Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
Welcome to TF!
You can use the following thread to track your progress and share your ideas/concerns when you finish a season (gain a level ^_^):
http://www.textfugu.com/bb/topic/textfugu-season-completions-for-great-motivation-of-heart/
がんばって!
Welcome to TF! ^_^
You can use the following thread to track your progress and share your ideas/concerns when you finish a season:
http://www.textfugu.com/bb/topic/textfugu-season-completions-for-great-motivation-of-heart/
がんばって!
September 6, 2012 at 8:48 am in reply to: TextFugu Season Completions for Great Motivation of Heart! #35246Yeah, definitely inspirational for those of us still working through the seasons. ^_^
Speaking of which, you guys who have done the JLPT N3, was that the first one you did, or did you already complete the lower levels?
- This reply was modified 12 years, 2 months ago by Aikibujin.
September 6, 2012 at 6:56 am in reply to: TextFugu Season Completions for Great Motivation of Heart! #35242Grats guys!
Unfortunately I’ve been hooked on Guild Wars 2 the last week, so haven’t made much progress. >_<
Just looking at cards is very boring to me. Using my iphone/ipad, I use google images and find photos that express the adjective. I save these in an album and call out the Japanese word during the slideshow.
LOL, sounds cool just make sure the pictures really do correspond to the actual word. Otherwise I could see some embarrassing situations arising.
One of my instructors got me to do that once, and it was just annoying as they got everywhere.
It’s a good idea, but I think a better way would just be to add the words to your Anki deck. So every week look around your house and identify a certain number of objects that you don’t know and add them to your deck.
I do this myself as well.
But I actually have a system on top of this, rather than just doing that alone.
I began my Japanese learning myself before I started TF, so I have about 700 Japanese flashcards that I’ve done up, that I’m still working through, which I created at various points when I was studying Japanese in a classroom environment.
I’ve learned about 2/3 of the cards with certainty, but the others are harder for me to absorb for whatever reason.
I basically divide them into a daily deck, weekly deck, and monthly deck. When I drill myself on the daily cards, if I get one correct 5 times (5 days), I move it into the weekly deck, if I get a weekly card correct 4 times, I move it to the monthly deck. If I get a monthly card correct 4 times, I semi retire the card as learned, and I occasionally will go through that pile making sure that I know everything at first glance, if not, it goes back to the daily pile.
As far as the post its go, if I have a card that I get wrong twice in the weekly or monthly deck, I put it back to the daily deck. If this happens twice with any card, then I make a post it of it and put it on my monitor just as you do.
A bit more complicated, but it tends to stop my monitor from being crowded with post its.
Also as a side note, any Anki cards that I have particular problems with, I make a physical flashcard for and put it through the above process. So I’d have to be having a whole lot of trouble with an Anki word before it becomes a post it. The only one I’ve had to do that with so far is the word for police officer and nearly for subway. Those words just wouldn’t stick in my brain for whatever reason.
I got the idea from when my ESL students were having problems with words and I noticed that my housemate at the time used post its to remind him about things on his monitor. They seemed to have good results with this as well.
Basically it’s just a case of saturation. The more you see something the more you will remember it, as they say, out of sight out of mind. You may be correct however, in that it’s only getting stored short term. Even if you learn a word fairly well, if you were having problems with it before, it’s going to fade away over time.
So as Kanjiman said you need to start using these in sentences.
What I got my students to do was to make huge lists of the words they knew and to break them down into categories: Nouns, Adjectives, and Verbs.
Then I got them to make a separate list of situations they could be in where these words would be used.
For instance a very basic word list:
Apple, banana, food, drink, chair, table, male, female, child, puppy, ball, winter, summer, rain, insects, and textbook.
Situation list:
Having lunch at a cafeteria, eating a snack at school, walking your puppy through a park, daydreaming in class, etc.
So then you would take the situation and try to write a story about it using as many of the words that you know. If you don’t know enough to make a story then just try to write as many related sentences about it.
My students were a lot more advanced so their situations were more like: Renewing your visa at the embassy, applying for a driver’s license, etc.
This helps you retain the words you know, and also points out new words you need to learn if you are trying to make a story and can’t figure out how to explain a part of it.
Obviously this will only be helpful once you get to the point that you do know around 15-20 each of Nouns, Verbs, and Adjectives, so you may need more time if you aren’t there yet.
Yeah your own mnemonics will always work better than someone else’s. Using other’s can be helpful though as it can be difficult to come up with so many of them on your own. So if you read one and it seems to click, use that one, or even modify it slightly to personalize it, but if it seems hard for your brain to wrap around, you need to come up with your own.
The most effective mnemonics are ones that pop into your head immediately upon viewing/hearing whatever it is you are trying to remember. So take a look at it without thinking too hard about it at all, and see what’s the first thing that pops up. Then take that thing, try to engage all your senses in it as much as you can, and then try to give it a bit of a bizarre twist.
Koichi uses the same standard rules (I can tell by how he describes them), but since he is using the first thing that pops into his head, that can be very hard for someone else to link to.
I think he meant what’s the difference between the literary radical and the writing radical…
Welcome to TF!
You can use the following thread to track your progress and share your ideas/concerns when you finish a season:
http://www.textfugu.com/bb/topic/textfugu-season-completions-for-great-motivation-of-heart/
がんばって!
Welcome to TF!
You can use the following thread to track your progress and share your ideas/concerns when you finish a season:
http://www.textfugu.com/bb/topic/textfugu-season-completions-for-great-motivation-of-heart/
がんばって!
Welcome to TF!
You can use the following thread to track your progress and share your ideas/concerns when you finish a season:
http://www.textfugu.com/bb/topic/textfugu-season-completions-for-great-motivation-of-heart/
がんばって!
August 26, 2012 at 10:19 pm in reply to: TextFugu Season Completions for Great Motivation of Heart! #34982Grats Clement!
がんばって!
@Bbvoncrumb WTF….
The only thing I got from your video is: something about spaghetti and maybe throwing the girl out the window…
@_@
I think there’s a typo in TF somewhere, though I’ve now seen this mentioned somewhere else before:
“if it has multiple Kanji together, or it’s by itself, you know it’s the ON reading”
That was from Koichi, but it’s actually the KUN reading most of the time when they are by themselves, except for numbers and a few other exceptions.
-
AuthorPosts