watermen wrote:2. I enjoy the feeling of being able to listen to the latest lesson. So far, I am only capable of doing it on Newbie, I wish to do that at all lesson. Don't you find it exciting to listen to the latest lesson?
I understand where you're coming from. When you're excited about learning something you want to jump right in and be able to do it all right now. But I'm also concerned with your pace. I imagine med school exams must be incredibly hard and require you to know buttloads of info. But learning a language, especially one as different from English as Japanese, is not like studying for a med school exam. Your brain acquires a language by regular exposure over a prolonged period of time. You may remember the stuff from the lessons you studied at the beginning of the week now, but what about a month or more from now? Really understanding a language is not about filling your head with vocab and grammar facts (though they're certainly important). To obtain a deep understanding of a language, what you need is familiarity. And you can only get that thru prolonged exposure to the same thing over and over. When I took music theory, my professor always said it was better to practice a little while everyday than practice a lot a few times a week. This type of practice builds the kind of familiarity you need to get good at a musical instrument or at a language. While at the pace you're going, you could certainly have listened thru the beginner series and start the intermediate, but I very seriously doubt you would be truly ready for the intermediate series. There are things sometimes in the intermediate lessons that *I* don't understand, and I've been studying this language for 4 years now. Like Javizy said, it's not realistic to expect that you can absorb all the info in such a short amount of time and expect to be able to take on the intermediates so soon.
Am I trying to discourage you from learning? No, of course not. I just think you need to slow down and give your brain time to absorb, not memorize, really absorb the concepts put forth in the lessons. Otherwise I'm afraid it'll come back to haunt you and if you try to launch into the intermediates at the pace you're going now you're going to run really hard face first into a wall of frustration.