Posts Tagged ‘Learning A Foreign Language’

3 Tips For Learning A Foreign Language At Home

January 5th, 2010

Did you study a foreign language in school? Spanish, French, Italian? Did you enjoy yourself? Or was it an experience that you’d rather forget?
You have to answer these last two questions honestly because they reveal a lot about how you will do the second time around.
There are many people who can’t learn a foreign language in a classroom. I was one of them. I studied French in high school, dropped it in college and then decided to study Spanish once I graduated. No formal teaching, no homework assignments, no calls home for bad grades.
Now I’m a Spanish teacher, married to a Spaniard and raising our children bilingually. And it all happened outside the class.
If you’re one of these people and have no desire to return to the classroom, then you have to make the most of your studies on your own.
It’s not easy at first. Studying a foreign language requires discipline and an awareness of important tips and tricks that can reduce the frustration and disappointment.
Here are three that are at the top of my list:
1) Understand how to learn – This may seem like a simple point but it’s worth its wait in gold. Understand that things take time. Patience is probably more valuable than your conjugations.
Too many people quit studying foreign languages after becoming discouraged with their progress. If you feel that you should progress everyday, you’re mistaken. If you feel you should make great strides each week, you’re mistaken.
You will learn slowly but surely at first and then there will come a point when you’re learning will accelerate. No one knows when. Just be patient and know that good things are happening in the depths of your brain.
2) A little studying each day is better than a lot of studying for a few days. – This is self-explanatory. You are much better off putting in 5 minutes a day when you really don’t feel like it than waiting a week and then studying for 2 hours.
The 5 minutes everyday can be anything you like. You could listen to a song in the foreign language, read the comics in the language, learn curse words in the language. As long as you’re connecting with the language in some way, you will benefit.
3) Find many ways to study. – By this I mean, listening one day, reading another, and so on. The trick to studying a foreign language on your own is to have many ways to both learn and entertain yourself. This way, you’ll always have at least one thing you can do each day to keep your momentum going.
If you know your learning style then do the majority of your learning using that style. After all, it’s the one that comes naturally to you.
In closing, knowing how to study a foreign language on your own is the most difficult part of the adventure. Discipline and desire are needed throughout. If you think you have what it takes, get to it. I did and I’m as fluent as can be. And loving it!

Language Lesson Plans – Improve Your Foreign Language Skills to Native Level

January 3rd, 2010

If you are learning a foreign language, language lesson plans are necessary to keep you on the fast track to your success. The good language lesson plans should not be 1) Complicated; 2) Time consuming; 3) Needing a lot of work. A good plan should be 1) Easy to carry out; 2) Based on reasoning that convinces the learner; 3) Having quick and long-lasting effect. Being able to speak a new language feels good. This is one of the reasons that people are keen to learn foreign languages. But a second thought of learning a large scale of vocabulary that consists of strange new words and pronunciations tends to scare people away. “It is just not for me. ” I have heard many people say that after they have learned a second language for a short period of time. Languages are made for human beings. Everybody with health listening and speaking ability is using their native languages freely all over the world. If you can speak your own language, you can be enabled to learn another tongue. If you are not experiencing success in language learning, I can tell you that the problem is not about the one who learns it. It has everything to do the lesson plans. Just think about the process that a baby learns his/her first language. There are no reasons that we as adults cannot learn foreign languages like that. Language learning is just a natural accumulating process. It is not required to work hard on separate words and sentences, neither to acquire listening and reading individually. So what you are supposed to do is just to search for the right language lesson plans.

Learning Spanish Part Eight : Some Really Bad Science!

