Belton wrote:I'm loath to recommend Heisig but it is one of the few approaches I've seen aimed at 2nd language learners. One key benefit is the order you study the kanji.
Just wondering why that is. I've seen you steer some other poor souls away from even
trying the book, and it makes me shiver to think of the extremely extended path of mindnumbing repetition and frustration these newbies have unwittingly been led down.
The technique works, and when it works, it's more efficient than anything else. That's a fact. Not just with kanji either, a guy who broke a record for remembering insanely long strings of numbers described a technique extremely similar, which involved creating mental images for given sets of numbers that interwined in a way which allowed him to recall them with perfect accuracy. These images are essentially memories, aren't they? Memories that can be kept very fresh and vivid with review. A talented artist could depict a vivid memory in beautiful detail; all we have to do is write about 15 strokes.
Whether or not the individual has the drive, ability, understanding, affinity, or whatever it is, to pull this off is a different matter. The fact is, there is no argument for not giving it a shot. If somebody was about to undergo gruelling physiotherapy that would take 3-4 years, and there was a drug, effective for say 60% of people, that could help shorten this to 6 months, would the therapist tell the guy to just forget it and fight on for 4 years just because it didn't work with one of his other patients, or would he make the very obvious choice to take the 60% shot to begin with?