Hi all,
So far (in 18 months of study) I haven't really put any effort into specifically learning kanji, although I've tried with the red 'Basic 500 Kanji' book, and flash cards in the past, but:
a) couldn't really get them to stick that way
b) found it tedious and didn't enjoy it at all - it made study boring!
Instead I have preferred to use my study time to use the podcasts and my MINNA NO NIHONGO books (now on book 2) to study vocab and grammar, while also writing emails in Japanese to my friends and watching some anime to get used to the speed and styles of speech.
I've found that through reading emails and other content that I'm slowly recognising different kanji, and as time goes on I'm figuring it'll work more and more just by letting them be soaked up as I study other (more important) things like vocab and grammar. Also as I'm picking up knowledge of some of the radicals, I can sometimes take a guess at meaning that way when I need to.
Anyway, my real point was that, while doing this, I've figured that most of us now use electronic forms of written communication, whereby you type text in hiragana, and it converts it into the kanji form. Now whilst I realise that you need to recognise which kanji are which from the homonyms when you do this, I can't really see the point in spending lots of time at the moment learning to write kanji. After all, when I write Japanese it's mostly only ever on the computer, where I have that help.
Am I alone in this thinking, that because of this, I'd rather spend my study time - at least until I reach an upper-intermediate level of speaking and language knowledge - learning the language content rather than specifically learning - rote or heisig or whatever - written kanji?
Cheers!