Hi everyone!
I haven't been posting that much lately, sorry about that
I posted a sound-clip of my Japanese (http://chirb.it/kxn99p) the other day, resulting in some forum-members asking me to write about how I study Japanese. I really didn't want to do it, because I was afraid of looking like a "Mr. Know-it-all" when it comes to language learning. However, I've tried and failed a lot when it comes to learning in general, so I thought that maybe - just maybe - some of my experiences and ideas could be of some sort of help.
First off, both my English and Japanese are still a work in progress. I still struggle with them both, but I do feel that I've made good progress, especially during the last two years that I've been studying Japanese.
A quick "background story":
- I've been studying Japanese since August 2009 (not including RTK).
- The first thing I did after RTK was learning hiragana / katakana.
- Then I went through the first half of Tae Kim's grammar guide, got bored and stopped.
- After that, I worked REALLY hard on the KO2001 books and finished inputting them into Anki within a couple of months.
- I added all the sentences from Kanzen Master 2級 after that.
- Christmas 2009 - Started using Subs2SRS to mine sentences from variety shows (especially London Hearts)
- Summer 2010 - Stopped adding sentences, started adding single words only.
- September 2010 - June 2011 - Worked as a volunteer in Japan. Did not study much (added around 4-5000 words during that year), but my friends were all Japanese.
What I'm doing now:
- Adding 30 words a day.
- Working on N1 grammar
- Learning Japanese names
- KO2001 Production (single words, not sentences)
Additional info:
- I've been listening to Japanese non-stop for two years (iPod <3)
- TV, movies, games, books - all media has been, and still is, Japanese only.
- I hardly spoke Japanese the first year.
I don't want to go through the last two years in detail (but please ask if you have any questions!), but I want to talk about some topics that I think are really, really important.
Practice / Study:
I'm a musician. I've been playing the drums since I was 9, and I worked as a pro musician for one year after high-school (that really, really sucked, but that's a different story
)
Anyway, one thing I learned from practicing the drums was:
Practice a lot. Practice every day. Practice does not make perfect - perfect practice makes perfect.
What I mean is - you have to put in the time. Every day. It makes everything easier. It becomes a habit, you feel yourself improving, and motivation follows.
BUT do not fool yourself by saying "I've been studying for 8 hours today! I will become awesome in Japanese". Hours mean nothing, if it's time wasted.
Why do you study Japanese? To be able to talk and function as an adult in Japan? If so, you have to study in order to do just that. If you spend every day studying extremely rare kanji, words you never hear, know twenty words for "sword" but can't hold a basic conversation, then you are, in my humble opinion, wasting your time.
Work hard in the beginning:
The first 6 months are hard, very hard. It doesn't have to be boring or painful (I had a blast!
), but you won't understand much and it will take a long time to learn new things. I remember spending up to 8 hours every day during the first 3 months. Nowadays I hardly study more than 2 hours (not including reviews) and still make great progress.
It's not a linear process, it gets easier. Keep this in your head during the beginner-phase - it'll pay off later
Accent:
I tried to write about how to develop good pronunciation in a language, but then I figured it would be so much easier to just make a video about it. I rarely speak English nowadays, so I'm pretty rusty, but if you're interested in the topic, please take a look and tell what you think
All in all - I really don't feel that I've been studying in a very different way compared to all the other hardworking guys on this forum. I've been studying hard every day, kept on doing it, and had fun during the process. I always focus on 「doing stuff」 instead of 「thinking about how it should be done」. New language learning books, games, software, methods... all that stuff is good, but look at it this way:
A friend of mine owns over 20 guitars, a lot of amps and all kinds of DVDs, books etc.
His skills? REALLY bad.
Another friend of mine rents a violin. He owns a couple of CDs and two instruction books given to him by his teacher.
When I heard him play I cried. It was just amazing.
There you have it. Some random thoughts about language learning, music and life in general. Please ask me if you have any questions. Like I said, I'm a student, just like you guys. All I know is based on what worked for me and what didn't.
I hope this can be of some sort of help or inspiration, but if it's not... then, well, I tried
I haven't been posting that much lately, sorry about that

