This is a comprehensive beginning-level Japanese textbook and language learning program.
Elementary Japanese is designed for students who are just beginning their study of the Japanese language at the first-year college level or on their own. The author and contributors have created a highly structured approach to learning Japanese based on acquiring the fundamental patterns and constructions of the language as well as the Japanese writing system including the primary Hiragana, Katakana and Kanji characters.
Each volume of this two-book set is designed for one semester of study. The books feature detailed grammatical explanations which make them extremely useful as references and for review purposes when traveling to Japan or preparing for the Japanese Language Proficiency Examination (JLPT).
Printable PDFs and MP3 audio files are included with each volume, available for free download online, making this a great way to learn Japanese on your own while ensuring that you learn the correct pronunciation. The recordings also help you build up your listening comprehension skills.
After completing this course, you will be able Elementary Japanese Volume One covers the first semester of a college-level Japanese beginner course. It contains 14 lessons, each representing one week of instruction over multiple sessions. Each lesson consists of a dialogue, usage notes, grammar notes, exercises, new kanji and explanations, and new vocabulary. Authentic Japanese script is used throughout; the two volumes together introduce 313 Kanji.
All disc content is accessible on tuttlepublishing.com/downloadable-con....
I am self studying using this book and book two of the series. This book is excellent for the student who is self studying, because all of the grammar an vocabulary are explained thoroughly. There is very little left up to the student to try to figure out; and though the exercises are designed for use in a classroom, they can be easily adapted. Additionally, this book is all-in-one in that it offers dialogues, cultural notes, grammar, vocabulary, and kanji in one volume. It also comes with a CD that contains the readings, pronunciation of all the vocabulary, and additional exercises.
This book is not for someone who is casual about learning the language. It is more grammar-centric than books that are focused on conversational Japanese (like the Japanese for Busy People series). Also, it starts teaching kanji relatively early. In addition, kanji is only given furigana (a pronunciation guideline) one time for each different pronunciation of the kanji, from then on out it is up to the student to remember the correct pronunciation or to look it up. Looking it up is aided by extensive appendices. Nevertheless, this book offers far less hand holding than ones that put furigana over every kanji. Having said this, it think that this has helped me greatly in my reading because it has forced me to actually learn the kanji even if the process is a little slower than it would be with another book.
The only reason I would consider docking this from being a five star review comes down to hiragana, katakana, and some minor formatting and editing issues. The first two chapters, where you learn hiragana and katakana, are useful for pronunciation, but don't help you to actually learn to write the characters (this is not true of the kanji, where all aspects are addressed). This makes it necessary to use an outside source. Sources can be readily found for free online or elsewhere, but it still is a minor shortcoming of the book. Also, the book is sturdy, relatively easy to use, and the information is stellar, but the paper quality, formatting and illustrations are not up to the quality of the actual information. Also, there are a few typos and slightly awkward sentences. This is likely due to the fact that this was published by a smaller press that doesn't have the same budget as a major textbook publisher. Don't let these issues things deter you though, this is a great tool to have to begin learning Japanese.
I'll be honest. I didn't finish this book. It had a lot of useful information, but I felt it would be more useful in a classroom setting with a teacher. I didn't find it helpful for self-study.
While I found this to be a good companion, it didn't teach me (a self-learner) in depth very much, probably leaving it up to the teacher to do so. I ended up using youtube videos and Japanese forums outside of this coursebook to actually be able to understand what it wanted from me. I also found the way they introduced things to be a little backwards (such as doing phrases before learning hiragana, though I can see why that'd be alright in a classroom as they want you chatting and all that). Overall, pretty useful in telling me what exactly to look up, though not good enough by itself for even basic level beginners like me.