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日本語勉強 - Personal recommendations for Japanese learners

Published: at 08:49 AM

This is a list of resources that is working well for my Japanese studies.

Reading

You need to read until you destroy the visual and mental barrier of kanji. Until you don’t reach that point, your eyes will naturally tend to skip the entire content to pass to something else you can read without effort. So, force your mind to stop and read it all until your brain will stop making antibodies for kanji.

The problem, as always, is to find the right content for your level because you also don’t want to spend 25 minutes to read two lines.

So, along with the usual suspect, already known by everybody studying Japanese, i.e.:

this is also very useful:

Reading stuff for the context you need

Listening

This is the most interesting part that I’m personally very happy about. There’s a huge amount of content on YouTube for Japanese listening, for all levels.

There are two kind of videos available:

  1. grammar short lessons videos (5 minutes)
  2. real Japanese conversations (30 - 50 mins)

Grammar short videos

This is my personal workflow with this type of videos:

Listening real Japanese conversations

The above video are great to learn grammar, but they have the same problem you find in formal language courses: they are structured.

Real life conversation is unstructured, so you need this type of content too. Few years ago I could only find Benjiro - Beginner Japanese, I guess he was the one who started with this brilliant idea of creating content where people just freely discuss in Japanese in an unstructured way. His channel is not updated anymore, but the videos are there available for all and they are just gems.

Now there are many more on the same line. My favorite ones on YouTube:

There are few podcast I also listen (I use Google Podcast):

Shadowing

Worth mentioning this too. If you don’t have too many occasions to practice Japanese speaking, you can try with “shadowing”: listen and repeat out loud.

While it’s true that you can do this with whatever the content (just stop the video/podcast and repeat what you just listened), there are few that are focused on this only:

Volunteers Japanese classes (for Japan residents)

If you live in Japan most cities organize local Japanese classes managed by volunteers, typically Japanese elderly people who want to help foreigners with their studies. They are free (or extremely cheap, mostly a symbolic cost, really) and sometimes they also provide some study material. There are two things I like of these classes:

These classes are up to you, really. The volunteers are the best resource you can find, but you need to understand how to take advantage of them properly and not waste your time.

Worth mentioning resources

Funny and useful: