VanDesu wrote:Thank you for your detailed explanation. But I don't understand why seasons are not expected to be worked through in order, since one might get exposed to lesson materials which were covered in a previous season. Isn't that the case?
Yes, you're right: to a certain degree that
is the case. However, you don't really want to start with Absolute Beginner season one and then work your way through the rest of Absolute Beginner followed by all of the Newbie seasons and then all of the Beginner seasons. A new member might reasonably expect that to be the way it works, but it isn't.
Originally there were only three levels: Beginner, Intermediate and Advanced. The Absolute Beginner and Newbie levels were added later, and make it clearer to new starters which series to go for first. However, the older Beginner level series start with the basics, and the original Beginner Season One series (which is really,
really long) could be split into two or three Newbie seasons followed by two or three Beginner seasons.
The basic set-up is, firstly, that there are a number of stand-alone seasons covering specific topics, and these are given a level so that you'll know how easy or difficult each series is. The
Culture Class: Essential Japanese Vocabulary series tells you about Japanese artists, writers, festivals, favourite foods and so on, and is at the Absolute Beginner level, while
Japanese For Everday Life gives you useful phrases for dealing with car repairs, plumbing failures and the mysteries of Japanese waste-disposal, and is at the Upper Intermediate level. With these series you can choose one that interests you and do it alongside whatever else you're studying.
On top of this there are two main curriculae: the original one that starts with Beginner Season One and the later
Nihongo Doujou that starts with Newbie Season Two. Taken together, these two series account for two out of five Newbie seasons, all six Beginner seasons and all six Lower Intermediate seasons. If you pick a season that's part-way through one or other of the two curriculae, you will find, as you suggested, that you're expected to know the grammar from earlier episodes within whichever curriculum it belongs to.
However, if I stick to the second of your proposed curriculum, will that cover all essential materials regarding grammar?
Yes.
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