aphasiac Wrote:ta12121 Wrote:Strengths(What I can do at the moment)
-Watch anime(90%+ understanding)
-Dramas/movies(80% understanding)
I'd like to know how your audio comprehension got so good.
Everything seems based around reading and/or recognising the kanji in their written forms; you have no listening deck. Can you talk us through your listening practise?
Listening deck? I had never used those types of stuff. Reason why is, well I didn't need to train those skills(What i mean by those things is that. There are some formats that go from listening(question card) to kanji/kana(answer card). It does train the skills but I prefer kana(question card) to kanji(answer card) for writing vocab/sentences in my production deck.(Also RTK1+3 reviews are in there two, makes my life easier when working with 3 main decks designed for 3 different things. Vocab for reading/listening/understanding. Sentence deck for context/reading/understanding. Production for sole purpose of just writing from memory(kana to kanji).
I'd say it's vocab/listening a lot. I know that might seem like a general thing, but how would one improve listening skills without listening?
Having audio is good for your decks, as if you hear it anywhere else your definitely going to remember it/understand it right from the get go.
When I gave the 90%,80%. That's what I've felt I could understand, meaning for the 90% I can pretty much understand all of it, some things get by me still but overall I can understand almost all of it. 80% for drama's refer to, I can understand a good solid portion of it, still a good amount get's by. But the gap is closing for that for me. Vocab deck is saving me so much trouble. As what I srs I can hear and recongize instantly.
Also if you want to get a better grasp of understanding of animes/movies. Try monolingual, with full kanji sentences. Those are the best, as they make you want to understand japanese in it's full form. I did start this in the beginning of my japanese studies but I felt I couldn't understand it well. What happen is that, after a while. Got more accustomed to japanese, it becomes easier. That's the key factor in this, adaption. I also listened to japanese as my main media, instead of an english show, japanese tv, instead of regular music, j-music. Instead of english OP for Windows 7, full japanese one. You gotta force yourself to understand, meaning you can't always rely on the English translation. My media nowadays is 80%+ japanese. I don't like watching english stuff(not that i mean it, but for the immersion factor I need to keep japanese up and strong)
But one reason why is vocab/a lot of kanji reading/kanji srsing. Those are the most things I do daily. Even though I still think I suck horribly, I feel it due time, I'll be owning japanese(meaning fluency) if I keep at it.
Edited: 2010-06-26, 3:12 pm