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sup3t33180 wrote:I have been studying hard in the past three days and i have managed to learn hiragana. So now i will chew my way through the katakana and after that i will have to get to the kanji part.
My question is, how do i practice kanji in a structured way?
Javizy wrote:If you don't like the idea of RTK, I still strongly advise a systematic approach. Attempting to learn kanji as you meet them is a recipe for disaster. What if you meet 憩 before 舌, 自 and 心? Even 舌 can be broken down to 千 and 口. You rob yourself of the opportunity to simply assemble "building blocks" that you already know. Instead you have to force a high number of strokes to memory with little foundation. People succeed with different methods, so I guess the most important thing is finding one you can commit to, since its consistency that ultimately leads to mastery.
confusionary9335 wrote:One question I have for anyone who has finished RTK is, what did you do after? Because if I understand the method correctly RTK doesn't teach any readings or words at all. You can only identify the characters and have a general sense of their meaning from the keywords. So how did you take the next step, and did you think that RTK was ultimately helpful or could you have done just as well without it?
ありがとうございます!
choneb9359 wrote:In the two days spent looking at RTK I have "learned" about 150 kanjis, not including the other 90 or so I learned with the learn-as-you-go method. I put learned in " " because it still require a lot of revision before I commit it to my long term memory.
mmmason8967 wrote:How's it going, now that you're a week further in?
I've never found the idea of RTK very appealing, mainly, I suppose, because the impression I had about it is that it doesn't teach the characters in context. But a lot of people seem to like it, and I'm finding the learn-as-you-go method to be difficult and a bit hit-and-miss, so I'm very interested in how effective you're finding it.
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