I apologize if this already exists somewhere, I just haven’t found it yet. I’m currently using several scripts, but am looking for a script that only reviews Kanji and radicals. I have the WaniKani self study quiz already, but I didn’t see a way to customize it only to quiz me on kanji.
Does anyone know if such a script exists that will allow me to only select the kanji and radicals for self review.
I plan to do everything in WaniKani, but I also want to just keep doing a quick review every day of all the kanji I’ve learned so far so that recall is lightning fast. This is the way I imagine I will be able to do get to that point.
I guess I’ll ask that question too here, and maybe in another post. Anyone have tips for studying kanji to improve recall speed? As in recognizing the meaning/reading as soon as you see the kanji?
This probably isn’t helpful to you, and I’m not trying to be a smart alec, but I find the vocab on WK reinforces my recall of the kanji a lot. That is, I can recognise them more reliably when they’re in conjunction with other kanji and as part of words, more so than when a random lone symbol comes back to haunt me from a distant level and my mind goes blank Context innit I suppose. Which is how they exist in the wild I guess.
I appreciate the response. I agree with you. I just feel like it would be more manageable for me to do 200 kanji reviews every day at the moment, than go through a huge pile of randomized vocab and hope I hit every Kanji. I plan to keep doing the WaniKani stuff as is, going through the reviews and vocab, but I would also love to go through all the kanji I’ve learned up to this point while I’m still in the earlier levels every night before bed.
If I’m understanding you correctly, are you wanting to study WK’s kanji outside of WK? If that’s the case, I recommend http://www.zjchapman.com/kanjiroids/ It’s a fast (space invaders style) review game. You can set it to kanji only and enter your api key so it’s only kanji you’ve studied as well. Personally, I use it more for vocab, but the way I do it is if I can’t remember the meaning, I’ll intentionally let the word fail so that it flashes on the screen. It’s good for improving your speed since you only have a limited time to answer with the correct reading.