Writing helps the language stick better for me especially if it’s one like Japanese or Korean where you have to learn a whole new writing system.
Whew, good thing I'm functionally illiterate in Hebrew! Hah. I have a TBI that makes learning these systems extremely difficult, bordering on impossible. What helped me was taking each letter, making it really BIG, like on a whole ass piece of paper, then using haptic feedback to clue my brain in how the shapes are formed. Every time I read, I'm using gestures as well (it's helped actually to learn the
alef-bet in Israeli Sign Language, because it makes me look less
crazy).
I associate each letter to the sign language version, which allows me to get a better handle on the word. But it takes me like five times as long to read something than to hear/speak it (and I am far, far better at production than I am at understanding, in every language I learn -- I speak like a fluent person, with a good ass accent! My ability to hear and replicate sounds is quite good. The
only sound that I cannot produce in the languages I know spontaneously [though I can within certain sentences, like I can say 'ani
rotze' with a
rhotic R but I cannot produce the rhotic R in other words/sentences with consistent accuracy.)
Anyway, so people get tricked into thinking I'm fluent, then start yammering on at me and I'm like oh okay!!!
abawbndiawdaijgvdg!!! to you as well, sir!!! Personally I define myself as fluent in both of these languages even though my actual proficiency is nowhere near as good as English (reading and writing, particularly -- I learned how to do this in English
before my TBI and fortunately retained my skills, though reading nonsense words or conlangs can throw me off, I managed to become fluent in Vulcan!) because I think I've learned them to the best of my actual capacity.
I will never be able to gain complete proficiency in Hebrew writing, it doesn't matter how long or how hard I study it (a TBI is not like a learning disability - without extensive neurological rehab at the start of your injury, your ability to regain skills is very limited. I did become
better at certain things over the last 20 or so years, but I still was completely unable to learn
new things that invoke the damaged processes in my occipital lobe) and because I can
produce at a fluent level (I can even produce fairly
competent Hebrew writing, I just cannot read it with any consistency).