If an adult fails to learn a foreign language (and most do), most of us assume they simply don’t study hard enough or just aren’t good at languages. It’s certainly true that some learners are lazy, and given the same methods, certain folks tend to pick up languages faster than others. But neither of these is the real issue; both are but symptoms of the underlying problem: 1) crappy methods, 2) crappy materials, and 3) crappy attitudes.
Why some people struggle to learn languagesSteve Kaufmann
Hi everyone, my name is Steve Kaufmann. I have achieved varying degrees of fluency in 15 languages, and look forward to learning more.
Why do some people struggle to learn a new language? Here is a few points I want to share to help you achieve your goals with language learning!
Visit my blog for more tips, advice, and motivation.
http://blog.thelinguist.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/lingosteve
Youtube: https://goo.gl/aJ9P2T
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lingosteve?fref=ts
Making mistakes is an integral part of learning a language, but only if they are productive mistakes. Mangling a verb tense or using the wrong noun gender provides a learning opportunity. More serious mistakes, like using the wrong materials or burning yourself out, on the other hand, can be detrimental. Find out which mistakes haunt language learners, and how you can avoid them!
I have achieved varying degrees of fluency in 15 languages, and look forward to learning more. To me, there are three natural stages in language growth, which I outline here.
Visit my blog for more tips, advice, and motivation.
http://blog.thelinguist.com/
My name is Steve Kaufmann. I have achieved varying degrees of fluency in 15 languages, and look forward to learning more.
Here's an answer to a question I am asked frequently, "how do you start learning a language?"
Visit my blog for more tips, advice, and motivation.
http://blog.thelinguist.com/
Why some people struggle to learn languagesSteve Kaufmann
Hi everyone, my name is Steve Kaufmann. I have achieved varying degrees of fluency in 15 languages, and look forward to learning more.
Why do some people struggle to learn a new language? Here is a few points I want to share to help you achieve your goals with language learning!
Visit my blog for more tips, advice, and motivation.
http://blog.thelinguist.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/lingosteve
Youtube: https://goo.gl/aJ9P2T
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lingosteve?fref=ts
Making mistakes is an integral part of learning a language, but only if they are productive mistakes. Mangling a verb tense or using the wrong noun gender provides a learning opportunity. More serious mistakes, like using the wrong materials or burning yourself out, on the other hand, can be detrimental. Find out which mistakes haunt language learners, and how you can avoid them!
I have achieved varying degrees of fluency in 15 languages, and look forward to learning more. To me, there are three natural stages in language growth, which I outline here.
Visit my blog for more tips, advice, and motivation.
http://blog.thelinguist.com/
My name is Steve Kaufmann. I have achieved varying degrees of fluency in 15 languages, and look forward to learning more.
Here's an answer to a question I am asked frequently, "how do you start learning a language?"
Visit my blog for more tips, advice, and motivation.
http://blog.thelinguist.com/
Ever wish you could be proficient in a second, or third or even fourth language? It won't be easy, but it is possible and extremely rewarding to know and be fluent in many languages. There are several aspects to learning a language: listening skills, speaking skills, writing skills and reading skills. All are equally important, so try not to lag behind in any one category. You can join a class, hire a private tutor, or try to learn at home. The more work you put in, the more you will improve.
The MTL Professional Development Programme is a collection of 202 PowerPoint presentations that will provide you with step-by-step summaries of a key management or personal development skill. This presentation is on "The Art of Listening" and show you how to listen attentively, empathically, and actively to others.
Check out these 8 reasons why learning English as a second foreign language is so important today, especially for your successful IT career. Don't forget to share your thoughts with us.
If you understand how English is important for you, then there is the next question: HOW can you improve your English skills? Check this presentation to find out the 10 best ways of making your English better.
Ever wish you could be proficient in a second, or third or even fourth language? It won't be easy, but it is possible and extremely rewarding to know and be fluent in many languages. There are several aspects to learning a language: listening skills, speaking skills, writing skills and reading skills. All are equally important, so try not to lag behind in any one category. You can join a class, hire a private tutor, or try to learn at home. The more work you put in, the more you will improve.
The MTL Professional Development Programme is a collection of 202 PowerPoint presentations that will provide you with step-by-step summaries of a key management or personal development skill. This presentation is on "The Art of Listening" and show you how to listen attentively, empathically, and actively to others.
Check out these 8 reasons why learning English as a second foreign language is so important today, especially for your successful IT career. Don't forget to share your thoughts with us.
If you understand how English is important for you, then there is the next question: HOW can you improve your English skills? Check this presentation to find out the 10 best ways of making your English better.
