- Apr 2, 2007
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- 57,429
How difficult is it? I was told the following:
Unlike math, where you need to learn step A, then step B, then step C....with a language, you don't want to just go learning word A, then word B, then grammar rule C. This really doesn't work well. What works well is learning the same we all learned our native language; you will struggle, hear and say words you don't understand, you won't fully grasp a concept before hearing more words, etc. The big key is staying immersed in the language, listening to it and speaking it as much as possible. Your brain will hardwire itself over time and learn the words, phrases, rules you have a hard time with. Trying to memorize them like memorizing a multiplication table doesn't work
This is why so many people come out of high school or college saying "huh, I really don't know much even though I've had 4 years of classes where I did countless amounts of homework".
This is a great article explaining: https://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/03/science/how-immersion-helps-to-learn-a-new-language.html
"The subjects were split into two groups. One group studied the language in a formal classroom setting, while the other was trained through immersion.
After five months, both groups retained the language even though they had not used it at all, and both displayed brain processing similar to that of a native speaker. But the immersion group displayed the full brain patterns of a native speaker, Dr. Ullman said."
The part I bolded is the key, it's the reason why immersion learning is far superior to trying to "book learn" a language.
I myself disagree. My daughter speak 3 languages and she only 13 - English, Spanish and French. They are all taught in the classroom.
Unlike math, where you need to learn step A, then step B, then step C....with a language, you don't want to just go learning word A, then word B, then grammar rule C. This really doesn't work well. What works well is learning the same we all learned our native language; you will struggle, hear and say words you don't understand, you won't fully grasp a concept before hearing more words, etc. The big key is staying immersed in the language, listening to it and speaking it as much as possible. Your brain will hardwire itself over time and learn the words, phrases, rules you have a hard time with. Trying to memorize them like memorizing a multiplication table doesn't work
This is why so many people come out of high school or college saying "huh, I really don't know much even though I've had 4 years of classes where I did countless amounts of homework".This is a great article explaining: https://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/03/science/how-immersion-helps-to-learn-a-new-language.html
"The subjects were split into two groups. One group studied the language in a formal classroom setting, while the other was trained through immersion.
After five months, both groups retained the language even though they had not used it at all, and both displayed brain processing similar to that of a native speaker. But the immersion group displayed the full brain patterns of a native speaker, Dr. Ullman said."
The part I bolded is the key, it's the reason why immersion learning is far superior to trying to "book learn" a language.
I myself disagree. My daughter speak 3 languages and she only 13 - English, Spanish and French. They are all taught in the classroom.
