Is this a good way of making a workflow?

I’m not sure if this or anything similar has been posted before but I looked and couldn’t find anything which answered my question

I’ve gotten to around JLPT-N4 level by working rather sporadically and am looking for a more consistent and organized way to learn Japanese. I put together workflows based on the times I would be able to study on any given day

For example, if I have only 30 minutes: first 15 minutes I’d do flashcards (kanji and vocab combined) and the remaining 15 I would spend doing work in Genki/the textbook I’m using

If I have 3 hours, on the other hand, the first 20 minutes I’d do flashcards, then 20-60 would be textbook work, 60-120 would be kanji writing practice, 120-160 would be writing down vocab (helps me remember), and 160-180 would be flashcards again

Is this a good way of setting up workflows? Is it too structured? Is it better to just finish things when you finish?

1 comment
  1. It really depends on you because someone like myself, I could go 10 hours a day with learning japanese. Except not everyone can do 10 hours a day so at the end of the day we can’t really make your study schedule since it might not be for you

Leave a Reply
You May Also Like