How Long It Takes to Learn Japanese (and how to make a study schedule)

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ToKini Andy

ToKini Andy

Күн бұрын

How much Japanese can I learn in 6 months? Can I become fluent in Japanese in 3 months? How do I make a schedule for learning Japanese? These are the 3 questions I answer in this video. I also go on a rant about the "JUST IMMERSE" immersion community, and the annoying comments that always seem to pop up on videos like this one.
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0:00 Beginner questions about learning Japanese
0:24 How much Japanese can I learn in 6 months?
3:54 Rant about "Immersion"
6:43 Can I become fluent in Japanese in 3 months?
7:34 Sample Schedule for Daily Japanese Study

Пікірлер: 633
@nikkuniisan
@nikkuniisan Жыл бұрын
Hey, I just saw this video and thought it was good. Studying Japanese does require "studying" before just input. That's probably the most efficient way by far. I don't know how I would have gone about learning Japanese without reading the instruction manual first. The reason I tell Japanese people just to immerse is not because I think Just immersing is the best method, but because they study English from elementary school till high school and never actually immerse with real input. Your video made sense of why I think people studying Japanese should study more than Japanese people studying English (because Japanese people have already studied tons of English).
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Nick has a great point here. Most of the native Japanese people I know have more than enough of an English base to "just immerse". Even by the time they're in high school. And to add to this, if we're talking about young children, "just immerse" is probably the ONLY way you're going to get them into a language. I tutored a 5 year old Japanese child back in the day who was ONLY allowed to watch English TV and play English video games. He wasn't allowed to do either in Japanese. His English was AMAZING. It should be noted that he lost most of that ability in elementary school due to lack of interest/embarrassment at being "different". But it was still very impressive.
@sonicthesilly
@sonicthesilly 11 ай бұрын
@@ToKiniAndy PLEASE help! ive been using your videos and things to get grammar and other things down, but i cant find a solid place to study adjectives and verbs for completely free! i recently went over genki with one of your videos, and it helped a whole lot. so today, i thought i would practice building sentences, but the SAME PROBLEM happens- i need a free way to learn adjectives, nouns, and verbs! do you have any recommendations there that are free?
@TheodoreSmith-ir6xb
@TheodoreSmith-ir6xb 8 ай бұрын
​@@sonicthesillyAnki is great for vocab, but it has been a while so did you find anything?
@goyam2981
@goyam2981 7 ай бұрын
Yes, my sister has been watching anime and played games in Japanese a long time. She still can't speak Japanese although she can understand several phrases and can read Katakana really well from seeing character names in games. Definitely some degree of formal and structured study is needed.
@saoriich
@saoriich 2 ай бұрын
@@goyam2981 Depending on what anime she watch, some anime characters don't speak natural Japanese. But I wish you and your sister good luck!!
@g_rr_tt
@g_rr_tt 10 ай бұрын
I was able to master all grammar points up to N3 within 2 years of daily 1-2 hours of actual study; I spent the rest of my time watching Japanese TV/ movies/ dramas. I'm now approaching my 5 year mark and gearing up to take the N1 test this winter. I know around 11-12k words now but the grammar points just keep getting more difficult. Difficulty comes in the form of it not being used too frequently and therefore it's easy to forget. I have never lived in Japan, I have 0 Japanese friends, this was all done in my room as a hobby while I finish up my engineering degree.
@yo2trader539
@yo2trader539 8 ай бұрын
それは凄い。いつか日本で働いてください。
@CNNDS
@CNNDS 6 ай бұрын
That's really motivating and I appreciate you sharing your experience! What do you think is the most important thing? Consistency in learning? ( Given the quality of study materials and effort are good enough )
@thinlizzy9032
@thinlizzy9032 5 ай бұрын
Good luck to you man! I hope I can be as self disciplined as you when I start learning Japanese.
@SM-yc4qv
@SM-yc4qv 5 ай бұрын
@g_rr_tt wow congratulation i learning since 3months every day about an 30min -1hour and i see its not enough for making fast progress but better slowly and steady i guess. Did you try voice chatting or something like this?
@miragebarrage9748
@miragebarrage9748 5 ай бұрын
What do you mean by “1-2 hours of actual study”?
@samuelallen85
@samuelallen85 Жыл бұрын
basically what I got from this video is to shave off several mindless hours of gaming/watching youtube I spend daily and instead actually study
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
I guess boiled down that's a main point for sure. 😊
@Jaxv3r
@Jaxv3r Жыл бұрын
I'm watching Japanese youtube content nowadays, even tho I barely understand them, it helps me study it, and loved how some of them have JP subs
@shinsoatimaku
@shinsoatimaku 11 ай бұрын
​@@ToKiniAndycan I play the games in japanese?💀
@izunakmd
@izunakmd 10 ай бұрын
I mean he's not wrong :')
@izunakmd
@izunakmd 10 ай бұрын
​@@shinsoatimakuI guess it can be interesting
@TravelGeeq
@TravelGeeq Жыл бұрын
I just came back from my dream vacation from Japan for two weeks. I've been trying to study on and off for about a year solid and I will say that I already knew 3x more than I ever thought I needed. Sure, there are other scenarios (like working there, watching anime, etc.), but I got through the entire trip on very few words including buying groceries, food, and making others laugh with a couple of jokes. They were SO appreciative of my knowing ANY amount of Japanese and I even got a Nihongo Jiozu by an old taxi driver in my very first few hours. I was so happy and grateful to everyone I met and it boosted my confidence for the entire trip. TLDR: No matter what your level is, don't think you're not doing well. Any input and learning is one step closer to your goal. Always try your best and I assure you that you'll succeed!
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Sounds like you had a great time! I'm glad that you got to use some of what you learned. 😊 And agreed on your final points.
@SAHanson
@SAHanson Жыл бұрын
"Always try your best and I assure you that you'll succeed!" I get where you're going for from this, but I find the idea "Anything worth doing is worth doing badly" useful. By which I mean: that just because you're not capable/willing to do everything you want to on a day doesn't mean it's not worth doing to a lower level. A lot of people (myself included) get caught up in perfectionism because we don't see our work on a given day as being "our best" and the idea of being allowed to do something to a level that isn't "our best" is revolutionary.
@tree_anna
@tree_anna Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this comment, I am planning on going to Japan in one year and I am so nervous that I won't be able to learn enough Japanese. This makes me a feel a little better!
@SpinningTurtle66
@SpinningTurtle66 Жыл бұрын
@@tree_anna Don’t worry, I went just a few weeks ago and pretty much only knew “daijobu,” “arigato”, the super basics, and it was fine lol. Especially if you’re in Tokyo, it’ll be a real challenge to find someone who only speaks Japanese there lol. Of course I would recommend knowing as much Japanese as possible before going there, I wish I did, but it usually isn’t necessary for a holiday.
@Its_just_me_again
@Its_just_me_again Жыл бұрын
that's a bold assurance :P im glad u enjoyed ur trip :)
@magicfibre
@magicfibre Жыл бұрын
This is my 30th month of studying Japanese ~1 hour/day and I'm just starting to be able to read NHK Easy and Satori Reader without having to look up the words every 3-4 sentences and I'm just now realising that it's not really the lack of time or effort that's been stopping me - I've just been learning the wrong stuff. For over 2 years, I've been mostly just memorizing kanji and words while doing some Duolingo lessons on the side, but whenever I actually wanted to read or listen to any Japanese I could barely understand anything. A few months ago I decided to watch Andy's Genki playlist to try improving my grammar a bit and it suddenly felt like someone opened a floodgate - now I'm able to understand around half of what I'm hearing and most of what I'm reading, the particles have stopped blending with the words and recalling the meanings of everything became so much easier, since now I can understand the context of the surrounding sentence. So, dear reader - if you're like me and you don't see much results despite pouring a ton of hours into learning Japanese, maybe take a step back and make sure you're touching all the bases and diversifying your learning methods instead of hyperfixating on just one or two aspects.
@izmypocky
@izmypocky Жыл бұрын
This is just what i needed to hear seriously thank you. I also started with Duolingo and Busuu about a year ago. Now I've been touching grammer through other sources on occasion while absolutely blasting kanji with Wanikani for a few months now. It's cool to recognize so many new words that i see in passing from reading or hear in anime, but it currently still feels like the particles and words are just indistinguishable most of the time right now. I haven't been able to figure out where i should put more effort otherwise.
@littlered6340
@littlered6340 10 ай бұрын
​@@izmypockyI don't know what your resources are like, but if you can make audio flashcards that will probably level up your whole game. It did for me, like MASSIVELY Omg.
@dillongracia884
@dillongracia884 10 ай бұрын
Around 9 month in. My kanji is around n4ish, but my vocab and grammar is laughble at best. same with my speaking (i strugle with making the sentence), and my hearing, but my reading is quite decent
@egodeath_
@egodeath_ 8 ай бұрын
1 hour?! that seems very LOW. Jesus lol. 3-5 hours would have been better.
@magicfibre
@magicfibre 8 ай бұрын
@@egodeath_ ok bozo
@lordjack567
@lordjack567 Жыл бұрын
I have been “trying” to learn Japanese for about 5 years, which mostly means I’ve had several times over the years where I’ve started, spent 2-3 weeks of 2-3 hours a day, then completely burned out, stopped studying entirely, and forgot everything. ADHD man… My new schedule is 30 minutes a day. It’s not much, but it’s reasonable, achievable, and most importantly I’ve only missed 3 days in the last 60. Id like to reach an N5 level by the end of my first year, which means I’ll need to pick up more later, but for now slow and steady wins the race.
@NatalieNicole2222
@NatalieNicole2222 9 ай бұрын
I know this problem - same problem, also having add
@Cyanice
@Cyanice 9 ай бұрын
same situation here (minus the ADHD). After about 3 years I'm on attempt number 4. But every time I restart it goes way faster than last time. The amount of progress I've made in 2 weeks took me about 3 months on my first attempt. The foundational knowledge really does stick with you.
@fool4343
@fool4343 3 ай бұрын
i also have been "trying" for like 6 years. i was somewhere on akin to n5 level on 22nd of january i have downloaded anki deck (jlab beginner guide) w anime and dorama audio bits, grammar explanation (tho i dont really read into it, i afterwards go to tae kims guide). the guy who made the deck said that there around 800 words i think? which is not enough at all so i also use some renshuu while watching smth haha i almost finished the deck, i studied with it for an hour a day, and i understand some japanese videos with basic speech pretty well i think. i should watch more vids at this point, keep repeating hard cards on the deck and im pretty sure i will get to my goal at the end of march, which is to be able to listen to japanese with a bit or no concentration. i dont go for speaking bc i learned to speak english w/o trying lmao, it took me a while though, a year or half a year maybe? didnt try speaking much for most of my english understanding life
@vtv5558
@vtv5558 Ай бұрын
I've been trying for a while too. No ADHD but I do have executive dysfunction. For the last week I've been studying an hour+ a day just reviewing. I'll hopefully do the same next week before moving on to new content.
@NeilHaskins
@NeilHaskins Жыл бұрын
I love the "immerse" idea. I just need to learn enough that I can actually understand anything being said. Otherwise, it doesn't seem so different from random noise.
@Yuoaman
@Yuoaman Жыл бұрын
Very solid information in this video! I definitely appreciate you pointing out that even the most ardent "Immersion-only" people likely did not get where they are solely via immersion, it's one of my pet peeves with the Japanese learning space online.
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I guess people feel like it's better for their "brand" to lie and say they JUST immersed. But in the end I think it's counter-productive and ruins the trust people had when they find out the truth. But alas, people will be people. Thanks for watching! 😊
@xXJ4FARGAMERXx
@xXJ4FARGAMERXx Жыл бұрын
@@ToKiniAndy the reason their slogan isn't "immerse and study" is because if they said that, then people will think that studying is just as important as immersing, and then whenever they have the chance to immerse, they'll just delay it and study instead, and that will lead them to studying lots and immersing none. Which, btw, is the opposite of our goal, immersing lots and studying a little.
@bullshitdepartment
@bullshitdepartment 3 ай бұрын
Can you point to some prominent examples of KZbinrs saying they "JUST" immersed? Because ironically it seems this channel and yall are overinflating the issue...I haven't found a single resource, guide, internet persona, etc saying to only immerse. Everyone recommends grammar study on the side, everyone recommends using anki.
@AnikaNeela
@AnikaNeela Жыл бұрын
I am happy to get this extra motivation to keep my pursuit on disciplined learning schedule. Thank you!
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
I'm glad the extra motivation helps! Consistency is key! 😊
@Kanji_world
@Kanji_world Жыл бұрын
I think the best way for a non Japanese speaker to learn Kanji is through meaning inside words. For example 明日 (ashita->tomorrow) means 明るい日 (akarui hi-> a bright day, an encouraging day) because we expect the best for the next day of our lives 😁
@TheRedFoxMcCloud
@TheRedFoxMcCloud 11 ай бұрын
it could work but learning from word for word translation is actually extremely tedious in my opinion it can actually seriously burn out the person too
@hackptui
@hackptui 10 ай бұрын
And 切手(きって、kitte) meaning "postage stamp", because the stamps in Japan are so sharp they cut your hand.
@TheRedFoxMcCloud
@TheRedFoxMcCloud 10 ай бұрын
@@hackptui i feel like that'll work while trying to memorize it in english lol
@tessa4883
@tessa4883 10 ай бұрын
@@hackptui 嘘つき!
@ThunderK01
@ThunderK01 9 ай бұрын
etymologically, 明 means tomorrow on its own because it's the day followed by one round of the sun and moon. 日 (day) would be the redundant part, technically.
@Evie-wq1nd
@Evie-wq1nd Жыл бұрын
The points you make are very important, especially in regards to immersion. Having that base of knowledge makes immersion so much more efficient and meaningful (and therefore potentially more fun). Without it it's very easy to get super frustrated and burn out. Speaking from experience there.
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
100%! And thank you for watching! 😊
@user-ov4wr5yu4r
@user-ov4wr5yu4r 9 ай бұрын
Yes, some people are a bit misleading about what they've done. I fully expect they also claim they woke up with their hair like that, too. Instagram ready, that is.
@sivisvitamparamortem
@sivisvitamparamortem Жыл бұрын
I've been studying for 6 months using Genki and having once weekly evening classes. I also have speaking sessions every week (I try and have 2 x 30m weekly) and try to study 90 minutes 6-7 days a week. I'm starting to get somewhere and am loving it! We do one Genki lesson per month which is a reasonably mild pace (good for people who have to work during the day). I am looking to maybe get a 1 on 1 tutor to speed things up a bit over the summer months. Great Language to learn! I find it is a challenge but not as amazingly hard as some people say - the tricky bit is the very different sentence structure to English and the levels of politeness. Also, don't try to rush things - there is so much to learn you can easily burn yourself out and give up, but sticking with it in the long run is fun and i can see it paying off.
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
It sounds like you're steadily moving forward, which is excellent! I agree that there is no need to rush! For a large amount of people, rushing just takes the joy out of it anyway! 😊 I wish you luck with your 1 on 1 tutor!
@Shunmizushino
@Shunmizushino Жыл бұрын
I can teach you if you want . I did my genki 1 and 2 2 years ago and I have already completed my JLPT n3 (currently studying for n2) I started learning Japanese in 2021 so I think my progress is good since I am a college student right now aswell but yeah if you want then I can tutor you
@kurryball
@kurryball Жыл бұрын
Thanks for putting this together! I've been learning Japanese on and off since 2019 and have hardly progressed because I begin to over think things like time management for learning/studying. I have started up again and have been using your videos. Thanks for all you do!
@micro_mechanologist
@micro_mechanologist Жыл бұрын
I've been doing the blended approach that you recommend. I'm working through the Genki textbooks while using your online course and meeting with an italki tutor about once a week and doing anki everyday. During work, I listen to Japanese podcasts and youtube videos for the immersion approach for about 6-7 hours. KZbin channels like yours, Japanese with Shun, Yuyu's Podcast, Real Japanese with Mika, Cure Dolly and anything I can find in Japanese I'll listen to. If I'm going to watch a movie at home I'll watch something that's in Japanese. I agree that the approach you recommend is the best. Thanks for recommending the free graded readers, I've been looking for something like that to practice reading. I love the channel and all the content, keep it up!
@dudemcfizzle5781
@dudemcfizzle5781 Жыл бұрын
Andy, you are the greatest teacher I have ever had. Thank you for giving us a realistic lens of the learning process of Japanese. I love your humor and jokes that you add into your content to keep everything interesting. I don't think people understand how much you are pouring into your videos and I'm continuously blown away. I love your learning framework, because it works for more than just Japanese learning. It works for all learning. Always appreciating your wisdom keep it up!
@alialdur4901
@alialdur4901 Жыл бұрын
one of the best channels out there for learning Japanese, thanks man. Your Japanese alter ego is fun; please make him a permanent guest
@Kyubashi
@Kyubashi Жыл бұрын
Fantastic stuff, Andy. The last mention about staying on a schedule, and being willing to chip away at it continuously is so very important, and such a gold nugget of information for anyone!
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Thank you Kyubashi! And thank you for watching! 😊
@crulexia
@crulexia Жыл бұрын
I'm taking an upper level class this upcoming fall and need to brush up on many kanji and vocab this summer in preparation. This video has helped me to get motivated and a sense of what I need to do! ありがとうございます
@thisrandomdude_
@thisrandomdude_ Жыл бұрын
This is such a freaking good video!! Absolutely top-tier production-wise, but on top of that you have a hilarious ongoing skit all throughout and concise explanations that get the point across! It's clear that you're fantastic at making videos, I'm really happy this came in my recommended. Looking forward to learning from you here and there, if I can!! :)))
@oEllery
@oEllery Жыл бұрын
Thank you, Andy. I want to see myself as a person who is dedicated to studying, but I feel like every so often I need another reminder that I have to really make sacrifices if I want to make progress.
@tricia5
@tricia5 Жыл бұрын
Thanks andy, I've been slacking a lot lately. がんばります!
@AuntieDeeDee
@AuntieDeeDee Жыл бұрын
Great points!!!! This is so relatable and honest. Thank you.
@nataliejenkins7417
@nataliejenkins7417 Жыл бұрын
i appreciate the rant about immersion. I have never related to anything as much as this in my language-learning journey lmao
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
I'm glad it's not just me! haha Thank you for watching! 😊
@bilrose97
@bilrose97 Жыл бұрын
Really great advice, thank you :) I am one of those people who took the "just do some anki and immerse" advice to heart in the beginning. I really wish I had studied grammar a bit more seriously at the start as I could have prevented some headaches when reading manga for the first time!
@CotoLanguageAcademy
@CotoLanguageAcademy 8 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for this great video! We will share it with our students.
@Kawabunguh
@Kawabunguh 11 ай бұрын
Discovered the channel not long ago and I love the Ando character you sprinkle throughout the videos!
@NinjaNanya
@NinjaNanya Жыл бұрын
I'm finally being able to Immerse a little, but this conveyed my feelings about all the trolls yelling Immerse. I'd try it and get frustrated because I understood so little, then I look words up, get told I shouldn't by the same trolls. I just doubled down on the "Boring" vocab, Kanji, and sentences until I felt ready and finally reading is a bit more fun. I will note, studying grammar. Personally I've found studying sentences where I know all the vocab with just one new grammar point feels like the best to me. Studying grammar points directly out of context feels a lot harder than kanji or vocab. So if anyone is struggling with that like me, get a sentence you know everything else with a translation.
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
I agree that studying vocab AND grammar within the context of sentences or paragraphs is FAR better than studying them on their own out of context. =) Glad I was able to put your feeling into words. 😊
@reykhault4072
@reykhault4072 Жыл бұрын
That was a satisfying honest view of learning Japanese. Thank you for that.
@Adanos_ger
@Adanos_ger Жыл бұрын
Great video once more! Talking about realistic expectations (hours spent) and the need to make sacrifices was important and very welcome. Also loved the comeback of Ando-san, really missed him! 😎
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
We missed Ando-san as well! Looking to make him a MUCH more regular guest now. =) Thank you for watching, and glad it was helpful! 😊
@Pointyish
@Pointyish Жыл бұрын
Thanks for giving perspective. Definitely motivated me to hit the books today!
@shirakenpsyop6843
@shirakenpsyop6843 Жыл бұрын
As someone who's been extremely frustrated by my progress after three years, this video is invaluable. Thanks for the vid and for your other follow-along vids for the Genki textbook!
@melanierackley5670
@melanierackley5670 11 ай бұрын
I finally made the plunged and ordered Genki 1 Workbook and Textbook. Your videos helped me make that decision. ありがとうございます
@Dere_Kaka
@Dere_Kaka Жыл бұрын
Such a brilliant channel - great work ToKini Andy son 🎌
@VictorTalking
@VictorTalking Жыл бұрын
Great video Andy! I like your response to "just immerse" type of people😂👍 It's the same when people say that living in the country automatically makes you fluent (or having husband/wife/bf/gf from that country). -Victor
@user-rk4kf3jl7j
@user-rk4kf3jl7j Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for all of your videos and all that you do, you have no idea how much you are helping us achieve our goals ❤
@TheFimpish
@TheFimpish Жыл бұрын
This is such a great, realistic look at what it actually takes to learn Japanese. Something that new learners need to seriously consider before taking the leap into Japanese. Really appreciate the word on Immersion as well. I know when i first started, early attempts at immersion we the most UNENJOYABLE times i had learning japanese. Even when id look up every word in every sentence i still wouldn't understand because of my lack of grammar! Now immersion is the most enjoyable. For me it was after about 2k vocab and after Genki 2 grammar that it started to feel enjoyable. Oh and btw, you can tell Andou that a new studio used the Paragon assets to make a remake called Predecessor. Its EA now but will be F2P at the end of the year. Definitely scratches that itch!
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I'm so glad to hear you're enjoying getting into immersion stuff now! It really is a joy being able to understand the "real" thing. 😊 And thanks for the tip on Predecessor! I had followed that for a while years ago, but I haven't looked in a long time! I'm glad to hear that it is coming together. I'm sure Ando-san will be psyched to give it a shot. 😉
@zima2031
@zima2031 Жыл бұрын
Tokini Andy keeps me motivated! Every time I think I'm fading I get a new burst of energy from these videos (:
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
I'm happy to hear that I've been able to help! 😊 You've got this! がんばってください!
@codythompson6804
@codythompson6804 Жыл бұрын
I hit a wall in my studies, and felt like crap about it so I took the weekend off. I needed this video. Helped me put some realization back in my head. Time to hit it again!
@adriangrana1239
@adriangrana1239 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video, I agree with you for the most part, I think the reason people say "just immerse" is not only because of disregard of regular study (which can be immensily beneficial), but more so because many people put off having fun in the language until they feel "ready" and this "readiness" will never come. I for example also started with textbooks and premade Anki decks, and still think it was the right choice, but now I am mostly immersing and looking up things along the way and adding it to my Anki deck and it's really fun. I am about between N3 and N2 level and I think most people at that level would not start immersing (at least I wouldn't if it wasn't for the huge immersion community pushing the idea of the importance of input), the thing is with N3 to N2, you understand most words when watching basic anime or reading manga, but a lot of the meaning still goes over your head, like there might be a 3 to 4 sentence streak where I understand 100% followed by 5 other sentences where I understand like 20% (I don't mean the words but overall meaning), it's still really fun though. but most people I know would shy away if they don't at least understand like 95%, so they keep forcing themselves to solely use textbooks and the like in the hope that they will reach this level, and that's why so many quit before reaching any significant level in my opinion.
@lostmothii
@lostmothii Жыл бұрын
I've been using your Genki videos to help me learn, I really appreciate them! I'm very excited about a potential kanji series!!
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
I'm glad to hear that they have been helpful! I can't wait to start getting the kanji videos out. 😊Thank you for watching!
@ino9393
@ino9393 Жыл бұрын
this was an amazing video and i'm really happy that i've already been doing this. its given me motivation to know that i am progressing well currently :)
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
I'm glad to hear you think so. 😊 Thank you for watching! Keep it up!!
@josoares6284
@josoares6284 Жыл бұрын
Your videos are so detailed and accurate. You always bring up and perfectly answer some very specific questions most people have but almost no teacher mention them. You know what I mean?
@antrazith
@antrazith Жыл бұрын
Great video. Thank you for sharing this valuable content. I always recommend your channel to everyone who asks me how I study Japanese. Keep up the great work.
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much Antrazith! 😊
@mickaelsflow6774
@mickaelsflow6774 Жыл бұрын
Very good videos! Good point and good focus on time and desired goal/acceptable sacrifice.
@agathahemingway8823
@agathahemingway8823 Жыл бұрын
This is the content I’ve been looking for! Thanks!! 👍🏽
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Glad to hear you're liking it! Thank you for watching. 😊
@winchestertonfieldville8973
@winchestertonfieldville8973 8 ай бұрын
Love this channel! Why didn’t I see this before? Been studying Japanese for one year now : Japanesepod101, Japanese for Busy People Level 1 (Romaji) and now just completing the same text in hiragana. Also like the Kana phone app. Broke my leg and had to cancel my upcoming trip to Japan, so will have some extra time on my hands. I have a Sensei who is helping me through the text, but I really think the missing piece is a conversation partner. Thanks for so many great learning tips!
@corinnesandifer
@corinnesandifer Жыл бұрын
This was SO helpful
@Algorhythmic
@Algorhythmic Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video and right in line with my personal experience. Your channel and Game Gengo have been a huge help. Thank you so much! I started with the basics (hiragana, katakana, grammar), tried apps, wanikani, RTK, etc. but still felt like I couldn't understand anything. So I downloaded a "top 1000 kanji words" anki deck and spent about three months learning that as well as trying to read manga like よつぶと and forcing myself to play video games in Japanese only. I also picked up some basic Japanese story books that teach vocab and have an English version. I've spent several hours most nights for about 9 months now. What amazes me is I can follow along with some 日本語の森 videos with Japanese subtitles. I don't understand everything but I know what is being discussed without the need for English. I 100% agree that it's important to have fun while studying and you nailed it about needing both study and immersion. When I was only studying I found things didn't "stick" or feel natural. Seeing a word in multiple contexts makes a huge difference. I also had to figure out what worked for me. I tried satori reader but it didn't hold my interest (thanks for the suggestion though!). I also don't find myself wanting to watch anime (maybe Ghibli films). However, finding Japanese only KZbin channels, reading, and playing games are things that keep me wanting to learn. To anyone wanting to play games in Japanese, buy a Switch. I am amazed at how many games have Japanese support out of the box and almost all Nintendo games have furigana.
@vilitias
@vilitias Жыл бұрын
Great video, thank you~ Been learning the language for 5 years and totally agree with everything said 🙌🏻
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Thank you Yulia! I'm glad to hear that we're on the same page. 😊
@maryj13
@maryj13 Жыл бұрын
that was really useful, thank you! 💚
@cassandraland3269
@cassandraland3269 Жыл бұрын
This is fantastic advice. I did Remembering the Kanji first, then Genki. Now I'm starting to read manga and I only have one chapter left in Genki I. It's a bit of a struggle to immerse but I can still enjoy it at my current level.
@Arguendale
@Arguendale 6 ай бұрын
This has been such an encouraging video. Whenever I ask pros in anything how long it took them to get good at what they are, they always dismissively answer that it "just takes as long as it takes", instead of giving me a gave of whether I'm practicing/studying properly to be at the same level they are after the same amount of time it took them to get to their point. But this video alleviated a lot of my fears that I'm not at a level I should be at with japanese after several years of casual studying. It does feel better knowing that I'm at actually a pretty good level and could easily progress with more consistent dedication, rather than me just being stuck in an educational rut. Thanks for the video! :D
@marioulloa2593
@marioulloa2593 Жыл бұрын
One of the most honest videos on learning Japanese
@keitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
@keitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Жыл бұрын
Finally, a realistic advice on learning Japanese. I'm not a regular here in your channel but since I got the guts to take N3 exam this July without my usual online classes, I found your channel (actually found again but that was few years ago 😅). Your N3 videos are actually my first guide on how I should self-study. Last month, I religiously watched the Quarter playlist every night after work. It was informative and fun, yet, I discovered that I had this 1 hr and 20 minutes attention span. Since some on the playlist are longer than that, I really need to resumed it by the next night. After that, I rewatched it but this time, I took notes on it and finished after it after a week. More or less, I finished those procedures by two weeks. Not sure if that slow but for me it's quite right. Totally agree with all you said here. From the learning time needed to be "fluent" in Japanese in 3 months which some of my acquaintances claimed to be possible 😅 which I don't quite believed in. Up to the immersion part which I havr quite integrating on my everyday life. For the immersion part, what I am doing are: - Listening to Japanese songs (this is the most consistent activity that I really enjoy doing) - Watching anime and Japanese shows (another enjoyable activity for me) - Study grammar and kanji after work (1- almost 2 hours depending on my energy and attention span) - Listening to podcasts and asmr (sometimes) - Watching KZbin videos of Japanese seiyuu or game streamers (enjoyable but not an every day activity) - Have 会話 with a local Japanese every week Not sure if I am doing right but so far my main goal is to balance my "have fun while studying" the Japanese language.
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 Жыл бұрын
Do you do a translation of the song before you listen to it or make anki cards ?
@TATOOINETABLEFLIP
@TATOOINETABLEFLIP Жыл бұрын
@@southcoastinventors6583 Whoa! Great idea! Recently I’ve attempted the Hamasaki Ayumi song EVOLUTION at karaoke, and despite having listened to it for YEARS now, I couldn’t get through bits of it, as the language wasn’t clear (also, it’s *fast*). I’m going to try working up a translation to get more familiar with the song overall, and maybe attempt it again sometime soon!
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Sounds like you're doing great! I'm happy to hear some of the N3 videos were helpful for you! Keep it up, and thank you for watching! 😊
@daenackdranils5624
@daenackdranils5624 8 ай бұрын
am discouraged to go in japan because of the commentaries of a pretentious canadian teacher called graham. he pretend to be a encyclopediathe truth. he say that learning a language takes many decades. he just make me want to not go in japan. why should we go in a country where basically nobody want to learn interna' languages even after getting an american influence the last century? when japnese is just like learning greek , hebrew , russian mandarin or thai , those so hard languages we feel it's a waste of time? if we have to rely on the words of those boastful people it's preferable to take them negatively. no need to go in japan with those YT videos anyway it's no more different than going there for real
@margocoleman8432
@margocoleman8432 Жыл бұрын
I loved this video. Not just the information but the whole way you put the video together. Very Nice. MT Grammy 😊
@ma.2099
@ma.2099 Жыл бұрын
Amazing video. Really sets goals straight. My wife and I are planning to move to japan for some contractual careers. It’s extremely important to learn Japanese and I think it’s best to get small doses and fit in Japanese anywhere that I can even with calendars and things of that’s sort.
@Cool-boy-asian
@Cool-boy-asian Жыл бұрын
I am learning Japanese and watched other videos as well but they were giving me nightmares that, learning Kanji isn't easy, it will be hard and it demotivated me but after watching you, I felt boosted and I will give my best to learn Japanese. Thank you for sharing.😀
@someoneontheweb4303
@someoneontheweb4303 Жыл бұрын
Always fun watching your videos! Excited for the Kanji series :)
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Me too! Can't wait until we start releasing lessons regularly again! Thank you for watching! 😊
@vortexkyuusoku3169
@vortexkyuusoku3169 Жыл бұрын
Ive been very casually learning for a while now but i always get a thrill when listening to Japanese and have words I understand jump out of the rest of the noise. It inspires me to keep learn more.
@strategicoCod5
@strategicoCod5 Жыл бұрын
I'm happy to see that you're going to do a kanji series. Actually is what I needed because I love kanji, but didn't find anywhere a nice video series about that (the only one that was nice was Japanese Ammo Misa's). Regarding the study part, I'm trying to spend all the time I have studying japanese and looking for input. Some days I'm completely stuffed and can't more than 1 hour, but I'm trying to improve, thanks also to your site and Discord channel, obviously! 😎🙏
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Even an hour is great! Every little bit helps. Thank you for watching! 😊
@kortexii5534
@kortexii5534 Жыл бұрын
The character speaking in Japanese was really funny.
@ellessar5
@ellessar5 Жыл бұрын
Hey there Andy, thanks for another great video! I'm currently preparing for the N2 this July wish I could have showed this video to myself a long long time ago when I first got interested in learning Japanese. For a little over a year now I have been studying Japanese every day at a language school here in Japan. Before I moved to Japan, I learned all of the N5 kanji and about half of the N4 kanji using WaniKani before starting Minna-no-nihongo 1 here in Kansai. In the US, I realistically only had time to learn kanji during the day, but knowing the kanji that I did before getting started in the textbooks was an amazing way to start my time as beginner student and if that's all you have time for, I agree that Kanji is a great place to start. After 9 months of mainly studying with textbooks while watching anime in my free time, maybe understanding 50% of it, I passed the N3 in December. Watching anime, reading graded readers, and spending as much time with the content outside of my 3 hour classes everyday made all the difference in my speed and comfort levels when taking the test. Almost exactly as you mentioned in the video, only after passing the N3 and grinding textbooks did I stumble into the immersion community and I found myself feeling as though immersion was becoming a more tangible and productive option for me as I prepare for the N2! It took some time, but I would not be able to sit down and watch anime without having to look things up constantly or just feel frustrated if it wasn't for the concerted effort I put in in the beginning making use of various textbooks, learning grammar and vocab, and studying Kanji literally everyday. For anyone interested, after over a year of studying Japanese (to at least some extent) every day, my routine now consists of going to class in the morning for three hours (which was way more productive during the N5 and N4), making sentence flashcards based on recommended grammar from the shinkanzen master grammar textbooks per my JLPT level, completing my wanikani reviews and anki flash cards (throughout the day), and then watching anime and shows as actively as possible and making anki sentence flashcards for words and phrases that I don't know or want to learn! I do have to work on top of this as well, but I think it goes to show how much you can fit in in a day if you're willing to put in the time! I think at the end of the day, as long as you are disciplined and actively spending time engaging with the language, even 5 minutes a day, that alone is えらい in itself! To all those who think they can't do it or simply don't have the drive or the time for that matter, it will indeed take time, but you don't have to do it all in 6 months. I think once I was okay with that idea, I was really able sink into getting started!
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Congratulations on the N3 pass! I wish you luck as you go for N2. It sounds like you have a system down that will allow you to pass with flying colors. 😊 I hope that the methods you detailed can help someone who reads your comment in the future! I love your last few lines too. Accepting that it's going to take some time can really allow you to get down to business, and stop worrying about time frames and rushing to the finish. It's actually a really fun experience slowly unraveling a new language. It's like opening up the map on an open world game, slowly but surely, and seeing your progress. Thanks for watching, and for telling us about your experience. 😊
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 Жыл бұрын
With the N2 you can get a Japanese job if you like to live in Japan. Still not sure if you can get anything in Japan with just a N3.
@Rationalific
@Rationalific 11 ай бұрын
This is good, realistic advice.
@emmacazabonne
@emmacazabonne Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much. Your video was the incentive I needed. I started learning hiragana and katana with printed books about a year ago, then in November, I started wanikani and Anki. I thought I needed to wait to read even Tadoku Level 0. But I was slowing down in my study (partly because of lack of time, and probably because I needed more fun input, though I am part of these crazy people who do love grammar!!). So I am back in my learning schedule, thanks to you. I'm only in level 6 in wanikani, but having fun seeing the number of burned turtles going up! I decided to delete my Anki deck and restarted - I use the one for JLPT N5. I'm using your videos for Genki 1 for now - though I may end up with the book later on. I also daily use Duolingo (I know that by itself it's lame), but with all the other things I'm doing, it's actually very good, because I get more context, and it helps me memorize more vocab. And today, I have finally read my first Tadoku story - level 0. To maximize my use of Tadoku, I have checked the words/expression I didn't know and created my own Anki/Deck cards to retain this new vocab. My goal is not really to speak Japanese (am too old to go there), but to be able to read Japanese lit. I may remain all my life at the kid books level, but that's ok. I already know several alphabets (Hebrew, Greek, Russian), so at least hiragana and katakana are not too challenging. I am actually French, and a French online tutor, but I have been living in the US for 20 years, and am fluent. I can read several other Romance languages, so it's also easier to create mnemotecnics to associate kanji to some words I know in various languages. Much easier than if I only knew English! SO THANK YOU for your awesome input.
@juancruzcastillo2112
@juancruzcastillo2112 Жыл бұрын
Great content, I like how you focus on the funny side of learning Kanji 😊
@davidw789
@davidw789 4 ай бұрын
Just the discussion on the average hours to get to only N3 was enough to kick me into stepping up my study game. Thanks for giving the hard numbers and facts there, it motivated me
@wx8945
@wx8945 Жыл бұрын
How did you know I needed this video xD. I started your Genki 1 course but recently started a new job and is going through weeks of training, but now that I'm settling in a bit, I definitely need to go back to maintaining a more intensive study plan beyond doing some vocab for 5 min breaks I get between meetings.
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Work can definitely take over life a bit. Happens to me too! When I'm making a video, there's pretty much no chance I'm going to be able to study much. haha So I feel you there. Thank you for watching, and I'm glad it was good timing! 😊
@russbrownmusic
@russbrownmusic Жыл бұрын
I've been going at it now for about 4-5 months with a combo of TokiniAndy/Wanikani/Bunpro - really not making a lot of Genki progress (lesson 4 after 4 months) but Wanikani and using Bunpro to get my vocab down for the Genki lessons is helping me get ahead of the curve a bit - I'll catch up on my grammar here in a few weeks
@matsalvatore9074
@matsalvatore9074 3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for speaking japanese and English. That helps a lot.
@lukrio99990
@lukrio99990 Жыл бұрын
Loved this video!!! Im using the Refold method of learning Japanese, and im almost 2 months into studying and have started (finally) to develop a habit. Its difficult at the beginning especially since you just dont understand enough to really get anything out of 'just immersion'. But also spending all your time in textbooks is painful and not very fufulling. What helped me the most is prioritizing fun. Its easy to optimize the fun out of learning a language. Questions like: "can i be fluent in 6 months?" Are pointless imo cause even if its theoretically possible, if you arent having fun your more likely to get bored or upset and quit. Heres what i do everyday: 15 - 30 mins of flashcard vocab and kanji (anki, and Recognition Remembering the Kanji) 45 - 60 mins of animal crossing (more or less) An episode or two of pokemon and/or cardcaptor sakura. There are probably more efficient or effective ways to learn, but this is what works for me so far. Its so so improtant to identify what kind of schedule you have for your TL, and what your goals are. And more importantly for me, how much enjoyment i can get out of the early stage to make getting to advanced stuff all the more sweeter.
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Having fun is definitely key! Thank you for watching! 😊
@TATOOINETABLEFLIP
@TATOOINETABLEFLIP Жыл бұрын
I thought my previous comment long, so decided to break it into two separate posts. My current learning experience covers a wide range of content/apps/textbooks/etc. I spend a little time each day writing kanji/kana, some textbook time, and at least one show without subs. I’ve also read (“stumbled”) through numerous novels/manga (currently reading Yotsuba To, so thanks for that!!), and have picked up a few Switch games in Japanese. I also have loads of Japanese music on my phone that I play in the car (Buck-Tick and Sakamoto Kyu being two of my favorites). I could go on and on but this is long enough I think! Thanks again for all your work in the field - it’s helped point me in some awesome directions as I try to better my fluency!
@ohtalkwho9816
@ohtalkwho9816 Жыл бұрын
knocked it out of the park with this one. I have been sharing your videos all over reddit recently because I feel that your videos are the most reasonable and approachable, while still teaching a highly effective method. I have been studying for a while now and have my N2. I used to follow some of the people you didn't mention in this video only to realize on my own that the middle path of both immersion and dedicated study is the most effective for me! For anybody reading this, I promise Andy is right in what he teaches and you can trust him. Also stoked for the return of アンドーさん
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much OhTalkWho, and good to see you here! I'm glad that you've found the videos helpful enough to share. 😊 Congrats on N2!! I agree that a balance between the two, especially in the early days, was critical for me as well. I'm glad to have Ando-san back as well. Hoping he can become a more regular fixture! 😊
@lightfeather7948
@lightfeather7948 Жыл бұрын
The funny thing about your schedule is that I am currently doing the exact thing for vocab and kanji. At the beginning, I actually learned more grammar than vocab, which in hindsight might have been a bad idea, because little to no vocab means I can't use the grammar I have learned. Now that I'm learning vocab in fairly regular intervals, I'm starting to understand more and more thing without additional grammar. Of course eventually I should revisit the grammar section, so that I can communicate more and more complex ideas. The book "Remembering the Kanji" is definitely a great way for, well, remembering the kanji in an easy and orderly fashion. Weirdly enough, I kinda enjoy writing Kanjis from time to time. Makes me feel smart in a way. Still kinda amazed on how fluent I became in English without actively learning the language outside of school(german speaker here btw.) Ps. That sure was a good video, love the little tid bits where you speak to your alter ego, makes the video less stale.
@haio9703
@haio9703 Жыл бұрын
Thank you, helps me a lot
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
I'm glad to hear that! Thank you for watching! 😊
@TSComega
@TSComega Жыл бұрын
I'm somebody whose main study routine (from day 1) has primarily consisted of immersion, and I could not agree more. You cannot learn a language super fast from osmosis alone. Studying + Input is definitely the best approach to studying. I've definitely gained a lot more from doing look-ups and trying to piece sentences together than absorbing things without doing look-ups. It takes a long time to get to a stage where you can learn from just osmosis and for it to still be effective. It's definitely a lot more effective to study and get input at the same time, whether most of your time is spent immersing (and 20% of it is dedicated study like reading grammar guides and doing flashcards and stuff) or whether it is spent doing a 50/50 split of both immersion and input.
@juststudy869
@juststudy869 Жыл бұрын
このビデオはとてもおもしろかったです!ありがとうございます!
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
よかったです!見てくれてありがとうございます!
@jennyb4115
@jennyb4115 Жыл бұрын
Thank you I’m just beginning and I’m so confused about where to start this and helped out.