Most people think just by born good looking is a good personality, but this is far from the truth, however, good grooming and looks is tiny part of it, the scope of personality development is quite broad.
Personality means characteristics and appearances of a person, his/her way of thought, feeling, behavior, communication ability, how to dress well and interpersonal skills.
The personality can also be modified to a certain extent, as previously people were thinking good personality is by born. But in recent years have seen a variety of efforts by professionals to design courses, that develops certain positive trends in personality. The objective of such courses is to remove those barriers or obstructions that stand in the way of the good personality.
SIOP Refresher: Meeting the Needs of our ELLS Carla Huck
This was our first PD of the school year, providing our teachers with the key principles of language instruction for ELLs and classroom implementation examples. Supplemental materials were also provided in a binder, such as a glossary of terms, GO-TO Strategies Matrix, differentiated techniques for ELLs, and one page handouts on various instructional strategies discussed.
Presenting an overview of the research and history of Every Child Ready to Read @ Your Library and why this early literacy initiative works and should be an essential part of all library storytimes and settings.
Have you ever asked yourself:
- how babies learn language and how that's different from learning a foreign language
- how easy or difficult it is to teach English as a foreign language
- how a language teacher comes to grips with finding out and explaining language rules
- how to describe the different ways people talk and write English
- what sort of person makes a good language teacher and whether you might be that sort of person?
If your answer to any of these questions is 'yes', then this course should interest you.
What are the aims of the course?
The main aim of this course is to act as a taster for anyone who feels they might like to pursue an interest in language or language teaching. It is designed to fascinate and intrigue but above all to be clear and straightforward about the nature of the English language. For instance, it highlights the variety and diversity displayed by English. The differences between colloquial English, conversational and written English may seem at first obvious, but they are not and they are not always mirrored in other languages. In Arabic-speaking countries, educated people sometimes use classical Arabic in speech as well as in writing, whereas less educated people speak only colloquial Arabic. The differences in convention between the two languages must be well understood by teacher and learner alike if confusion and misunderstanding are not to result. But this course is not just about the system and use of language. The information it provides is always set in the context of learning development, both the learning that you will be doing as course user and the learning achieved by learners of a Foreign language.
A second aim of language and learning awareness is to promote English language teaching (ELT) as a profession rather than as just a backpacker's passport. You might think the days are gone when to get into teaching English as a foreign language (EFL), the first step was to 'practice' on a class, without so much as a day's training. Sadly this does still happen, and of course is fair neither to the learners nor the 'teacher'. I hope that this course will persuade anyone who isn't persuaded already how important it is to counter this state of affairs.
A third aim has been to sensitize the user to issues and principles rather than dazzle them with names and difficult terminology. The course is written in a direct, personal style and any terms which might possibly pose a problem are either fully explained in the text or appear in a glossary which can be accessed at any time. In general, it has been kept jargon free. If at any stage you come across a point which you don't find easy to follow, don't worry or give up. It may become clearer later, so it's worth carrying on and returning to it if you need to. Be prepared to side-step a stumbling block rather than treat it as a barrier to the rest of the course.
Source: https://ebookschoice.com/what-is-language-and-how-do-we-learn-it/
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3. But Why? Most of us
assume we fail to reach
fluency in a language
because we simply didn’t
study hard enough or just
aren’t good at languages.
It’s certainly true that
some learners are lazy, and
given the same methods,
certain folks tend to pick
up languages faster than
others.
!
But neither of these is the
real issue; both are but
symptoms of the
underlying problem...
The Supposed Cause
4. The Real Reason Most Fail
For most learners, the real root cause of failure in language learning is
not laziness or a lack of aptitude, but rather the “crappy triumvirate”
of traditional language learning:
Crappy
Methods
1
Crappy
Materials
2
Crappy
Attitudes
3
5. Crappy Methods
Despite their poor track record and the widespread availability of far
better options, most language study is still focused on three
outdated, ineffective, inefficient, painful methods:
Grammar-
Translation
A
Rote
Memorization
B C
Standardized
Testing
1
6. Grammar-Translation
This academic approach focuses on memorizing grammar rules and
vocab lists, and translating written passages to and from one’s native
language. It was originally used for studying “dead languages” like
Latin, but came to be applied to modern spoken languages as well. It’s
a highly inefficient means to reach oral fluency as shown by the vast
majority of students who emerge from ten plus years of grammar-
based formal instruction unable to speak the language well, if at all.
A
7. “You do not have to know grammar
to obey grammar.”
!
