I have named the lists
RSL1
RSL2
RSL3
RSL4
RSL5
so that students of the five levels of study may find and use them.
I was able to extract text containing Hanxgi Pinyin and English and place it into Microsoft Word 2007. I used the REPLACE function to strip away all of the English alphabet, numerals, punctuation, etc. Then I wrote a simple macro to press space bar and right arrow a few hundred times (to the max that a macro can be) and used that to separate the Chinese characters with spaces so that I could paste the entire level into http://www.online-utility.org/text/analyzer.jsp and generated a vocabulary sorted by frequency of occurrence. That vocabulary table is easily pasted into a Google Document Spreadsheet. Once I had my five spreadsheets, it was easy to use the Skritter word list tool to create my lists. At first I tried to create a simple list but realized the 200 limit. So I deleted that list and created LARGE lists with sections. As I saved each section I told Skritter to delete the duplicates.
A new Skritter user does not immediately see all the many powerful features.
For example, I like to watch stroke order animations so I went to the SETTINGS section and set animation speed to its slowest. Then all I need do is click and hold on the ? and watch the stroke animation until I have memorized it. THEN I go to http://nciku.com and practice the strokes. I also have MS Word 2007 open and I can paste the character, the pinyin with tone number, and take notes.
Just tonight I happened to notice mention of the mnemonic system for characters so I am going to hunt that down.
I had one interesting idea. I am age 62. I thought perhaps Chinese character study might me recommended to retired people as a better way than crossword puzzles to exercise the memory and avoid or stave off problems like Alzheimers. One woman in my building studied Chinese for a few years and commented that drawing the characters has a calming, meditative effect. I have only been studying for two months and I notice what seem like slight improvements in cognitive and emotive functions. I think part of it is that I feel like my school days were I had to memorize many things. At first it seems like an impossibly slow task but then suddenly the mind adapts and things become easier somehow. We are very adaptive creatures if we push ourselves. Of course, the desire must be there, at least a desire or motive of some kind, whether it is the practical need to communicate with Chinese speakers or whether it is an intellectual goal to broaden ones horizons.