掲示板 Forums - Help, does anyone know how to organize the renshuu?
Top > renshuu.org > Questions about renshuu Getting the posts
Top > renshuu.org > Questions about renshuu
Is there any way to make the renshuu more organized? Like, out of nowhere it teaches me that juu is 10, but it doesn't teach me the other numbers, like a fragmented teaching method, and this is really
You'd eventually practice more snd you'd learn them all over time, so keep practicing and that won't really be an issue.
The only ways to have any sorting is pretty limited. You'd have to rebuild the schedule if it doesn't have a coherent order to begin with, so that would mean making a new schedule to replace it.
Hi, could you teach me how to rebuild the Renshuu as well? I'd like to put it in a concise order🙏
Make a new schedule. Use a list/schedule of stuff you want to study. Add them in order, it should populate in order.
You're in complete control over what you learn in Renshuu. If the default study path isn't working for you, there are plenty of other pre-made options to choose from in Manage Your Schedules, or you can just make a new empty schedule to fill with whatever custom materials you want.
Since you mentioned numbers as an example, go to Community Lists under Resources in the menu, search for "numbers", and then pick whatever list looks most helpful to you to add to a schedule. You can do this with any topic you like.
Sorry to bother you again, I'm new here, how do I create an empty schedule?
To make a new schedule, click the "Manage Your Schedules" link under the list of schedules on your dashboard. Then switch to the "All Schedules" tab (green magnifying glass) to select from any of the premade options or make your own.
Make an empty, completely customizable schedule by selecting "Make my own", and then clicking the button for whatever type of terms (words, kanji, grammar, sentences) you want that schedule to use. Then you can add content to the schedule by clicking "Add/remove materials" in that schedule's settings, finding lists in Community Lists and clicking the calendar button next to them, or looking up things in the dictionary and clicking the + button on the dictionary entry.
Thank you! Can I also write and customize my own schedule the way I want without having to get it from someone else?
Yes, you can create your own lists to put in a schedule by clicking the "Make a new list" button on the front page of Community Lists, or just add whatever terms you find individually.
Wow,You're helping me so much, thank you 😭. One last thing, I added something to a schedule I created, but I can't make it studyable, how do I do that?
That depends on what you mean by 'not studyable'.
If the term is new, and you are not presented with new terms before the review quiz starts when you press the "Study" button on your schedule (or if the button says "Focussed review" instead of "Study"), you may have reached your maximum number of new terms for the day/week, and Renshuu will prevent you from adding more until tomorrow/next week. In your schedule settings, click the link for "More settings" to see what your limits are and change them; "Daily study goal", "New terms per quiz", and "Max new terms" are all options that can restrict how much you can study.
If you know the term already and it's just not appearing in a quiz when you press the "Study" button, then it's not ready to be reviewed yet. Renshuu's schedules are a spaced-repetition system (SRS), which means your quiz questions are timed to be presented to you after a delay, to give you the best chance of the term making it into your long-term memory. You need to wait until the term becomes ready to review according to the SRS before you will be asked about it.
If the term is explicitly flagged as "Can't study" (there is a number in red with the label "can't study" when you go to your schedule's page), that means that there is a mismatch between the study vectors (question types) you have enabled and the type of data the term has. e.g. if you only have kanji-related vectors enabled, but the term is a word spelled with katakana, it can't be studied because it doesn't have any kanji-related vectors.