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Belton wrote:Also I'd really recommend this dictionary.
Kondansha Kanji Learner's Dictionary Jack Halpern, (Kondansha International)
LPJAPAN wrote:Belton wrote:Also I'd really recommend this dictionary.
Kondansha Kanji Learner's Dictionary Jack Halpern, (Kondansha International)
I picked up this dictionary the other day, partly due to this forum. I have to say that the first day I bought it I was ready to return it. I couldn't seem to find anything, NOT EVEN the Kanji I knew. I couldn't even find 川!! But after a few days of using it, it's gotten much easier to find kanji. The system of finding the kanji is easy to catch onto and that saves time!!!
Belton wrote:Also I'd really recommend this dictionary.
Kondansha Kanji Learner's Dictionary Jack Halpern, (Kondansha International)
mikuji wrote:Maryo-san
I would definitely go for Heisig's method for remembering power alone.
I know it looks strange and it conflicts with other learning methods (i.e. pronunciation learning at the same time) but it is not an either or once you master the meanings. The Kanji have to be recognisable sooner or later so why not sooner?
There is no problem recognising meaning first and adding reading after.
To pre-empt you question. I have been studying Japanese since 2001 but totally on my own. I suppose I am at level 3 JPLT (I get above 70% when testing myself at the learning centre for this level) but, not living in Japan, I am particulalry interested in being able to read, so I need to get as many kanji as I can under my belt.
For all it is worth, Heisig's method is also great fun.
Gambatte kudasai
mikuji
Martin Ecker wrote:I'm also currently using Heisig's book "Remembering the Kanji I" to learn the meaning of the kanji and I must say that I'm quite surprised how well the method works for me. I'm not making an effort to learn the readings for now. Although naturally, when you're exposed to Japanese on a regular basis, such as here on JapanesePod101.com, you pick up the readings of a kanji here and there.
Before I started and after several failed attempts of learning kanji the "traditional way", I could recognize and read some 50 kanji and reading a Japanese text was always scary, mostly because so many kanji were unfamiliar. After using Heisig's method for the last 2 months (I study approx. 1-2 hours per day, with 1-2 days a week where I don't do anything), I've made my way through the first 900 kanji and it's incredible how well I can remember all of these kanji simply by the stories and images I created for them. Every weekend I go through all the kanji I've learned up to now and my recognition percentage is always above 98%. My goal is to finish the book within the next 2 months, assuming circumstances let me continue at the current pace.
For now I can only say that I really enjoy Heisig's method and I'm always thrilled when I read Japanese somewhere and there's a new kanji I recognize that I learned the day before. I might not know the reading, but it's fun nevertheless and I believe it will make it easier for me to later on learn the readings. Reading Japanese websites with rikaichan has also become so much more enjoyable because I recongize a lot of the kanji and can guess what a word means before I use rikaichan to tell me the reading.
If you're using the Heisig method I highly recommend KanjiGym Light (available in English, German, Spanish, and French here http://kanjigym.de), a Java-based kanji flash card program for Heisig's first book available for PC and PalmOS, and http://kanji.koohii.com, a website for reviewing kanji where you can share your stories with others or use stories that other people have created for a kanji. This website has helped me tremendously in finding stories for kanji where Heisig doesn't provide stories anymore in his book. Some of the stories there are hilarious and they make remembering a kanji so much more easier.
Martin