How can we maintain our relationships with friends back home?

When we come to Japan, most of us leave behind friends and family. Unfortunately, we often get caught up with our lives in Japan, and our old friends get put on the back burner. Today, I'd like to take a look at a few ways that have helped me keep in touch with my people back home.
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john
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« on: February 04, 2007, 13:19:58 PM »

For those of you interested in studying Japanese in Okinawa, I've posted some links to Japanese language schools in the links section.

John
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MissionaryMan
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« Reply #1 on: December 16, 2007, 21:18:20 PM »

I have been told by several people that have lived in Japan that it is better to wait until you live there to learn the language, rather than have to unlearn a bad habit picked up from a substandard teacher in the US. Is this the case, or is it just easier learning a language by immersion in the country, language, and culture?
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john
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« Reply #2 on: December 17, 2007, 10:43:36 AM »

This is a tough question, and I'm sure one could come down on either side, but personally, I feel that you're better off learning before you come. I've done some reading on the subject, and it has been found that the best way to pick up a foreign language is not just total immersion in that language, but total immersion combined with a knowledge of the fundamentals of the language. Of course, if the only Japanese teachers available to you are substandard, then perhaps you shouldn't study with them.

According to what I read, when you jump directly into the culture and language without any base, you actually tend to pick up more bad habits because you don't fully understand the fundamentals of what's being said, so you make assumptions which are often incorrect. I think this can be seen in many non-native speakers who learned through exposure. While they make speak well, they often have a large number of fundamental mistakes in their speaking. That being said, if you study a lot once you get here, I'm sure you can avoid these pitfalls.

I'd recommend getting a book about the basic grammar and concepts of Japanese, and using some of the great online Japanese studying resources to help you confirm that you pronunciation is correct. I used Easy Japanese when I first started learning. It's not the best text book, but it's interesting and will provide you with some basics. I also personally recommend the Genki textbook series, if you're looking for more of that style. You don't need to be a Japanese master before you arrive, but it will give you a leg up if you have some idea about what your getting into before you jump in.

Also if you haven't already done so, pick up a book or study online the basic hiragana and katakana scripts. I'm sure you'll find these, especially the katakana, very helpful.

That's all just my opinion, but from what I've seen and read, it seems to be true.
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MissionaryMan
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« Reply #3 on: December 17, 2007, 12:27:43 PM »

Thank you!

It may be just your opinion, but it seems to make a lot of sense, and you gave more reasons for your position that any one else That I have ever talked to. I appreciate it.
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john
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« Reply #4 on: December 21, 2007, 02:41:59 AM »

Great! I'm glad it helped. Thinking about things like this is always the easy part for me. Actually doing the studying is what takes the real effort! Ahh... gotta study more.
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MissionaryMan
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« Reply #5 on: December 31, 2007, 16:28:26 PM »

I am actually considering buying a Japanese series from Rosetta Stone. They seem to have a good reputation, and are advertised in United Airline's in-flight magazine. Two courses (Simple and Intermediate) are $339. Any opinions on this specific brand name of language courses?
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john
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« Reply #6 on: January 02, 2008, 22:12:00 PM »

Rosetta Stone? I've used it many times, but I don't really think it's that great. Have you ever used it before? I'd recommend trying to get a look at it before shelling out that kind of money.

Rosetta Stone has a lot of repetition and gives you Japanese exposure, but it explains nothing about the underlying structure of the language. Basically it wants you to learn the target language in the same way that a child would without understanding the grammar or word meanings directly. I don't think there is any English explanations of the words and phrases you are learning. It is all based on pictures.

While learning like a child might seem like a good idea, personally I feel that I learn better using more advanced 'adult' strategies. I mean, sure children pick up languages quickly, but they also have people with lots of patience trying to teach them 24 hours a day. I think I can remember more vocab words in a week by using flashcards than a three year old can using immersion... Smiley

As far as real advice goes though, I haven't ever seen a decent computer aided language learning program. I've made good use of stackz though. It's a flash card program and it has a lot of premade word lists available for download.
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