Learn Kana Easy: Master Hiragana & Katakana in 7 Days
Learning kana (hiragana and katakana) is the fastest practical step toward reading and writing Japanese. This 7-day plan gives focused daily goals, simple techniques, and short practice routines so you can reliably memorize all 92 basic kana (46 hiragana + 46 katakana) in one week and begin reading real Japanese.
Why learn kana first
- Kana are phonetic: once learned, every kana corresponds to a single sound, making pronunciation and reading predictable.
- They’re used in everyday Japanese for native words (hiragana), foreign words and names (katakana), and grammar markers.
- Knowing kana unlocks vocabulary study, basic grammar, signage, menus, and native-level resources like children’s books.
How this 7-day plan works
- Short, daily sessions: 20–40 minutes per day.
- Active recall + spaced repetition (SRS) principle: practice writing, reading, and recognition.
- Mix sensory methods: visual mnemonics, handwriting, listening, and typing.
- Immediate application: read sample words and simple sentences each day.
7-Day Schedule
Day 1 — Foundations & 10 hiragana
Goal: Learn stroke order and the first 10 hiragana (あ a, い i, う u, え e, お o; か ka, き ki, く ku, け ke, こ ko).
- Study: Watch a 5–10 minute hiragana stroke-order demo for vowels and ka-row.
- Write: 5 repetitions of each kana while saying the sound aloud.
- Mnemonics: Create a simple visual story for each kana (e.g., あ looks like an “antenna” = a).
- Read: Find 10 simple words using these kana (e.g., あお ao = blue).
- Review: Quick 5-minute flashcard review before bed.
Day 2 — 10 more hiragana
Goal: Learn sa-row (さしすせそ) and ta-row (たちつてと) where possible — 10 kana.
- Study: Short demo for new rows.
- Write & Say: 5 reps each.
- Listening: Hear native pronunciation examples (use a simple audio kana chart).
- Read: 10 words combining Day 1–2 kana.
- Review: SRS flashcards (digital or paper).
Day 3 — Finish hiragana (remaining 26)
Goal: Learn na, ha, ma, ya, ra, wa, n and remaining kana to complete 46 hiragana.
- Study: Break into two sub-sessions (morning/evening) to avoid overload.
- Write: 3–5 reps for each new kana, emphasizing tricky shapes.
- Mnemonics: Use consistent imagery (family of shapes) to speed recall.
- Read: Short children’s words or labels.
- Test: Timed 5-minute recall writing all hiragana you’ve learned.
Day 4 — 10 katakana
Goal: Start katakana with vowels and ka-row equivalents (ア イ ウ エ オ; カ キ ク ケ コ).
- Study: Note shapes differ but sounds match hiragana — leverage hiragana knowledge.
- Write & Say: 5 reps per kana; compare pairs (あ vs ア, か vs カ).
- Recognition drill: Match hiragana to katakana pairs.
- Read: Foreign loanwords in katakana (e.g., コーヒー kōhī = coffee).
Day 5 — 18 more katakana
Goal: Learn sa, ta, na, ha, ma, ya rows as capacity allows — reach ~28 total.
- Practice: Pair new katakana with their hiragana counterparts.
- Typing: Learn to type katakana using romaji input (optional).
- Listening: Short audio drills for katakana-only words (brand names, foods).
- Read: Short katakana-heavy lists (menu items, loanwords).
Day 6 — Finish katakana + voiced marks
Goal: Complete the remaining katakana to total 46 and learn dakuten/handakuten (e.g., か→が, は→ぱ).
- Study: Learn voiced variants and small kana (ゃ,ゅ,ょ,っ).
- Write: 3–5 reps each for remaining kana + voiced versions.
- Drill: Convert hiragana words to katakana and vice versa.
- Read: Practice words with small tsu (っ) and contracted sounds (きゃ, きゅ).
Day 7 — Consolidation & Real reading
Goal: Solidify recall, timed tests, and read short native materials.
- Review: Full SRS session covering all kana.
- Timed writing test: Write all 92 kana within 10 minutes.
- Reading practice: Children’s sentences, simple signs, product names.
- Use: Translate 10 simple words from romaji to kana and back.
- Plan next steps: start basic vocabulary, simple grammar, or use graded readers.
Quick Techniques that Make It Easy
- Write by hand: Memory strengthens with motor action and stroke order.
- Use mnemonics: One quick image per kana beats rote memorization.
- Active recall: Test yourself before checking the answer.
- Spaced repetition: Short daily reviews (5–10 minutes) beat long cramming.
- Mix modalities: Read, write, listen, and type to reinforce different memory pathways.
- Grouping: Learn kana in small, related sets (rows) rather than random order.
Sample 10–Minute Daily Practice (repeat each day)
- 2 minutes — Quick warm-up writing 5 kana learned most recently.
- 3 minutes — Flashcard rapid recognition (cover answers).
- 2 minutes — Listen and repeat 10 audio examples.
- 3 minutes — Read or write 5 short words using those kana.
Resources (recommended)
- Printable kana charts with stroke order.
- SRS apps (Anki, Memrise) with kana decks.
- Short audio kana charts for pronunciation.
- Children’s books or graded readers for beginner
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