These are the steps I'm going to take to achieve literacy and get my listening comprehension up to scratch. The grouping of the list indicates which things I'll attempt to do concurrently (within reason). I'll be immersing throughout the process via anime, radio, etc. as well as mining sentences from every resource along the way (i+1). Of course, all of it is subject to change.
1. Learn Kana
2.Assimil
3.Remembering the Kanji
4. Learn Japanese the Manga Way
5. Core 2k + adding example sentences
6. Manga (Yatsubato and such)
7. Tae Kim
8. A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Grammar*
9. An Introduction to Japanese - Syntax, Grammar & Language*
10. Colloquial Japanese*
11. Genki I and II*
12. All About Particles
13. A Dictionary of Intermediate Grammar
14. Dramas/anime/movies subs2srs
15. Core 6k
16. Light novels
...and beyond.
*In no particular order, on no particular timeline; as I go.
Although Assimil doesn't explicitly teach you grammar, you will develop a feel for it (I speak from experience with the Russian and Dutch course), so it seemed like an ideal place to start. Also the audio tracks contain the scripts from the course book, and they speed up as the course progresses. I have a feeling it will keep my mind occupied while learning the kanji.
I'm one of those reasonably intelligent people who are less concerned with results and more concerned with improving the overall process... which more often than not leads to better results. When I've done all of this and feel comfortable, I'll probably jump on Lang-8 and find a cute Japanese girl to skype with-- because apparently interacting with actual human beings matters when learning a language.
Question: Should I be trying to get to a point where I can drill vocab without necessarily needing to add full sentences, similar to where I am with my English (somewhere between 10k and 20k active vocab)?
Sorry this post is all over the place, but if anyone sees any way I can improve this process, or would simply like to share some of their wisdom/experiences it would really help me out.
1. Learn Kana
2.Assimil
3.Remembering the Kanji
4. Learn Japanese the Manga Way
5. Core 2k + adding example sentences
6. Manga (Yatsubato and such)
7. Tae Kim
8. A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Grammar*
9. An Introduction to Japanese - Syntax, Grammar & Language*
10. Colloquial Japanese*
11. Genki I and II*
12. All About Particles
13. A Dictionary of Intermediate Grammar
14. Dramas/anime/movies subs2srs
15. Core 6k
16. Light novels
...and beyond.
*In no particular order, on no particular timeline; as I go.
Although Assimil doesn't explicitly teach you grammar, you will develop a feel for it (I speak from experience with the Russian and Dutch course), so it seemed like an ideal place to start. Also the audio tracks contain the scripts from the course book, and they speed up as the course progresses. I have a feeling it will keep my mind occupied while learning the kanji.
I'm one of those reasonably intelligent people who are less concerned with results and more concerned with improving the overall process... which more often than not leads to better results. When I've done all of this and feel comfortable, I'll probably jump on Lang-8 and find a cute Japanese girl to skype with-- because apparently interacting with actual human beings matters when learning a language.
Question: Should I be trying to get to a point where I can drill vocab without necessarily needing to add full sentences, similar to where I am with my English (somewhere between 10k and 20k active vocab)?
Sorry this post is all over the place, but if anyone sees any way I can improve this process, or would simply like to share some of their wisdom/experiences it would really help me out.
Edited: 2014-02-02, 4:53 am


