100-Day Kanji Sketch Pad: Daily Writing & Stroke Order Guide

100-Day Kanji Sketch Pad: Daily Writing & Stroke Order Guide

Overview

A focused 100-day practice workbook designed to build consistent kanji handwriting and stroke-order mastery through daily, incremental drills.

Who it’s for

  • Beginners learning kanji basics
  • Intermediate learners wanting handwriting improvement
  • Self-study students seeking structured daily practice

Key features

  • 100 daily pages each with: stroke-order diagrams, guided tracing, graduated blank practice grids (large → small), and example compounds.
  • Progressive syllabus: starts with 10 basic kanji then introduces new characters at a steady pace (about 5–8 new kanji per week) plus regular review days.
  • Stroke-order emphasis: clear numbered stroke sequences and directional arrows for every character.
  • Review system: built-in spaced-repetition schedule with checkboxes to mark retention at 1, 7, and 30 days.
  • Reference appendices: common radicals list, kanji readings summary, and quick tips for handwriting ergonomics.

Daily page layout (typical)

  1. Header: kanji, readings (onyomi/kunyomi), English meaning
  2. Stroke-order diagram with numbered steps
  3. 3–4 guided tracing rows (light gray strokes)
  4. 6–8 practice grids (decreasing cell size)
  5. Example words/compounds using the kanji
  6. Quick self-assessment checkboxes (1d/7d/30d)

Benefits

  • Builds consistent daily habit over a fixed, manageable timeframe.
  • Reinforces muscle memory through graduated practice grids and tracing.
  • Integrates reading and vocabulary by pairing kanji with compounds.
  • Simple progress tracking via checkboxes and milestone pages.

Usage plan (recommended)

  1. Spend 15–25 minutes daily.
  2. Day format: review previous day(s) for 5 minutes, learn new kanji (10–15 minutes), finish with 2–5 minutes of writing example compounds.
  3. Use review checkboxes to schedule spaced repetition.

Production suggestions (if creating the book)

  • Use 10–12 mm grid for initial large practice, down to 6–8 mm for smaller cells.
  • Print on 80–100gsm paper to minimize bleed-through.
  • Include perforated practice sheets for tear-out use.

Short example (Day 1)

  • Kanji: 日 — readings: onyomi: ニチ/ジツ, kunyomi: ひ — meaning: sun/day
  • Stroke-order diagram, 3 tracing rows, 8 practice cells, examples: 日本 (にほん), 日曜日 (にちようび)

If you want, I can produce a sample 7-day spread or a printable Day 1 page.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *