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August 19, 2009

Language Learning Is A Different Type Of Skill Acquisition

As we’ve expounded on so many times, you can’t learn a language in isolation.  Languages are a means of communication between people, and the only real way  to learn it is by engaging in interactions.

Can’t you learn a language from a language learning software?  Of course, you can.  Using it, you can
memorize vocabulary, study grammar and learn how to construct sentences, among other things.  However, having a store of words and grammatical constructs you can draw from is hardly the most important aspect of learning.  Acquiring a language has more to do with developing abilities in communication and interaction, being a part of a community that speaks the vernacular.  As such, you can’t ever truly learn a language on your own.

Unlike a skill like riding a bicycle that involve no outside component, other people are imperative to language learning.  Language serves as a bridge for understanding.  If you don’t use it to communicate, then your feedback mechanism is completely inadequate – about a 1 in 100, if you need a number to gauge just how lacking it is.

A more fitting comparison to the skill of language learning is the art of public speaking.  You can practice giving out a speech for days on end in your bedroom, but your biggest progress will always happen once you leave the house and stand on a podium.

Don’t think you can work at language learning the same way you work on Math and History.  Language has many nuances that you simply can’t pick up on your own.  Read your phrasebooks and finish your language software lessons, but remember to go out and apply it as much you can.

July 11, 2009

Developing Study Skills For Language Learning

Want to have an easier time in your language learning efforts?  Look towards developing better study skills.  Unfortunately for the school-averse, the same discipline necessary for doing good in school (remember those times) is likely to be the same thing that will help you in your later language acquisition.

Strategies And Techniques

There are literally dozens upon dozens of techniques available to anyone who’s trying to learn a new language.  Some of them can work better for you, depending on your personal talents and capabilities.  As such, it’s important to look back at learning strategies that have worked well for you in the past, then aim towards integrating it with the way you approach language learning.

Making Time

Even the best language learning software and the most advanced tools aren’t going to help your language skills if you can’t make time for them.  As such, you’ll have to afford language learning some amount of priority, even if it isn’t the biggest thing going on in your life at the moment.

Building A Routine

Get yourself used to a regular study schedule, where you will focus solely on language learning lessons and practice.  Incorporate both formal lessons (either from a book or a language software) and practice time (both reading and spoken).


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