A Little About what makes ILearnedKanji Web-App Unique


Graph generated from user's Kanji study on the ILearnedKanji Quizzing-App
Graph Showing 466 days of Kanji Study Month by Month ==========>>

No need for pretty graphics and walls of text

I needed an application that could help me learn Japanese Kanji in the fastest, most efficient, and while retaining the most possible from what I have learned. The result is a condensed Kanji Quiz.

You really do decide your pace with ILearnedKanji Quizzing App. The only stipulation to this is having to complete a kanji test to progress through the app. That's it

While the Quiz App is fully functional, I still strive to improve and re-invent it. Your help would be most appreciated as any feedback is valuable because I aim to make ILearnedKanji Kanji-Quiz the leading app for learning Japanese Kanji. See what a condensed Kanji drill app can do for your study. Thanks!


The good:

Fast
As fast as you want to take it. ILearnedKanji Kanji-Quiz allows you to laser-focus on learning Kanji, only Kanji, at your pace.

Just Kanji
Blow through Kanji as fast as possible. Use ILearnedKanji Kanji-app to suppliment your Japanese, enjoy Kanji used in sentences!

Learn Kanji with no distractions
Quiz daily. Learn more Kanji. No Fluff

Promise to You, the learner
Effort doesn't return void. Quiz yourself. Recollect kanji, not recognize; Learn useful vocabulary and conjugation rules, through Kanji.

Retention Rate
Repetition and enough forms/types of input, "brain links." Flashcards are the quickest for learning, but retention suffers without output ( writing/typing/speaking ).

Tips?
If you don't write down what you are memorizing, you simply will forget quicker. Writing takes time, so I've compromised on typing instead( You may still write though )
Reason? Okay, think of any test you have taken. Have you once studied and said, "yeah, I'll ace this test," then find you can't remember the answer? You probably didn't try studying by taking a mock test. Your brain will fool you, take a mock test to discern what you really know. That's a trick I learned in college. Saved me from failing a few classes actually.