Starting beginner lessons to learn a new language? You’re probably wondering where to start.
If you’re learning a foreign language as a hobby and there’s no pressure for time, you can just follow whatever lesson plan is laid out by the course you’re taking. Doing so will usually help you learn the language in an optimized step-by-step process, as most courses have been refined from hours upon hours of applied testing.
Things are slightly different, however, when you’re learning a language because you need to. Whether it be for an upcoming trip or a job requirement, there’s usually time pressure involved. As such, you need to take a firmer hand in setting priorities for your study materials. If you’re situation, the following guidelines should help:
- Dive immediately into what you need to learn. If you need business French, then don’t bother with survival phrases for travel. Grab yourself a business-focused language software and get cracking on that.
- Play to your strengths. If you can’t stand grammar, then don’t take a grammar-based language course. Choose a language course that plays to your strengths — you’ll get faster results that way.
- Practice the core items you need again and again. Language learning relies heavily on repetition to help things kick in. Do your language software exercises several times over — it helps.