@aleex2850
@aleex2850 Жыл бұрын
You can definitly see the quality going up with these videos.Great stuff,the league of legends part hit me really close ahaha
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
I hear you! I wonder if you could change it to Japanese? haha And thank you! I'm having a blast trying to get better at these. 😊
@HanaJapan622
@HanaJapan622 11 ай бұрын
I love this video😊 ❤
@Wainwright95
@Wainwright95 Жыл бұрын
Loved this video, I've been using your videos since I picked up Genki 2 and a lot of time your descriptions of the grammar is a lot easier to understand than what's written in Genki. From my experience when watching anime, it's very easy to switch off the learning side of the brain and just watch the show instead. I found reading manga a lot more beneficial as it allows you to learn new vocab, notice grammar that you may not of learned yet and also, most importantly, have fun. I went to Japan on holiday a couple of months ago for the first time and granted, I didn't understand a lot of what was being said to me, but the interactions I did have where everything was understood are precious memories to me. I've been studying for around 4 years whilst balancing everything else life has to offer and would say I'm close to being N4 level, and I have recently started calling people on HelloTalk and found that a really enjoyable way to practice especially with the ones who I consider friends. When there seems like there is so much to learn, it can be overwhelming. But, I think the most important thing I've found is that regardless of how much time you're willing to put in, as long as you do, that's all the matters. It's not a quick or easy process but if you keep pushing yourself then it'll all be worth it in the end :)
@derekstacey9330
@derekstacey9330 Жыл бұрын
Ive been studying 3 months straight for minimum of an hour up to several hours if i habe it in my. I trird every resource i can get my hands on. If something clicks I rotate into my activities. Its so fun because stuff I'll hear in a game ill instantly recognize what theyre talking about. When 3 months ago it all sounded like nonsense. Dedication is the key!
@vinhill1456
@vinhill1456 11 ай бұрын
I agree. I dont really fit into either Immersion or Targeted Study camps, i do think immersion has the weighted benefit just getting used to how the language sounds, sentence patterns and pitch accent stuff, but overall its just important that people find a method that keeps them consistent. The only real debate between them is the timeline. If people just learning at their own pace, it doesnt really matter what method they use.
@GuildmasterWigglytuff
@GuildmasterWigglytuff Жыл бұрын
I managed to scrape by the N3 test after about a year. Really gotta second that remark about needing focused study to get a base before diving into input. Japanese-language media is great for running into a lot of words and grammar structures very quickly, much faster than a textbook chapter or blog post. But if you can barely parse a sentence, if you have to spend a lot of conscious effort on kanji recognition, pronunciation, sentence structure, inflection, context, and all that, juggling it in your limited working memory, you're not gonna learn very much from it!
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Yes, it can be very discouraging. And when you understand a bit more it's a LOT more fun. Congrats on N3! 😊
@GuildmasterWigglytuff
@GuildmasterWigglytuff Жыл бұрын
@@ToKiniAndy thanks! your videos were incredibly helpful for getting there
@purinsesuusagi
@purinsesuusagi Жыл бұрын
I study Japanese at university, everyday i spend from 2-6 hours studying and have been doing so for about 3, 5 years now. I get told i'm fluent. But I do not consider myself fluent. I often feel like i cant express myself as i wish and have to "settle" when speaking japanese. I also find my own writing insufficient and i wish i started using flashcards seriously much sooner. Watching your videos helps me keep motivated and gives me new perspective on things.
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
The peaks and valleys can be challenging! Even now I find times when I'm like... wait... do I suck?! And then there are days when I feel great. haha It's never too late to learn more!😊 I'm so happy to hear that the videos are helping keep you motivated!
@gordonbgraham
@gordonbgraham Жыл бұрын
it took me only a few months to be functional in Japanese (that is the ability to order food, ask for directions, talk about myself to a small extent), 5 years to become conversational, 10 years to become fluent and 15 to become fully literate (literate enough to have taken a full course load in Japanese at a Japanese university).
@purinsesuusagi
@purinsesuusagi Жыл бұрын
@@gordonbgraham how much did you study everyday?
@gordonbgraham
@gordonbgraham Жыл бұрын
@@purinsesuusagi 1 hour, 5 days a week…but while living in Japan so getting the benefit of hearing nothing but Japanese 24/7. At first, I didn’t focus on learning kanji as I felt it took too much time as I needed Japanese to navigate my daily life. Learning to read and write expedited my language acquisition greatly. I highly recommend putting your focus on that as it gives you an internal narrator that allows you to assimilate grammar, vocabulary etc without having to “study” it per se.
@purinsesuusagi
@purinsesuusagi Жыл бұрын
@@gordonbgraham yeah i try to read and write everyday. But i do find reading alot more enjoyable!
@michaelpitman8617
@michaelpitman8617 5 ай бұрын
I'm really trying to get good at japanese recently. I've been on and off studying for 8 years and still haven't finished genki 1 yet. I just graduated highschool a few years ago and have more time to study since im in uni now. I'm trying to do the exchange student program next year I know that will really help alot. Your videos have really helped me crack down and study. My uni dosen't offer the Japanese class I need this semester so its just self study. Your videos are really awesome!!
@louish5068
@louish5068 Жыл бұрын
Need this motivation. I was very surprised to see that I am at at least N5 level already with 6 months of quite inconsistent studying because of being a student (when im done in my day studying for Uni, Japanese is one of the last things on my agenda, I also have work and a relationship). Made me motivated to study for N4 tests in December. I finish Uni in August and will be able to study much more afterwards, so I could even theoretically aim for N3 by then, but I wouldn't want to risk that and end up failing. So might as well play safe with N4. I am also applying for JET this year, so hopefully by summer next year I am living in Japan. I can already tell my Japanese will accelerate massively when that happens, as I am definitely lacking opportunities for speaking atm. I am very excited for the future of my Japanese Learning Journey.
@gokupropvpofc
@gokupropvpofc 11 ай бұрын
I'm an English-Portuguese speaker and along with your videos (and the videos of many other channels) and some android apps that comes with japanese dictionaries I managed to learn a lot haha... Started about 2 months ago and in the very first month i managed to learn to read all kanas. Since last week i boosted my study time to 3+ hours a day and i felt a huuuge impact on the amount of stuff in learning... just a little bit worried whether I'll be able to keep studying this much a day when i start going back to school lol Oh and by the way, I'm loooving your genki videos they're so good!
@jobejones185
@jobejones185 4 ай бұрын
I've been following wanikani for about a year and a half and only just started properly on grammar, but my schedule unintentionally ended up like you recommend here. I do 30mins of wanikani before and after work, I listen to Citypop during work (probably doesn't help much) and dribble in some genki when I have a spare moment and then I am currently playing through the Yakuza series in the evenings.
@Mobik_
@Mobik_ Жыл бұрын
LOL MvJ said he only "watched anime" but on a new interview video he ended up saying he studied a lot of grammar, pitch accent, etc for a long time because he didn't knew anything it because he "just immersed".
@markcdespain
@markcdespain Жыл бұрын
おかげさまで, I am enjoying the journey more and more.
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
よかったです!I'm so happy to hear that! 😊
@hadleyshome379
@hadleyshome379 4 ай бұрын
i’m in japan right now! i plan to actually immerse fully or almost fully (i still consume most of my daily guilty pleasure comforts in english), and bump up your schedule’s time frames from 30 mins to 1 hour or even 1 and a half hours. I’m already at N3 now, but I want to be an academic weapon. みんな、頑張って!
