First candidate is all of the sentences from the first book or two in the Unko Sensei series. Now that I’ve found that there’s no need to worry about getting overwhelmed by having multiple decks, I’m thinking of adding more. Better to practice something a little more than you needed to, rather than less than you required. I give myself a bit more leeway on the translation of, for example, words like 'international/foreign student' or 'nice/pleased to meet you, how do you do, etc.' But when it comes to the Japanese, I try to be pretty hard on myself regarding kanji recognition, pronunciation, etc. As far as I'm concerned it was either Good/Satisfactory or Again/Wrong. I don't use the ‘Easy’ or 'Hard' options at all. When I click through to the answer, depending on whether I've got it right or not I'll click either 'Good' or ‘Again’. So now my method is: look at the card, read the phrase aloud, then say aloud "that means" followed by saying my translation aloud. Sometimes several versions with different voices. Each card also has full voice recordings that automatically play when you click to show the answer. But so far they've all been pretty common kanji that I was already comfortable with. It also uses kanji from the start, and you don't get the furigana until you click through to the answer, which could be a bit harsh depending on how many kanji you‘ve already been exposed to. The JLPT deck mostly uses the vocabulary in phrases, which is more useful for remembering and understanding the usage (although, I've just been through a batch where it felt it was essential to go through every month of the year, and also a whole load of one person, two people, three people, six people, etc.) The other deck is the one recommended in this video called 'JLPT Tango N5 MIA Japanese' (it is a deck that has been built to go along with the JLPT Tango N5 study book*.) Over a month later and it still seems to be working for me, which is better than I've ever managed with it - every time I've tried, I've bounced off pretty hard and pretty fast. This way, I can control how far ahead it goes. Firstly I have a 'Genki' deck, which I'm manually populating with the vocabulary from the vocab pages in each chapter. But if you’ve never used Anki at all, it’s a very good guide to getting it set up and starting to use it.Īs a result of watching this video, I have developed a way of using Anki that seems to be working for me. It's a bit long, as it covers every detail of how to use it, and exactly how she has all the settings configured. On that channel Alivia has a video specifically about using Anki to study Japanese that has been very useful to me. I’d pretty much given up trying, and then I discovered the Alivia’s Japanese Nook YouTube channel. Of course, this is also the reason it has been possible to adapt it for so many different subjects. Anki doesn’t guide you or force you to work with it in a specific way, and the design of the cards is almost infinitely configurable. Also, I'd then be constantly having the dilemma of "do I put this in, or is it not worth it, or how can I add this in a meaningful way, that I'd understand why it was there when I came back to it?"Ī big part of the problem is how open and flexible the system is. (Note from Fran - you can “suspend” all the cards and manually “unsuspend” them as you work your way through a textbook, although I appreciate this is a bit fiddly!)Ī lot of people recommended that you should use a single deck, and dump everything you came across into it, which seems a bit too messy for my liking. Some people recommended that you should download a pre-made deck to match the textbook you are using (there is a huge library of decks submitted by users accessible from within Anki.) But I felt this would mean that it would start automatically adding vocabulary past the point I’d got to in the book. While I saw Anki mentioned and recommended everywhere, I could never figure out a way to use it that really worked for me. It was originally developed for language learning (being named after the Japanese word for ‘memorisation’) but has since been applied to many subjects, including medical studies. If you can’t remember (or remember incorrectly) it will show it to you again sooner. If you remember the card correctly, it will increase the length of time before it shows it to you again. You should be able to recall the information, but at a slight stretch. It does this by aiming to present you with a flashcard exactly at the point you were about to forget it. A special guest post from Step Up Japanese student Phil Kinchington!Īnki is a flashcard app that uses a Spaced Repetition System (SRS) to help you learn and memorise information by creating strong, long-lasting memories.
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