Day 1
Lesson 1 - It mainly just talks about the hiragana to 'a'. This was one of the first characters I've learned to write the first time I tried to study Japanese. I found this lesson easy, but good for completely knew starters. At the end of this lesson I made myself write a as あ ten times.
Lesson 2 - Goes over the rest of the first row in the Hiragana chart. I い, U う, E え, O お. This is helpful when writing the Hiragana, since it has tips about when and how you write. It helps more than just a plan chat. Again at the end of this I wrote the characters then times for practice with strokes. This lesson also came with words you can study, and are used in later lessons in their quiz! So be prepared!
This is where my first day ended.
Day 2
Lesson 3 - This is over Katakana for A ア, I イ, U ウ, E エ, O オ. This also has some helpful tips on how to make the katakana. Once again I made myself write the characters ten times for stroke practice.
Lesson 4 - I copied over the quiz, to my notebook I've been taking notes in and answered everything there, as more stroke practice for those I knew. The rest of the Lesson was ka か カ, ki き キ, ku く ク, ka か カ, ko こ コ in both Hiragana and Katakana, again its good to read and see what stroke order tips this lesson has. Its also good to copy down the hiragana and katakana for stroke practice ten times each!
I'd stop here or after lesson 3 and review. I did lesson 5 as well, but im thinking of taking tomorrow off from lessons and reviewing. To much in one day can set you back.
Lesson 5- This goes over the S-Row sa さ サ, shi し シ, su す ス, se せ セ, so そ ソ. Again go over the reading for the useful tips. Then practice the hiragana and katakana ten times.
At the very end of this lesson I took every hiragana and katakana learned and wrote them 15 times each. This way I could practice the stroke order and see what my week points were.
I'd say its a great idea to buy the Kana flash cards from White Rabbit and use those there. I know if you wanted you could print your own out, but I already owned these flash cards and found them useful here. I figured I tried to learn to much and needed some extra help.
Tomorrow I'll learn lesson 6 and then write every hiragana and katakana again 10-15-20 (ten times being I know it well - 15 time I kinda know it - 20 times I hardly know it) times depending on how well I know it. Then I'll quiz myself with the hiragana and katakana flash cards for a while pulling out the ones I'm getting good at.
The Rows I've been having the most trouble with are the rows newer to me. I.E. Ka-Ko Katakana and Sa-So Katakana and Hiragana.


