Hello,
i'm new here, this is a great forum with lots of helpful threads!
I just wanted to ask some of the more experienced japanese learners for some advice, as in how could I possible optimize my approach.
I learned the kana using Remember the Kana and basic grammar using the michel thomas method. I suppose it's much better than something like pimsleur because it doesn't just drill phrases but explains the basic grammar / markers to you. From what I've seen it's similar to Genki in some ways.
Right now I'm
- learning 15-20 kanji every day w/ RTK. I'm around 300 learned.
- listening to michel thomas advanced japanese lessons
- reading japanese graded readers level 1. (amazing, I recognize quite a few Kanji, how cool is that!)
- using Anki daily to repeat the learned Kanji.
I'm not sure what else I can do. With Anki vocab decks I'm encountering the problem that lots of Kanji are being used which I do not yet know. Also, I'm sceptical about learning vocab out of context. Isn't reading actual japanese material much more effective? After all that's also how I developed my English language skill.
Also I'm not sure about the subject of intense immersion. How good is listening to japanese (as in anime or j-drama) if I can't understand 90% of what is being said. I understand this is a controversial subject. I'd be very thankful for your perspective.
Also since I'm personally learning much more effectively with audio as opposed to textbooks, can anyonre recommend audio lessons once I've finished the Michel Thomas lessons?
Is japanesepod101 any good?
ありがとうございます!
i'm new here, this is a great forum with lots of helpful threads!
I just wanted to ask some of the more experienced japanese learners for some advice, as in how could I possible optimize my approach.
I learned the kana using Remember the Kana and basic grammar using the michel thomas method. I suppose it's much better than something like pimsleur because it doesn't just drill phrases but explains the basic grammar / markers to you. From what I've seen it's similar to Genki in some ways.
Right now I'm
- learning 15-20 kanji every day w/ RTK. I'm around 300 learned.
- listening to michel thomas advanced japanese lessons
- reading japanese graded readers level 1. (amazing, I recognize quite a few Kanji, how cool is that!)
- using Anki daily to repeat the learned Kanji.
I'm not sure what else I can do. With Anki vocab decks I'm encountering the problem that lots of Kanji are being used which I do not yet know. Also, I'm sceptical about learning vocab out of context. Isn't reading actual japanese material much more effective? After all that's also how I developed my English language skill.
Also I'm not sure about the subject of intense immersion. How good is listening to japanese (as in anime or j-drama) if I can't understand 90% of what is being said. I understand this is a controversial subject. I'd be very thankful for your perspective.
Also since I'm personally learning much more effectively with audio as opposed to textbooks, can anyonre recommend audio lessons once I've finished the Michel Thomas lessons?
Is japanesepod101 any good?
ありがとうございます!


