Hello! I'm planning to use my school holidays to get a start on a new language, in this case, Japanese.
I was wondering if anyone had any tips regarding learning new languages or more specifically Japanese.
Any tips will be helpful, thank you!!
hey! i did japanese continuers and you'll definitely need to study consistently in speaking/writing/listening/reading to better your understanding of the language. start with hiragana and katakana - those are the easiest and aren't that hard to master, unlike some preconceptions that some people have about them. the same goes for kanji - kanji may seem overwhelming at first, but go slow and start with the easiest ones. kanji is incorporated in japanese and can be read in two different ways depending on the context and what word/expression is being written, but just continuous/constant exposure/immersion to kanji (and by extension hiragana and katakana) will eventually improve your understanding. for example, after a while you'll know that 食べ物 is read たべもの(tabemono - food), but while the kanji 食 means food or meal, on its own it is pronounced as しょく(shoku). this kanji is also read as shoku in 食事 (shokuji - meal). it seems confusing now but much later it'll be second nature to you.
try to practise speaking. i know it can be a little difficult finding an active speaking partner but try not to be like me who neglected their speaking and was basically a flub at it for most of year 11 while the rest of the skills were fine; when i ended up actually practising and taking the effort to improve i went from a 50% student in speaking to an 85% student in speaking in the span of a few months. reading and listening will probably be the 'easiest' skills since they are receptive, strive to also be just as diligent with these skills as speaking and writing. it can get pretty easy for your reading and listening skills to slow down if they are neglected.
in terms of material, you can use the textbooks the japanese courses (the junior courses in 8, 9 and 10 / japanese beginners, then the japanese continuers stuff when you finish the junior material) use if you want something structured. of course, you could also use the genki textbooks, which are also pretty structured (and in my opinion, probably a lot easier to transition through as you're going through the content) then tobira if you're more advanced. genki and tobira are both international textbooks that aim towards completion of certain levels of the JLPT though, while the nsw ones focus on completion of nesa outcomes and the hsc courses where relevant.
japanese can first seem really difficult, and lots of people studying it independently tend to quit because they feel it can get too hard too quickly, especially in the intermediate zone. study consistently, and your japanese will end up improving tremendously. don't try to overload yourself with a bajillion kanji or grammar all at once, it's going to demotivate you very quickly. good luck!