Abstract
This longitudinal qualitative study investigates how cultural experience of staying in Japan may affect attitudes and self-directed learning of kanji among learners of Japanese as a foreign language. Six beginner learners pursued semester-long weekly kanji learning sessions and their diachronic behaviours were observed and recorded for attitudes and self-directed learning. The six volunteer participants responded to a poster on 'kanji learning workshops' put up on notice boards in a university in Australia. All participants had completed their undergraduate studies majoring in fields other than Japanese and were not pursuing other studies in Japanese The learners who had spent a considerable time in Japan consistently demonstrated trends of negative feelings toward kanji compared to those who had not been to Japan at all. These attitudes were partially reflected in their reported ability for self-directed learning. This interesting finding is discussed in terms of preconceived beliefs and how teachers could help develop positive attitudes in learners.