―Barry Farber
How to Learn Any Language
8. Language is Innate
Grammar-translation fails because it treats
language as a set of facts to memorize,
not the innate biological system
it truly is. Nobody learns to drive by
reading the car’s owner’s manual,
yet that is precisely the way
most people try to learn
foreign languages.
9. “Language is not a cultural artifact that we learn the way we
learn to tell time or how the federal government works.
Language is a complex, specialized skill, which develops in the
child spontaneously, without conscious effort or formal
instruction, deployed without awareness
of its underlying logic…”
!
―Stephen Pinker
The Language Instinct
10. Rote Memory
Trying to commit a new word to memory by writing it out hundreds of
times is not only boring, but also highly ineffective. It may work to
temporarily memorize a set of facts or figures for tomorrow’s test, but
this approach does not lead to long-term retention. Moreover, rote
memory only works—if it works at all—for explicit information, not
the tacit knowledge required to understand and speak a language.
B
11. Oh the Memories...
Grammar-translation and rote memory approaches attempt to force
feed language facts into declarativememory. This might work for
memorizing the capital of Namibia or a list of Spanish words out of
context, but it does not work for building proceduralmemories, the
kind that allows you to actually use words in context or produce
grammatical sentences. Dr. Stephen Krashen defines this distinction
well in his Acquisition-Learning Hypothesis.
16. Acquisition is Hardwired
Humans have been acquiring languages for hundreds of thousands of
years without any help from textbooks or grammar teachers. This is
because the ability to acquire languages is hardwired into our genes.
The language acquisition process happens automaticallyif—and this
is a big if—you get sufficient exposure to a language and enough
practice using it. This is precisely what happened when you were a
baby, and can happen even faster as an adult.
17. Adults Can Learn Faster
Contrary to popular belief, adults are actually better, or at least
faster, language learners than children. We grown ups have three
main advantages over ankle biters:
!
‣ Adults have the power of choice
‣ Adults have learned how to learn
‣ Adults have big vocabularies to draw upon
18. The Power of Choice
The freedom to choose what you learn, why you learn, and how you
learn significantly increases motivation, enjoyment, and retention.
Most people develop a hatred for foreign languages in school because
they have no control over any of these choices. It is very likely that
both enjoyment and proficiency would significantly rise if language
courses were optional.
19. Adults Know How to Learn
You have already learned how to drive, operate the printer at work,
program the clock on your DVD player, and fix that toilet that keeps
running for some reason. You learned all of these things more quickly
than any child could because you have already learned so many other
things. Every task you learn helps you learn other tasks. And every
language you delve into makes the next one that much easier to learn.
20. Adults Have Big Vocabularies
Infants must first develop basic cognitive functions before they can
begin acquiring the language around them (what Steven Pinker calls
“mentalese”). Assuming you don’t have brain damage, adults have
fully developed mentalese and massive vocabularies to draw upon.
You already know the meaning of “photosynthesis”; you need simply
learn it’s equivalent in your target language.
21. Test, Test, Test!
As the late Peter Drucker said, “What gets measured, gets managed.”
This is sage advice, but what you measure and howyou measure it
is extremely important. Standardized language tests are poor
assessment tools for progress in a language because:
!
‣ Standardized tests don’t measure what really matters.
‣ Test preparation usually distracts from fluency-building tasks.
C
22. Measuring What Matters
Formal tests are not a good way to measure one’s ability to use a
foreign language in real communication. Not only do they focus on
exceptions and overly formal usage, but they tend to assess one’s
knowledge of the language, not one’s ability to communicate in it.
The only true assessment of language fluency is the ability to
understand—and be understood by—native speakers.
23. Test Prep is a Distraction
Test prep books and classes focus almost exclusively on declarative
memorization, not the procedural memories that actually lead to
fluency. If you spend your time actually acquiringthe language, you
will do better on standardized tests and be able to actually usewhat
you learn long after the test is over.
24. Crappy Materials
Even though modern learners can access heaps of free, interesting,
relevant materials online, most language learners still use traditional
textbooks and readers. Instead of boring, generic, text-only print
materials, the effective language learner chooses:
Interesting,
Targeted Content
A
Audio Over Text
Content
B
Digital Over
Print Content
C
2
25. Choose Content Carefully
There is no better way to improve both enjoyment and efficacy than
choosing materials that fit your specific interests, goals, and needs.
This is perhaps the greatest disadvantage of traditional classroom-
based learning where you are stuck with whatever materials and
topics your teacher happens to choose. With so many free, high-
quality resources available online today, independent learners have no
excuse to study uninteresting, stilted, irrelevant materials.
