning the meanings of kanji. It sure feels like you 'know' a lot of kanji when you finish this book, but the meaning of a kanji is only about one-fourth of the equation.

Kanji Koohii is a website and community dedicated to help you complete the kanji learning method called Remembering the Kanji.

  • Edit and share kanji mnemonics (called 'stories')
  • Improve long term memory with kanji flashcards and a spaced repetition system (SRS)
  • Track your progress to stay motivated
  • Learn words based on your kanji knowledge with the smart dictionary

About Remembering the Kanji

Remembering the Kanji (RTK) teaches you how to break down the complex kanji in smaller, simple parts that can be memorized with a mnemonic system (we call it stories).

Start with the free sample chapter from the publisher (PDF). It covers 294 kanji and 12 lessons.

You can buy the book on Amazon as well as publisher in paper or ebook format. Here is a good review from KanjiClinic.

Study And Share Stories

The Study area is where you begin your kanji journey! Start with the character 'one'. Edit your mnemonic (also called a 'story') or use one shared by the community. Then add a flashcard with the button in the top right. When you are done studying a few characters go to the Spaced Repetition System (SRS) and click the blue pile to review new cards.

If you choose to publicly share your story, it will appear in the list below. You can vote for stories that work well, copy a story from another member (you can use it as is, or you may want to edit it).

If you have previously forgotten kanji from SRS reviews, select Restudy > Start. This will take you to the first failed kanji. Once you have revised your story, select Add to learned list. This will take you to the next failed kanji. When you have finished working through failed kanji, select Review in the sidebar (top on mobile) to do a first review of these cards. Successfull reviews will move these cards into the SRS cycle, and your failed kanji list will eventually be cleared.

Hints

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  • If you don't edit a story, the first one that you star will be shown during flashcard reviews when you use the Story shortcut
  • Select the keyword to customize it.
  • Select the red pile in the SRS to go to the list of failed (forgotten) kanji.

The Dictionary

Kanji Koohii features a simple, yet smart dictionary. The Koohii dictionary is aware of your kanji knowledge: as you progress and add flashcards the dictionary will highlight vocabulary entries that are made of only those known kanji.

Currently known kanji means a kanji for which the user added a flashcard. This simple requirement is the most flexible for various needs. New cards will be learned soon, and failed cards are meant to be re-studied eventually so this works out.

In the screenshot above the user has studied kanji #1 to #50. The second word '合唱' is not highlighted yet, sincethe user has not yet learned 合 which is kanji #269 and will be seen later. Yet on kanji 21 already the dictionary can highlight a vocabulary entry (the verb '唱える') which is based on the user's previous knowledge.

This works in Flashcard Review too! So as you do reviews over weeks and months, and you open the dictionary you may discover new words which weren't highlighted before.

Technical Information

Kanji Koohii's dictionary uses Jim Breen's JMdict/EDICT Japanese-English dictionary (full acknowlegments in the About page).

Koohii's dictionary only shows 'priority' entries, approx. 16000 of the most common words. This is done in order to provide meaningful results for Koohii users. The dictionary would otherwise show rare, archaic and obsolete words as well as place names from a total of 170,000+ entries which you'll likely never use even after being fully fluent in Japanese.

As such, Koohii's dictionary is not an exhaustive reference. There are already excellent resources dedicated to this such as jisho.org. The goal for Koohii's dictionary is to help you stay focused while getting through the 2000+ common use kanji.

Adding Flashcards

Flashcards are added in Flashcards > Manage Cards.

If you study with Remembering the Kanji you can simply enter the maximum frame number that you have studied so far.

If you are not studying the kanji in the RTK sequence (say, JLPT), or you want to skip parts of RTK, then you will need to use Add Cards > Custom Selection instead.

The Spaced Repetition System (SRS)

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What is Spaced Repetition?

Kanji Koohii uses a spaced repetition system (also known as 'SRS') based on the popular Leitner System:

In the Leitner system, flashcards are sorted into groups according to how well you know each one in the Leitner's learning box. This is how it works: you try to recall the solution written on a flashcard. If you succeed, you send the card to the next group. But if you fail, you send it back to the first group. Each succeeding group has a longer period of time before you are required to revisit the cards.

The Leitner System helps you to:

  • Make sure that you review all the information that you have learned.
  • Review at increasingly longer intervals to stimulate long term memory.
  • Review more of the difficult flashcards, and less of those that you know well.

The SRS Bar Chart

The SRS bar chart represents stacks of flashcards. Stacks are shown from left to right. Stacks on the left side are relatively new. With each review, a card will move towards the right, representing a better knowledge.

The first box contains forgotten cards in red, and new cards in blue. You can select the blue pile or use the button above, both will take you to a review of new cards.

The following boxes represent a level of knowledge: cards have been reviewed one or more times succesfully. Each box comes with two piles of cards: due cards in orange, and scheduled cards in green.

