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Jason wrote:The best way is probably old fashioned boring repitition. Start with hiragana first. Take a row of characters and write them down over and over. At least 5-10 times. Don't type them. Don't just look at them. Actually write them down on a piece of paper. You should say them to yourself or preferably outloud as you write them. The more ways your brain can associate with each character, the better they'll stick. The next day, take the next row and do the same thing. After you finish with the new row, write down the row from the previosu day maybe 5 times. Work your way thru all the rows this way making sure to always practice the rows you've already gone over after you finish the new one. Once you get to the later rows, you can decrease the amount of times you practice the older rows to about 2 to 3 times. Just be sure not to stop. It's better for you to practice maybe 10-30 mintues a day every day, than for hours only a few times a week. You'll get familiar with them by seeing them every day. After you finish the entire hiragana chart, move on to katakana and do the same with it. But don't forget about hiragana. After you finish your katakana for the day, go back and write the entire hiragana chart at least once.
I know it's not exactly the most exciting method and it may take some time to work thru both charts, but this worked really well for me. You should also avoid rouma-ji like the plague. I realize it's not realistic to avoid it completely when you don't know kana yet. But as you learn more and more kana, you should be avoiding it more and more. Once you have hiragana down, you shouldn't use it at all.
As a bonus tip, the menus on the Japanese version websites of many fastfood chains made for some nice katakana reading practice.