<HTML>There is no need to reinvent the wheel--sometimes a change of tires will
suffice.
I have been studying a "Perek Yomi" in Tanakh for years according to a
schedule published by the Rabbanut haTzva'it appearing in the annual
calendars they distribute to hayyalim. By this schedule, you finish Tanakh
in a single year at the rate of two perakim a day (don't worry, Tehillim
119 is not studied in a single day)--based upon the assumption that Torah
and hameish megillot will be read in the course of a year anyway. [There
is also a schedule for Mishnah yomit, halakhah yomit, and Rambam yomi, as
well!
There is another schedule, published by the World Jewish Bible Society,
which has a calendar for completing Tanakh in a triennial cycle.
Given that Talmud study is the legacy of BAVEL, perhaps we should
deliberately use the triennial cycle for Tanakh study in order to provide
a zeikher (NOT zekher) of the legacy of Eretz Yisrael, too?</HTML>