Stacks in the first compartment

Failed cards. The red stack shows cards which have not been answered correctly. The kanji in this stack likely needs more work on the stories/mnemonics.
Untested cards. The blue stack shows cards that have not been tested yet. Below the graph there is a blue link, clicking the blue link is the same as clicking the blue stack. The blue link simply gives you more detail, it tells you which was the latest pack of cards that were added, when they were added, and how many cards remain in that pack of cards. Each time you add new cards, they go to the top of the blue stack. When you click the blue stack you get to review the most recently added cards first.
Kanji

Stacks in the other compartments

Due cards. (orange piles) are cards that are ready for review and need your attention. You should generally use the main button above the graph to review all due cards. However some people prefer to review from the right to the left, by selecting the orange piles directly. This lets you focus first on cards you know well, working your way down to the cards you added more recently and may be more difficult to remember. Use whichever system you prefer but we recommend to avoid this method until you are experienced with the SRS. Keep in mind all orange cards are sorted by due date, so you will always get the more 'urgent' reviews first (with a small amount of shuffling).

Scheduled cards(green piles) are scheduled for review, but have not expired yet.In other words, they are still 'fresh' in your memory, and the SRS estimates that these don't needyour attention yet. These cards will eventually become due at which point you can review them.

Reviewing cards ahead of time would defeat the purpose of the SRS, which tries to stimulate yourlong term memory, therefore it is not possible to select the green piles. Often times users who are new to the SRS want to do many reviews of new kanji. You can do so in the Kanji Review page. These reviews won't affect the SRS and can be repeated as many as you like.

Rating Flashcards

  • No : send card back to the restudy pile.

  • Hard : demotes a card to a lower pile. The next review is scheduled at a lower interval according to the scheduling (see below).

    The 'Hard' answer is very useful if you prefer not to use the Study page > Relearn > Review cycle. Even when your story is not effective, you can edit it from the Review page (shortcut S), and answer 'Hard'. That way you never have to deal with the restudy pile.

    Cards that are in box 2 (one review) and rated 'Hard' stay in box 2, but they always come for review the next day (instead of using the default of ~3 days).

  • Yes : this is the recommended rating for new cards, using the default interval.

  • Easy Pokemon storm silver rom. : rating a card 'Easy' increases the interval by 50% compared to the 'Yes' answer. This is best used on cards that you have reviewed a few times. Use 'Easy' whenever you can to reduce the amount of due cards over time.

When a card is not answered correctly it will move back to the first compartment! This is why you can gauge your current level of knowledge just by looking at the count of cards in each compartment : cards in the last compartment have not only been tested four times or more, they also have passed the test at least four times in a row. Thus, the cards in the last compartments correspond to the kanji you know best.

Scheduling

You can customize the Spaced Repetition scheduling in Account Settings menu: Diner dash hometown hero windows 10.

Remembering The Kanji
  • Number of boxes for successive reviews corresponds to the intervals for positive reviews and what the maximum interval will be
  • Review interval multiplier determines the spacing between reviews (in days). Consider using a smaller multiplier when you start out, if you'd like to get more reviews. When you complete RTK, consider increasing the multiplier to reduce the review load over time
  • Maximum box for cards marked 'Hard' determines the maximum interval for a Hard answer

Here is a screenshot of the default options:

Cards in the last box (maximum interval)

Cards answered 'Yes' or 'Easy' in the last box remain in the last box and are scheduled again at the last box's interval. To increase the maximum interval you can either increase the number of boxes, or the multiplier, or use a combination of both.

Variance

There is also an amount of variance, which adds a little 'fuzziness' to the interval by moving the date a little bit backward or forward. This helps spread due cards over time, so that they don't come in big batches on the same date.

The variance factor is currently 0.15 of the interval, and there is a limit of 30 days. For example, a card scheduled in 26 days with a variance of 4 days will be scheduled anywhere from 22 to 30 days.

Reviewing

Clicking any of the stacks in the Leitner graph will take you to the reviewing screen :

Depending on how many cards are in the stack the reviewing session could be very short or very long. Keep in mind that you can test as many or as few cards as you like, and you may leave the Review screen whenever you want!

Every time you answer a card, that card's status is updated. When you click the 'Finish' button to skip to the Review Summary screen, the remaining cards that were not reviewed simply stay in the stack, and can be tested when you have more time.

When you test one of the expired stacks (orange), you get cards in order of their expiry date, starting with the least recently expired ones, i.e. first come the cards that expired first.

When you test the untested stack, it works the other way round. Cards that were the most recently added, get tested first. This lets you review immediately newly added cards, regardless of how many untested cards were already on the stack.

Cards are always shuffled when they were added or expired on the same date. In other words, during review you get the cards in the order explained above, and within this order, groups of cards that fall on the same date get shuffled together.

