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Japanese studying made for you!

Japanese studying made for you!

Allemand : Une formation en ligne « Echange franco-allemand et web2.0 » Encore une formation gratuite en ligne à suivre sur le réseau du LPM de la Sarre. Notre collègue Christophe Jaeglin de la rubrique 'allemand' du Café y présentera des manières d'utiliser des sites du Web 2.0 dans le cadre d'un échange franco-allemand, notamment en primaire. Vous pourrez voir quelques projets réalisés avec des élèves grâce à des outils du web 2.0 pour faire vivre un échange franco-allemand, ainsi que l'utilisation d'un blog et d'une plateforme de travail collaboratif 'Moodle' pour permettre aux élèves de travailler, d'échanger et de mutualiser, de façon à améliorer leurs connaissances en langue vivante. Le lien d'accès direct fonctionnel le soir de la conférence

Japanese With Manga A couple of weeks ago I posted how reading manga can be good for your Japanese , but I only touched on learning to read from scratch. Thankfully, one of my friends natuskigirl (Lynn) followed through with her comment on that post , and put together two videos on how to start learning Japanese with manga. The videos are excellent in outlining the steps you need to take to start using manga as a learning aide, so I thought I might feature them here and add a few of my own ideas. Lynn started learning Japanese from manga when she was 13 years old, and has posted lots of cool manga collecting videos on her YouTube channel " tokirocket ". She knows what she is talking about, so listen carefully as she outlines a long term study plan for learning how to read Japanese with Manga. We'll get to the second part of the video soon, but first I just want to summarise some of the points Lynn made about the first steps you need to take. 3 Steps you need to take to begin reading First: Memorise the kana.

Méthode pour gaijins The Japan Foundation > Japanese-Language Education Overseas The Japan Foundation responds extensively to overseas demands for Japanese-language education in ways such as dispatching specialists to overseas Japanese educational organizations and training local Japanese-language teachers. Website The Japanese-Language Institute, Urawa Website The Japanese-Language Institute, Kansai Recommended Contents The WEB version of "Erin" has been used by a large number of people interested in Japanese language and culture. The Japan Foundation conducts surveys every few years of overseas organizations that offer Japanese language courses. The official Japanese coursebooks of the Japan Foundation "Marugoto : Japanese language and culture Starter A1" Katsudoo and Rikai have been released. Page Top

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