I posted a sound-clip of my Japanese (http://chirb.it/kxn99p) the other day, resulting in some forum-members asking me to write about how I study Japanese. I really didn't want to do it, because I was afraid of looking like a "Mr. Know-it-all" when it comes to language learning. However, I've tried and failed a lot when it comes to learning in general, so I thought that maybe - just maybe - some of my experiences and ideas could be of some sort of help.
First off, both my English and Japanese are still a work in progress. I still struggle with them both, but I do feel that I've made good progress, especially during the last two years that I've been studying Japanese.
A quick "background story":
- I've been studying Japanese since August 2009 (not including RTK).
- The first thing I did after RTK was learning hiragana / katakana.
- Then I went through the first half of Tae Kim's grammar guide, got bored and stopped.
- After that, I worked REALLY hard on the KO2001 books and finished inputting them into Anki within a couple of months.
- I added all the sentences from Kanzen Master 2級 after that.
- Christmas 2009 - Started using Subs2SRS to mine sentences from variety shows (especially London Hearts)
- Summer 2010 - Stopped adding sentences, started adding single words only.
- September 2010 - June 2011 - Worked as a volunteer in Japan. Did not study much (added around 4-5000 words during that year), but my friends were all Japanese.
What I'm doing now:
- Adding 30 words a day.
- Working on N1 grammar
- Learning Japanese names
- KO2001 Production (single words, not sentences)
Additional info:
- I've been listening to Japanese non-stop for two years (iPod <3)
- TV, movies, games, books - all media has been, and still is, Japanese only.
- I hardly spoke Japanese the first year.
I don't want to go through the last two years in detail (but please ask if you have any questions!), but I want to talk about some topics that I think are really, really important.
Practice / Study:
I'm a musician. I've been playing the drums since I was 9, and I worked as a pro musician for one year after high-school (that really, really sucked, but that's a different story
)Anyway, one thing I learned from practicing the drums was:
Practice a lot. Practice every day. Practice does not make perfect - perfect practice makes perfect.
What I mean is - you have to put in the time. Every day. It makes everything easier. It becomes a habit, you feel yourself improving, and motivation follows.
BUT do not fool yourself by saying "I've been studying for 8 hours today! I will become awesome in Japanese". Hours mean nothing, if it's time wasted.
Why do you study Japanese? To be able to talk and function as an adult in Japan? If so, you have to study in order to do just that. If you spend every day studying extremely rare kanji, words you never hear, know twenty words for "sword" but can't hold a basic conversation, then you are, in my humble opinion, wasting your time.
Work hard in the beginning:
The first 6 months are hard, very hard. It doesn't have to be boring or painful (I had a blast!
), but you won't understand much and it will take a long time to learn new things. I remember spending up to 8 hours every day during the first 3 months. Nowadays I hardly study more than 2 hours (not including reviews) and still make great progress.It's not a linear process, it gets easier. Keep this in your head during the beginner-phase - it'll pay off later

Accent:
I tried to write about how to develop good pronunciation in a language, but then I figured it would be so much easier to just make a video about it. I rarely speak English nowadays, so I'm pretty rusty, but if you're interested in the topic, please take a look and tell what you think

All in all - I really don't feel that I've been studying in a very different way compared to all the other hardworking guys on this forum. I've been studying hard every day, kept on doing it, and had fun during the process. I always focus on 「doing stuff」 instead of 「thinking about how it should be done」. New language learning books, games, software, methods... all that stuff is good, but look at it this way:
A friend of mine owns over 20 guitars, a lot of amps and all kinds of DVDs, books etc.
His skills? REALLY bad.
Another friend of mine rents a violin. He owns a couple of CDs and two instruction books given to him by his teacher.
When I heard him play I cried. It was just amazing.

There you have it. Some random thoughts about language learning, music and life in general. Please ask me if you have any questions. Like I said, I'm a student, just like you guys. All I know is based on what worked for me and what didn't.
I hope this can be of some sort of help or inspiration, but if it's not... then, well, I tried
Edited: 2012-02-29, 5:19 am