@matildawolfram4687
@matildawolfram4687 10 ай бұрын
Outstanding video! Many thanks to the author of the channel for the recommendations! The problem with many people is that they want to take a "magic pill" or get "secret knowledge" and immediately have skills and abilities. However, the truth of life is that knowledge, skills, and abilities do not come by themselves. You can't learn a foreign language without doing anything, without wasting your time and effort, just like you can't learn to ride a bike lying on a comfy couch, listening to lectures and watching videos about "modern methods of learning" on a bike. To really learn something, you have to really practice every day. You're going to fall down while you're learning, and you're going to get bumps - that's normal! The ups and downs of learning are an integral part of our lives. Motivation from success and depression from failure will always be your study companions. However, every student has problems in his or her studies that he or she lacks the knowledge to solve. It can be: poor memorization of words; no progress in language learning; the student can speak, but does not understand speech by ear; misunderstanding of grammar; incorrect pronunciation, etc. Agree that a problem you don't know how to solve is very demotivating. In order to find the answer to our question we have to spend a lot of time to read videos, articles and books by polyglots. In today's world, we have to solve problems as quickly as possible. I don't have time to study and analyze a huge amount of information. My goal is to master the basic knowledge of a foreign language as quickly as possible and already start earning money effectively in the international arena. I settled on the practical guide by Yuriy Ivantsiv " Polyglot's Notes: practical tips for learning foreign language". This book is always in my bag. If I have a problem while learning a language, I quickly find the answer in this book. There are many different techniques and tips for learning a foreign language in Polyglot Notes. I have made my own individual schedule and plan for language learning. Now I know what I am going to study, how I am going to study, when I am going to study and what results I am going to achieve. No problem could stop me! With an effective language learning plan my professional skills are more and more in demand internationally every day. Friends, don't stop there! Everyone has talents that millions of people around the world need! Learn the language and make your ideas and dreams come true! Thanks to the author of the channel for the informative and useful video! Your videos motivate me.
@Tismunited
@Tismunited 9 ай бұрын
I’ve struggled a lot with getting motivation to learn Japanese. I’ve been telling myself for years I will learn it but I haven’t got passed memorizing hiragana 💀. I went over so many times now you think I would have it memorized by now but I could only tell you half of them. The process of learning the vocabulary and grammar is both exciting and overwhelming to me. Which is making me almost afraid of going through with the language learning. I’m scared I’ll never learn anything. This video gave me a different outlook. I was always interested in people immersing themselves in Japanese but it never made since how they knew everything just from watching anime or a show. Mixing both the genki book, anime, and some Japanese KZbinrs. Sounds like a lot of fun. I think I can actually learn this time lol
@JamesWilliams
@JamesWilliams Жыл бұрын
I did a month long cultural exchange school in the north of Japan(Akita-ken) in February. Since Winter 2021, I've done some async remote JP courses at my local community college, only a couple hours a week(and your videos on Genki). That immersion was much more valuable and useful because I had put in the time in grammar and vocab (I'm bad at kanji). I had colleagues for whom this was their only exposure and let's say they didn't have as easy a time. Or knew obscure kanji but couldn't formulate "I eat." They were freaked out when told we had to give a speech at "graduation." I was excited for it as I'd had to give a oral presentation every term for the courses I was doing (and did for the course back home that I was talking while in Japan). Immersion from zero never worked for me. Flashcards are the quickest way to make my mind wander. I had the benefit of having learned another language before JP to pull in the techniques that do work. I appreciate that you aren't as prescriptive on things as other folks I've seen around these parts. There's a difference between this is what worked for the KZbinr through brute force, sheer will, and TIME vs this is the best route. Small request for Tokiandy.com : Can we possibly get all the graded readers as a single download? Either one massive PDF file or all of the files together in a zip? I've been on a slow travel ([US] trains and buses) kick lately and commuting into work more and I want to try to use the time for reading.
@bealotcoolerifyoudid7217
@bealotcoolerifyoudid7217 6 ай бұрын
I'd already finished GENKI 1 (with help of your videos btw - fabulous) however I had to quit it for more than year. Now I'm back at it, and GOD DAMN my memory still serves a bit. I hope there are some new videos and stuff for me to sink my teeth into. Cheer man.
@five-toedslothbear4051
@five-toedslothbear4051 Жыл бұрын
I'm about seven months into studying Japanese, with weekly two hour online classes with a native speaker. We're working out of Japanese for Busy People. I think the key to study is to be gentle with myself, find forms of study that click with me, make a sustainable plan, and stick to it. For me, that's refining an Anki deck with JFBP vocabulary, key sentences, grammar examples, and *dictionary forms of verbs added*, which I review every day. Since our kanji study in class isn't sticking in my brain, I've been using WaniKani to learn kanji, and since I want to be able to write, Ringotan on my phone for writing practice. And I watch two episodes of anime a day while exercising on my indoor bike, or if I walk for exercise, I'm starting to listen to beginner podcasts in Japanese. I also watch various videos on KZbin, including your excellent videos, Andy!
@justjames572
@justjames572 3 ай бұрын
Hey, I know this is an old post and something that may be a bit of a dumb question. When just beginning, having absolutely no knowledge of the language, while watching an anime for example, do you start with the subtitles on and then try to slowly phase them out?
@assia84
@assia84 3 ай бұрын
You are the ONLY one on KZbin who REALLY and SMARTLY answered those questions. I speak french english spanish german and arabic. And started russian, japanese chinese and korean chinese helped me learn japanese kanji and japanese did the sane for traditional chinese korean and japanese have similar grammar rules and so on.. Studying and commitment are the only things that work. And because I am a mother of 3, i have only 2/3 hours a week per language So when I hear fulltime Students struggling just wanna tell them, shut your phones and STUDY 😅 Japanese is easy to understand by listening BUT the kanji is really challenging. Good luck for ALL
@Ic3Drop
@Ic3Drop Жыл бұрын
Dude I follow you since you began your first series on genki 1. I just wanna tell you that your content is amazing and you really developed as a language learning creator. What you say is so true. Iam studying for several years now. Let’s say minimum 4 years. But I had big time periods off. So that’s why i am only at N4-N3 kinda range I guess. Here is the key. Find a routine that fits you’re daily schedule and stick with it! Thanks for the great videos! 🙏
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
Agreed! That's the way to go! And thank you so much! 😊
@tzakman8697
@tzakman8697 Жыл бұрын
I wonder how much it would take with 10 minutes of Duolingo every day 🤔
@ToKiniAndy
@ToKiniAndy Жыл бұрын
7.5 years to pass N5 (2772 days) I'd say. 🤷‍♂️
@tzakman8697
@tzakman8697 Жыл бұрын
@@ToKiniAndy isn't it weird tho that With 125 day's using Duolingo (for more than 10 minutes a day usually, but a lot of days i only did one lesson) I know all the N5 kanji (and a lot N4), and about 80% percent of the vocabulary? And Duolingo is my main source, For grammar I am quite behind.
@lincolneyar8269
@lincolneyar8269 Жыл бұрын
Duolingo doesn't teach the Chinese reading for Kanji as far as where I'm at in the app. It's a good supplemental resource especially for the vocabulary and repetition it provides. It really hammers the vocabulary better for me compared to flashcards but you should have textbooks or any lessons for grammar and Kanji. Kudos to Duolingo for their vocabulary.
@chibz1790
@chibz1790 Жыл бұрын
​@@lincolneyar8269 I only used Duolingo to start learning the alphabets, then once I got a few in my head I ditched Duolingo and used other sources that are more reliable, faster and easier to understand.
@tzakman8697
@tzakman8697 Жыл бұрын
@@lincolneyar8269 Chinese reading for Kanji?? what are you talking about?
@chris092283
@chris092283 11 ай бұрын
I'm just now starting to learn japaneese and I have 2-4 hours a day to study I just don't know where to start or what tools to use. I'm just focusing on memorizing hiragana and katakana. Ok i just watched your video on what you would do differently learning japaneese and it was a BIG help. Thank you
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