I’ve just finished re-doing my previous Joyo Kanji courses that got destroyed by the comma change. Here’s the result:
The course consists of 255 levels, containing all 2116 kanji officially in use in Japan today. The kanji are split to sets of 25, with one level for meanings in English, a second for Kun-readings (sort of meanings in Japanese) and a third for On-readings (Sino-Japanese pronounciation usually used in multi-kanji compounds).
The ordering of the Kanji is based primarily on the school year and secondarily on the commonness, which is why the order may appear strange at times (for instance, the numerals are in a scrambled order in the first two sets of levels). Please do let me know if I messed something up creating the course.
Shout out to Monash University’s Electronic Dictionary Research and Development Group for the Kanjidic 2 data I used to put this course together.