Class review videos to help short-term memory

Class review videos to help short-term memory

Seedtime multilingual offers online courses in Japanese, Spanish, and English for English Language Learners.  Planned  courses will also include: American Sign Language, Arabic, Korean,  Mandarin Chinese, and Vietnamese

The 10, 12, and 16-wk courses consist of 10 – 15 Modules. Students meet (on-site or online) with a teacher every two weeks for live conversation practice.  Upon completion of 10 modules, conversation classes will be conducted mostly in the target language.

We are presenting an example of a Beginner Japanese class review video.  In this video, we are using the Dr. Moku Free Hiragana Chart.

Additional charts can be found at:
Free Hiragana Chart (drmoku.com)

TOP FIVE APPS TO DOWNLOAD BEFORE YOU COME TO CHINA!!

TOP FIVE APPS TO DOWNLOAD BEFORE YOU COME TO CHINA!!

Toni's Visit to China - PHOTO of Temple Roof

Toni wants you to notice the Chicken designs atop the roof in her photo. Is this significant in China architectural designs?

1/7/2020

polyglot2abroad

INTRODUCTION

The top five apps that you should download before coming to China. You will need to either open your current phone plan to allow for international use or purchase a sim card when you arrive so that you can have internet access outside of Starbucks and the airport. You can usually get a sim card at the airport when you arrive or you can go to any phone store and get one. For someone coming for their first time with no use of the language and no one to help translate for you, I would suggest just getting it at the airport when you arrive.

TOP FIVE APPS (more…)

Tracking Tips for Remembering Kanji and other Characters

Tracking Tips for Remembering Kanji and other Characters

What makes the characters so difficult to remember? Why do Japanese have two readings for Kanji? What are keys to memorization? This blog does not attempt to teach linguistics nor the elements for learning the Kanji (this can be done in your own self-study) , but in my experience (with learning Mandarin Chinese and Japanese), I have tracked a few tips: spending time looking at the characters is the first step to becoming comfortable with what we see!  That feeling of discomfort with foreign writings and sounds, letters, script is no doubt the same feelings that we get in the presence of those (characters or persons) most unlike ourselves, linguistically and culturally.

Learning Kanji or any other non-alphabetic, non-Western writing system is like making  new friends.. from a different culture.  We size them up first, their appearance, hair, features phenotypes/genotypes, speech, sound or what they portray in character.  Is this right?  I think that the more we look, listen, and pay attention, the more familiar we become with the unfamiliar.  Thus, the less uncomfortable we feel learning Kanji…. and characters!

Dare to look, breathe, read.

Kanji are Japanese characters (adopted from the Chinese writing, called Hanyu (in the early 7th century,) literally meaning Han Characters https://www.japan-guide.com. Laying to rest formal linguistic words, like orthography, logographic, let’s simply agree that as English-speakers, non-alphabetic characters seem very scary! 

Remembering The Kanji 1 Flash Cards 2
http://www.polarcloud.com/rikaichan/ offers Kanji Cards for free download.  These are suitable for Beginners, great review for more advanced learners.  Kanji is the subject here, but also the underlying human feeling of discomfort with the unfamiliar.

Clifford Black,  https://redpilltraining.ning.com/profile/CliffordBlack, a former mentor, and I refer to as,  a Super Educator par excellence, introduced me to the concept of “taking a picture” with my eyes at a time when I was struggling with Kanji. This is among the many tips and tricks for learning how to learn that he proposes to learners of various subjects.  It’s been helpful in remembering the Kanji.