I’m still here. 我慢してください!(Please endure). I arrived Aomori in Nebuta which is a festival that increases the population by 1000% and lasts for 6 days, followed by local festivals all around the prefecture. I’ve barely had a moment to catch my breath, and on top of that I’m borrowing neighbor’s internet which goes in and out often.
I am posting from Aomori City. Hopefully I can visit you in Gosh soon. I am currently at work, but between the internet filter and the woefully old state of this PC (766 mHz Celeron) I can’t do much more than post at the dope. At home I have internet, but it’s slow because it’s borrowed from a distant neighbor. I will have my own internet starting from the 14th.
I don’t even have to click the link to hear Koichi say: 皆さんこんいちはとふぐのこいちでございます [Minasan, konichiwa, tofugu no koichi de gozaimasu]. I’ve been following him off and on since before he started Tofugu.
One of the online language study websites I forgot to mention in one of my previous posts is Lang-8 (www.lang-8.com), which Koichi recommends. Lang-8 is a peer-to-peer language learning system that provides feedback to your journal entries in the language you’re studying. It also allows you to critique and correct others’ entries. It’s actually not bad, and kind of unique as its environment is less than interactive, but more than self-study.
Johnny Divine, I have a friend who learned a foreign language by listening to mp3s on her mp3 player. Since you’re low on time but have a really long commute, why not try doing it that way?
I’ve been playing around with Livemocha recently, and they seem like a pretty good deal. The basics are free, which is tough to argue with. The basic model is to recruit users to teach each other - I submit something in Spanish, and grade something in English.
It has the same pitfalls as Rosetta Stone and the like for the set lessons, but has the advantage of what’s basically a built-in Skype chatroom. So I can find someone who speaks Spanish and is interested in learning English, and we can chat and help each other out.
Not perfect, by any means, but it’s the best that I’ve found. It looks like there are at least four free Japanese courses, each with multiple lessons, and a reasonable number of Japanese interested in practicing their English in the chats.
This is only my opinion, so please take it that way, as I have no wish to offend anyone. I must say, however, that LiveMocha sucks, or it used to. I subscribed to their program a few years ago when they were promoting their online Japanese courses heavily. They have (had?) a feedback/help system that’s worthless. You can submit a question or request for help until the cows come home but will never get a response. Their courses are (were?) not well thought out or organized, forcing the learner to go through material that requires knowledge of content not covered, or even referenced, in earlier lessons.
After trying countless times to get responses for my issues and not getting any at all, I gave up and canceled my subscription. This was ultimately a good thing, because my frustration with LiveMocha pushed me to bite the bullet and sign up for live classes.
Maybe their chatroom and other interactive features are good, but I didn’t stick around long enough to find out.
I have noticed a few vocab words being introduced in mid-assignment, but nothing that I can’t easily pick up contextually. I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s a spectrum of quality across the languages they offer, but I’ve been happy with the Spanish offerings. If you haven’t played with it in a while, it might be worth checking out again - there seems to be quite a bit available for free at this point.
Thanks for the advice. I’m well into my Japanese language training and am not interested in online study websites at this point, but if I were, I’d use one that teaches Japanese only, such as JOI.
OK. I’ve FINALLY gotten a free minute at home where I can post some of these links. Without further ado. I picked the best from each of my many JP study categories so these will just be in a big list with a brief description.
The on-line dictionary that I think receives the most usage from high-level Japanese learners (and by Japanese working in English) is ALC’s Eijiro: http://www.alc.co.jp/. You might have to use it in coordination with another on-line dictionary until your kanji level gets high enough.
Excellent set of links. I’m not in love with LiveMocha, but to each his or her own でしょう.
Mark me as another fan of Anki. I love their flashcard based system, and that the learner can customize their sets. Anki reminds me of another Japanese vocabulary memorization system called NihongoUp http://nihongoup.com. Their learning games are fun and challenging without being childish.