Kanji

Reviewing is done from the keyword to the character, and not the other way around. As recommended in James Heisig's method, you should write down the characters while reviewing. Since the book teaches you the stroke order of all the components of the Japanese characters, being able to recall the kanji from the keyword means you are able to write every one of the kanji from memory. There is no planned support for testing kanji the other way round (there is however some sight-reading test/games planned).

Write down the character on a sheet of paper, or trace it in the palm of your hand, then press the Spacebar key or click 'Flip Card' to verify your answer :

Note that you can edit a story S during a review, and even the keyword (click the keyword).

If you were correct, answer 'Yes' otherwise answer 'No'. You can answer by clicking the buttons or using the Y, N and E keys.

Correctly answered cards will be promoted to the next card box, incorrectly answered cards will return to the red stack in box one. It is highly suggested that you do not settle for half answers, if you forgot even just a small part of the writing of the character, answer 'No'. You are your own judge, but keep in mind that it is is not a race. Also realise that because many kanji look similar, forgetting 'just one small stroke' here or there can make the difference between one kanji and another.

The 'Stats' panel shows you how many kanji you have been testing in this session so far, how many were answered correctly, and how many were answered incorrectly.

At the end of the session, or when you click the 'Skip to summary' button, you will be taken to the Review Summary screen :

The Review Summary lists the kanji that were not answered correctly during the review session.

The table can be sorted on any column by clicking on the column headers. In the example image above the review summary is sorted on the frame numbers.

Remembering The Kanji Pdf

Clicking any of the keywords will take you to the corresponding character in the Study area, where you can check your mnemonics, adapt them, or maybe use a mnemonic shared by another member if yours wasn't working so well.

FAQ

Tips for rating cards with the SRS

  • Use the Hard answer instead of 'No' to skip the Restudy pile (cards rated Hard never fall below the 1+ review pile)
  • Use the Hard answer for New cards if you want a fixed 1 day interval ( instead of the default 2-4 days)

How do I reset my flashcards?

Remembering The Kanji

First, note that stories and kanji flashcards are separate. With that in mind, you can simply delete all the flashcards, your stories won't be affected.

  1. Go to Remove Custom Flashcard Selection (from the Flashcards > Manage Flashcards menu)
  2. Enter 1-3000 and click Remove Flashcards, then confirm
  3. Now you can add cards back as you see fit, either one by one advancing through the Study pages (top right Add Card buton), or add in small batches via Manage Flashcards menu

I can not see Japanese characters in my browser.

In old versions of Windows and some OS'es you may have to enable 'East Asian languages support', or add the language support for Japanese specifically. Most Linux / Windows / OS X desktops these days already have Japanese and Chinese fonts included. You may also want to look into enabling the input method editor (IME) to input kanji.

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Literature/RememberingTheKanji

Go To

Students (and would-be) of Japanese from all over the world face one huge nightmare: Kanji. These thousands of random scribbles, each representing a word (or more) each, coupled by many pronunciations, incredibly complex, yet ingrained deeply into the Japanese language, requiring many, many hours of painstaking copying, but leaving the brain the day after, make the majority give up or at least minimise their importance.

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Enter James Heisig's Remembering the Kanji 1: A Complete Course on How Not To Forget the Meaning and Writing of Japanese Characters.

These books exploit a fact that is hidden in plain sight: the 'complicated' Kanji are actually made up of simpler Kanji. Pushing 'imaginative memory' (instead of 'visual memory'), James Heisig divides around 2.042 kanji into their 'primitive' parts (related to, but not consisting only of, 'radicals' that identify Kanji by their parts), assigns meanings to these 'primitives', then (at least in the beginning) makes silly stories that effectively tie the primitives to their source Kanji.

James Heisig wrote two sequels: Remembering the Kanji 2: A Systematic Guide to Reading Japanese Characters and Remembering the Kanji 3: Writing and Reading Japanese Characters for Upper-Level Proficiency. He also wrote books on how to remember the Kana (the Japanese syllabary) and a couple of books each on traditional and simplified Hanzi. There is also a website where people share stories on the characters among other stuff regarding Japanese and Chinese.

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Examples:

  • Artistic License – History: Those who read on the actual etymology of Kanji know that most characters are actually made by combining the meaning of one character with the sound of another character. This trope is justified, though, because the books are partially founded on the idea that the meaning and writing of Kanji not only can be studied separately from their pronunciations but are better done this way. The later books take advantage of this historical fact, though, when teaching the pronunciations.
  • Exactly What It Says on the Tin: The first book focuses just on learning the meaning and writing of Kanji. James Heisig discusses this trope in the Introduction, saying that memorising the meaning, pronunciation, and writing at the same time is too much. He eventually gets to the pronunciations in the second book.
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  • It Will Never Catch On: Just about everyone was against James Heisig's method of learning Kanji at first.
  • Pyrrhic Victory: James Heisig's book is all about defying this trope normally associated with learning the Kanji.

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