New kanji often means that you now have questions available for vocabulary that include that kanji.
Say you have been learning たべる, then you learn the kanji 食. It now says "Great, instead of giving them たべる and asking for the meaning, I can now ask for 食べる. Their mastery of kanji > meaning is 0, so we need to start working that up"
New kanji often means that you now have questions available for vocabulary that include that kanji.
Say you have been learning たべる, then you learn the kanji 食. It now says "Great, instead of giving them たべる and asking for the meaning, I can now ask for 食べる. Their mastery of kanji > meaning is 0, so we need to start working that up"
Does that mean that those questions won't show up if:
1. I skip a lower kanji schedule and miss that kanji
Yes and yes. However, the metric for whether or not a kanji appears is NOT if you have studied it on renshuu. Rather, it is if the kanji is "known" (the light bulb icon).
This can be turned on by tapping the icon, studying the kanji, or using one of the tools (such as Kanji Index or Advanced Search) to quickly mark 10s if not 100s of kanji as known at once. This is perfect for "catching up" on kanji you already know from studying elsewhere, and want renshuu to know this, but don't actually want to study the kanji in a schedule.