January 2nd, 2010

So just where did this hideous stereotype about adults learning foreign language originate? It came from some very old science. There used to be a theory on “brain development” from the 1960′s which taught that there was a “crucial period” an individual had before the brain lost its “plasticity,” making learning a second language too difficult. (Lenneberg, 1967) It was a believed if you didn’t get your second language learning done before puberty, your goose was pretty well cooked. Modern studies have shown though some differences between how a child and an adult learns a second language do exist, the older learner has the distinct advantage. The adult learner of Spanish can learn the language faster because of the following: The adult’s maturely developed brain has the superior ability to understand the relationship between semantics and grammar. The adult’s brain is more mature in its ability to absorb vocabulary, grammatical structures, and to make more “higher order” generalizations and associations. The adult learner’s better-developed brain is better at “putting together all the pieces” with a more developed long-term memory. The biggest obstacle for the adult is the emotional factor. Adults have bought into the myth that they just cannot do it. They are also afraid of making fools of themselves. I have often thought this is the reason children seem to learn Spanish faster than adults do-they are not afraid of the embarrassment factor. Children also seem to learn Spanish faster because of the natural method to which they resort. They approach learning a foreign language in the identical manner as they did when they learned their native language. If you have children, you witnessed this event. Was there not a time when you just knew that your “yet-to-speak anything other than goo-goo and ga-ga” child understood far more than he was letting on? We had some friends for whom we often baby-sat. There was a point when I could see that little Scotty was more on the ball than he was letting on. Though he could not yet speak, I could say, “Show me what you want. ” and he could not only comprehend the question but also show me what he wanted. I am sure you had the same experiences with your children. Children have an “intensive” period in language learning where all they do is listen. Whether it is their native tongue or a second language, they do a lot of listening. Before your child began to speak his native tongue, he went through a silent period of listening and taking in everything. He said nothing-just listened. Before developing the high degree of spoken fluency he was destined to develop, he listened to literally thousands of repetitions of his native language from his parents’ mouths. The same thing happens in foreign language learning for the child. The child trying to learn Spanish will go through a period of listening intensely to thousands of repetitions of the target language. He will not speak much-he will just listen. During this “period of silence,” the child does almost no repeating but only listens to the sounds of the language and the meaning of the words. He sees pictures and actions associated with words and sentences. This is how children learn vocabulary and functional grammar. Then one day, after the “period of silence”-poof-he starts talking and he has largely conquered the basics of the new language. It seems fast and easy as we adults observe it but it is only the natural and fluid manner by which we all acquired our first language. You could use the same way-the same identical method-to learn Spanish. Adults often decide (and are led to believe) if they enroll in a conversational class, it will solve the problems of second language acquisition. It won’t and here is why. You will be in a class with other non -native speakers who are trying to do what you are trying to do. Mostly what you will be exposed to are non-natives speaking Spanish poorly. You will be constantly exposed to students making huge pronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary mistakes. This will hinder your progress and teach you bad habits. What would work, with regard to a conversational class, is a private one-on-one tutorial experience with a native speaker. But, as they say, which of us could afford that? Conversational classes work when you are the only student and you can interact with a native speaker without other non -native students hindering your progress. Remember the child. He is listening intensely to the native speaker whose is speaking the target language correctly. During that silent period, he is learning correct accent, vocabulary, and natural grammatical structures. The Horse you must seek is the development of a high degree of spoken fluency in the target language in the same way a child learns languages. In a study by Petoskey, 1974; Winitz, 1981; J. Gary and N. Gary, 1981, they postulated that the most effective methodology for the adult learner of a second language is one in which listening (that “period of silence”) is the focus before any speaking is done. ”According to this research, effective adult language training programs are those that use materials that provide an interesting and comprehensible message, delay speaking practice and emphasize the development of listening comprehension. . . “ Listening first, and I mean lots and lots of intensive listening, and speaking second is how you, Mr. Adult Wannebees Bilingual American, learned your English and it is the same method you must use to learn Spanish. It is the Horse-the high degree of spoken fluency-that you must develop first before trying to pull the Cart (formal grammar instruction). This is not only possible but I am going to tell you how I did it. NEXT: Still Looking for that Horse