Tag Archives: Japanese

Learning Kanji Through Meditation — Learning Meditation Through Kanji

Contrary to what you may think, meditation is not just a state of relaxation but also of alertness. Most meditation consists of bringing the mind in to focus on a particular object, real or imaginary. Often the breath is used as … Continue reading

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Why Language Classes Don't Work

At school we had to learn at least one language, I chose German. We’d have classes nearly every day and after six years I could hold my own in a conversation; not a bad result (well, worth a ‘B’).

These days I study Japanese, and when I started the first thing I did was get a book and CD to prepare for a 3 month stint working in Japan. I also got a book on learning the hiragana and katakana by James Heisig because it happened to be recommended on Amazon.

Talk about aiming low and underestimating the scale of the task! Even if I mastered the content in those two resources I’d still be stuck with virtually no knowledge of kanji (I’d be functionally illiterate) and would be confined to some pretty formulaic set conversations. Not to mention, these textbooks always hide the difficult Japanese from you so as not to scare you when you’re starting out.

The result was that I struggled constantly with learning the language and I learned an important lesson: you need input. You need to listen to hundreds, thousands of hours of spoken language. You need to read as much as possible. Drilling set phrases and words will only get you so far (perhaps about as far as I got, struggling as I did?).

After returning to the UK to start a PhD programme the first things I did was to look for a Japanese class. I quickly found a place that looked good (its sole purpose was teaching Japanese and was affiliated with the University of Manchester) and e-mailed the guy who runs the center. After arriving 30 minutes late he looked at the speeches I’d brought along (from my time in Japan, these were speeches to my colleagues, thanking them for their hospitality etc.) and told me that I couldn’t join the class as it was for beginners and so I’d be ‘disruptive’.

So, point #1 for why language classes don’t work: Continue reading

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Restarting Heisig, Tips For Success

It’s over two years since I started learning Japanese, and for a lot of that time I’ve owned a copy of James Heisig’s Remembering the Kanji. The first time I went through it I got halfway (~1000 characters) but ran … Continue reading

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Getting Fresh Japanese Input Using Online Movie Rentals

Had what I thought was a good idea the other day: use one of the online movie rental services to keep stocked up with fresh titles in Japanese. DVDs are expensive and things can be a bit hit and miss with Japanese films so I signed up for the free trial at LoveFilm.com. Not off to a good start though… Continue reading

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Kougakushin Opens

It would be wrong to say that this site has launched—there’s nothing here yet! That said, with time I hope this becomes a useful learning resource for those studying languages, Japanese in particular.

向学心 (kougakushin) means ‘passion for learning’. My parents instilled in me a passion for learning at an early age. Currently I’m a PhD student in the UK, and in my spare time I like to study Japanese. Learning has become a habit for me, and I gravitate towards topics that I enjoy. At present the most rewarding topic is definitely Japanese; interwoven culture and language that I can study endlessly. I don’t sit down with textbooks to study it though; I’m mostly watching TV and reading simple books. More on how that works later (you don’t need language classes, or many textbooks!) Continue reading

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