Whew! I’m impatient to finish now. I’m now trying to figure out what my next step will be. I’m considering a) following the JapanesePOD101.com lessons; b) studying Reading Japanese by Jordan; c) learning the Basic Kanji text; and d) continuing with Japanese the Spoken Language. It’ll probably be a combination of some of the above.
Rick's Life List
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1. learn Japanese
2 entries . 5 cheers9,721 people -
2. Complete Remembering the Kanji in 2006
6 entries . 3 cheers1 person -
3. Complete Japanese the Spoken Language (Part 1) in 2006
1 entry . 1 cheer1 person -
4. Write a screenplay
4 entries . 6 cheers2,189 people -
5. Meditate daily
6 entries . 4 cheers3,979 people -
6. Learn calligraphy
1 entry . 2 cheers449 people -
7. Take a vacation
1 entry471 people -
8. Spend less time fooling around on the net and more time actually working
3 cheers5,506 people
I’m not inspired to write scripts for the time being. Fiction is appealing to me more. Something about direct communication with the reader, creating the finished work yourself.
I decided I need a computer program to help me review. After a very frustrating time with Supermemo (a colossal mess of a progam), I found a page on 43 Things that recommended a program called FullRecall (see http://www.fullrecall.com). It’s very simple to learn and use, and it’s affordable ($20).
The way it works is, you enter or import your items to learn, flashcards basically. Then you rate how well you know each item. Based on your ratings, the program decides when to present you with the next repetition of each item. It waits longer for items you know and shorter for those you don’t. The point is to save time by not reviewing items you know very well.
I’ve imported all of the Heisig Kanji, and I’m looking forward to using the program. Unfortunately, I’ll have to start back at number 1. But the good part is that I’ll be continually reviewing them as I go, daily.
