Is it worth writing down kanji while using anki?

I’ve been using anki to memorize kanji with anki while writing them down at the same time or will it be faster if I didn’t write them down if my goal is to be able to read and not writing

5 comments
  1. It depends on you. Writing them down helps me memorise them better. However, there people who consider that there’s no influence if you write them down or not. I also enjoy it, I really like Kanji characters. So, even if it takes me longer to do my daily Anki review, I’m not getting overwhelmed by doing it.

    Btw, I only write down the ones that are new or the ones I forgot…

  2. I cannot tell you if it will help you personally or not, but I tried it in the beginning and it did not seem to help me at all with recognition. Even if it had helped a little, it was a lot of effort and IMO that effort is better spent elsewhere.

  3. I don’t use Anki, personally (I use WaniKani for kanji), but I do feel like for me, writing them helps me commit them to memory better than otherwise not doing it. That said, that’s very much a me thing; I also use it as an excuse to use my pens, because I like using them, but that’s neither here nor there.

    If you think it might help you, give it a go. If you have a printer handy, find a printable genkouyoushi layout (or make one yourself; it’s what I did at one point, though that didn’t work for me), or if you don’t, buy something like Kokuyo Campus paper (as an example) or a notepad that’s either squared or dotted.

  4. I think it’s a good idea when learning the first ~500 or so. Knowing the stroke order helped me with similar character recognition and especially being able to read weird fonts and poor handwriting.

    After that I think it gets less useful since the kanji just start being slight variations of each other or just lego-blocked together. I still do cards where I’m prompted for a kanji from the meaning+readings but rather than physically write it out I just need to picture it in my head. e.g. for 析 I’d just make sure I pictured 木 on the left and 斤 on the right and if I did I pass the card.

  5. Depends. If Anki alone is enough for you to remember them and being able to read them it’s not necessary. Personally I write them down and then use Anki because otherwise I won’t be able to remember but this is just me, also in my experience writing takes time so it’s not exactly faster

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