A
26. “We should remember the warning of the wise Grail knight in
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: ‘You must choose, but
choose wisely, for as the true Grail will bring you life, the false
Grail will take it from you.’ Choose the highest-yield material
and you can be an idiot and enjoy stunning success. Choose
poorly and, as the Grail knight implied, you’re screwed no
matter what. You’ll chase your own tail for years.”
!
―Tim Ferriss, The 4-Hour Chef
27. Audio > Text
Reading tends to be less intimidating for adult learners since we have
time to think our way through the language as we go. But you get
better at what you practice, and reading alone does very little to help
improve your listening and speaking abilities. When possible, try to
focus on audio over text, or materials that include both:
!
‣ Podcasts with transcripts
‣ Audio books along with the e-book or print version of the book
B
28. Digital Materials
I have an almost fetish-level attraction to good old-fashioned paper
books, but when it comes to language learning, digital materials
trump paper for 3 important reasons:
!
‣ Digital materials are faster
‣ Digital materials are more portable
‣ Digital materials are cheaper (if not free)
C
29. Digital Materials Are Faster
Looking up unknown words you encounter in paper books,
newspapers, or magazines is slow and laborious. Worse yet, when you
rely on a notebook or pad to write these words and definitions down,
you risk misplacing all your hard work. A far faster option is using the
built-in dictionaries on Kindle and iBooks, popup browser dictionaries
like Rikaichan, or online dictionaries like Google Translate, Tatoeba, or
Tangorin. Best of all, some of these tools allow you to export words
directly to spaced repetition flashcard apps like Anki!
30. Digital = Portable
Bitsarealotlighterthanatoms!
Most smartphones and tablets can store more reading and listening
content than you could get through in a lifetime. So instead of killing
your back and wasting valuable space in your bag, carry your foreign
language content in digital format instead. That way, you’ll never have
an excuse not to study when “hidden moments” arise.
31. “Harnessing your hidden moments, those otherwise
meaningless scraps of time you’d never normally think of
putting to practical use, and using them for language
study―even if it’s no more than fifteen, ten, or five seconds at
a time—can turn you into a triumphant tortoise.”
!
―Barry Farber
How to Learn Any Language
32. Bits Are Cheaper than Atoms
Due to their much lower production and distribution costs,
eBooks, streaming videos, and MP3s tend to be much cheaper than
print books, DVDs, and CDs. In fact, they’re not just cheaper, they
often free! Why spend hundreds of dollars on Rosetta Stone or
language classes when you can watch free YouTube videos, download
free podcasts, or talk to native speakers for free on Skype?
33. Crappy Attitudes
Perhaps the greatest obstacle of all is one’s attitude toward the
language learning process and the target language itself. Until you
can move past the following 3 misconceptions, even the best methods
and materials won’t get you very far…
“Languages
are Difficult”
A
“I Suck at
Languages”
B
“I Don’t
Have Time”
C
3
34. “In language learning it is attitude, not aptitude,
that determines success.”
!
―Steve Kaufman
Creator of LingQ.com & author ofTheWay ofThe Linguist
35. “Languages Are Difficult”
As Benny the Irish Polyglot points out, foreign languages are not
“difficult”, they are just “different”. The more time you spend with a
language, the more familiar it becomes. This may sound like mere
semantics, but one’s outlook significantly changes one’s outcome.
“You don't learn a language, you get used to it.”
―Khatzumoto, All Japanese All theTime
36. “I Suck at Languages”
Being “good at languages” is only a factor when you study using the
crappy, conscious, academic methods discussed earlier. When you
follow a natural, input and output based approach, your brain’s innate
language acquisition process does the heavy lifting for you. You
simply need to “show up” day in and day out.
!
“80 percent of success is showing up.”
―Woody Allen
37. “I Don’t Have Time”
I don’t doubt that you are busy. But the cold, hard truth is that even the
busiest person always finds time to do things they really want to (like
watch Breaking Bad). So if you catch yourself saying “I really want to
learn a language, but I’m simply too busy right now”, you need to do
some honest reflection and see if you are truly strapped for time or
just failing to prioritize language learning in your life.
38. “Most things make no difference.
Being busy is a form of laziness―lazy thinking
and indiscriminate action.”
!
―Tim Ferriss
The 4-Hour Workweek
39. Now Get Going!
Don’t wait for the “right time” to begin your language learning
adventure. The perfect timing will never come. Take the first steps
toward foreign language fluency rightnow:
!
‣ Choose interesting, targeted, digital materials
‣ Maximize exposure to the language throughout your day, every day
‣ Prioritize language learning & believe you will succeed
40. For more tips, tools, and tech to learn languages the fun way, visit:
LanguageMastery.com
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