About: All Japanese All The Time   Sponge Permalink

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"All Japanese All The Time" or "AJATT" is a language blog written by Khatzumoto, who learned Japanese to a respectable level in 18 months. "AJATT" is also used as a name for his language-learning method. The method was heavily inspired by Antimoon and Krashen's Theory of Second Language Acquisition, although the details of the method have changed over the years. The AJATT method has three major features: The amount of work involved was substantial—many thousands of hours of listening, and over 7,000 SRS cards.

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  • All Japanese All The Time
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  • "All Japanese All The Time" or "AJATT" is a language blog written by Khatzumoto, who learned Japanese to a respectable level in 18 months. "AJATT" is also used as a name for his language-learning method. The method was heavily inspired by Antimoon and Krashen's Theory of Second Language Acquisition, although the details of the method have changed over the years. The AJATT method has three major features: The amount of work involved was substantial—many thousands of hours of listening, and over 7,000 SRS cards.
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  • "All Japanese All The Time" or "AJATT" is a language blog written by Khatzumoto, who learned Japanese to a respectable level in 18 months. "AJATT" is also used as a name for his language-learning method. The method was heavily inspired by Antimoon and Krashen's Theory of Second Language Acquisition, although the details of the method have changed over the years. The AJATT method has three major features: * Attitude towards the language. "Pretend you are Japanese. Tell yourself you are Japanese. Who you think you are matters more than who you actually are." * "Immersion" at home. Khatzumoto aimed to spend every free moment either listening or looking at Japanese, whether he understood it or not. * Spaced Repetition (SRS). This was used to capture interesting sentences and review them periodically. This precise details have evolved over the years, changing from 10000 Sentences to Massive-Context Cloze Deletion. The amount of work involved was substantial—many thousands of hours of listening, and over 7,000 SRS cards. Khatzumoto sells an excellent one-page summary of his method for US$0.01. This is payable via Paypal, which means he also gets your email adress (though if he uses those addresses for anything, it's fairly rare). For those with a much larger budget, he provides a considerably more expensive online course called Silver Spoon/Neutrino, which gamifies your learning.
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