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[C871]Community Language Learning Method
by Quentin Yu, Que

Typically scholastic language instruction consists of classroom endeavors that group together people of various level of aptitude or relatively short term intensive exposure to a language in an immersion setting, like a summer abroad program. These methods of education are valuable in their own right and many academic institutions cannot venture far from these traditional styles of language teaching, but there are other methods and exercises often overlooked or deemed unimportant in the light of traditional instructional settings by language instructors.

Basic elements of language studies will most certainly always include reading, writing, speaking, and listening of the target language. What is many times understated or not made clear is how to do these things. Explaining study methods that help internalize linguistic building blocks can be the key to assisting a student in reaching a level of fluency beyond that of a high novice after two or three years of instruction.

Reading sentences in a new language, for instance, may take on a different order of perception than what English speakers are used to undertaking. Tibetan is a post-positional language such that descriptive parts of main phrases tend to be backwards from a similar passage in English. Glancing at a sign or billboard in Lhasa may be more productive if the reader learns to start from the end of the writing and work backwards first, or better yet, read the first word or topic syllables and then switch to the end of the sentence or phrase and work backwards until all of most of the sentence elements have been comprehended. It is not always necessary to have full comprehension of a sentence or phrase to get the general meaning. The goal eventually should be to have full comprehension, but gathering a general meaning first and then working on deeper associations later work better to internalize the reading process.

Script of languages similar in some ways to English may be easier that scripts that are farther in base from English, but learning either can be accelerated with visual aids. Traditional Chinese characters are pictographic in nature and if the meanings of the sections of the characters are taught, it is much easier to remember how to write familiar characters and recognize or make educated guesses at new ones. German or Spanish words may have familiar basic elements and mental pictures of the English term can help the student retain new words. When script of a language is completely unlike English, but is alphabetical, transliteration can be used to link words with English ones, or various student derived pictures can be drawn or conjured to relate the two words. One common trick that works wondrously is placing tags in the target language on objects in the student's environment or picture oriented flash cards. Many computer based language courses utilize similar visual association to enhance language learning.

Daily conversation with native speakers is always the ultimate learning tool. This, of course, is not always available, so listening and repeating exercises often take the position of the next best choice. Again, many computer programs are being used to bring allow the student to interact with a native speaker via video and audio files in lieu of direct contact. Other great tools include children's songs, films, and television programs in the target language. Students that watch or listen to media in the target language, even merely as background sound, may internalize the language more completely and rapidly than student who do not.

Perhaps the most important tactic rarely taught in a classroom setting is the art of trying. No student will have a full vocabulary available to them to complete complex thoughts in their target language at the beginning of their studies. What all students do have is the ability to use what they do have to find a way around the stumbling points presented by a small word base. For instance, if a student does not know the word for “dog” but does know the word for “cat” and a negative in the language, even if it is the wrong one, they can try to say something about the “non-cat”. It may be met with laughter or confusion, but more likely the native speaker will correct the student and fully comprehend the meaning being conveyed. In reverse, if the student hears a sentence that contains a structure “the BLANK there is red” and the only object is site that is red is a book, then the student can infer that the unknown word is a book and can either ask to make sure or mentally file away the word to look it up later and listen for it again in another conversation. A student should also not be afraid to ask a native speaker to repeat something they have said. Repetition is a fantastic basic tool and sometimes overlooked in language acquisition. These types of comprehension techniques will lead to a fully vocabulary and an increase in listening and speaking comprehension, which is the ultimate goal for all language students.

While many classroom settings and immersion courses will cover the basic building blocks of language, using these learning techniques, in conjunction with the traditional teaching of languages will promote a student's accelerated internalization of their target language.


Oh man, when you start out learning a new language, your biggest issue won't be the language itself, but choosing the right learning method. There is a plethora of websites out there these days, each coming with its own original language learning methods and although some of these methods are actually quite good, the sheer number of them will most likely confuse any wannabe polyglot or language enthusiast. That's why I set out looking for the best language learning tips on the Internet, from language courses, paid and free language lessons online, et cetera, et cetera, and I'm going to share some of them with you in the following article.

Prepare for the Language Learning Journey

Because it's going to be a long one. If you rush in head-first, you'll either: A. feel overwhelmed and be forced to quit or B. learn inefficiently. What you need to do before starting out with the actual learning process:

- Prepare to spend a certain amount of time dedicated to your language study. Try to respect this schedule all throughout the process and make it a "habit" to learn for 5-10 or 30 minutes per day.
- Get ready to feel frustrated. Whenever you're learning a new language, there's an inevitable feeling of frustration related to the fact that you're not understanding what you should already be on top of. This is what makes most people quit early on in their language learning journey.
- Don't think inside the box of your native language's rules of pronunciation, spelling and grammar.

Build Your Base Vocabulary

I'm not sure if you knew this, but almost all languages are based on around 3,000 words in normal language. This does not include technical terms and such, but a basic vocabulary of 3,000 words can get you through a solid conversation. These include greetings, goodbyes, colors, flora, fauna, tools, fruits, vegetables, actions and so forth. Of these 3,000 words, 1,000 are essential.

If you skim through the Internet, you'll find several free language lessons that offer you lists of essential basic words in English, Spanish, French, German, Chinese, Japanese and Russian most commonly. The base words lists for other languages may be harder to find, but not impossible. Anyway, whenever you start out learning a new language, you'll have to focus all of your attention on learning these base words. They will allow you to understand basic structures, form sentences, keep up trivial conversations and so forth and that's a huge step in the language learning process. Since every sentence or structure you will form in that language from now on will mostly contain these words, they're crucial for your upcoming progress.

You can use either flashcards to memorize these words, language mnemonics, educational games or simply use the old "phonebook method" in which you take each word in the list, repeat it a few times and check out what it means, before moving on to the next (although this method is considered inefficient nowadays when audio-video learning is king).

Eat the Information with a Small Spoon

Take these two scenarios: person A is trying to learn French and memorizes 100 words each day, but forgets 80 of them due to the sheer amount of information being chugged down the brain. Person B is learning French, but he only memorizes 30 words per day, making sure those words stick. Obviously, in the long run, B will outdo A in vocabulary and that's because our brain is not build to handle large amounts of information in short periods of time. This doesn't mean that A's efforts will be useless, but they will be inefficient in comparison to B's small information chunks method.

The new information needs to be assimilated and if too much of it is forced down the pipe at the same time, portions of it will be lost. Think of assimilating new words as trying to empty a bottle full of marbles. If you simply turn the bottle upside down and try to force a big chunk of marbles on the floor, a few will fall down with the rest getting stuck in the bottle neck. If you spill less marbles at a time, you'll get the bottle emptied in no time.
Article Source : Learn a New Language

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Both Quentin Yu & Michael Gabrikow are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Quentin Yu has sinced written about articles on various topics from Language Learning, Tattoo and Cure Anxiety. . Quentin Yu's top article generates over 590 views. to your Favourites.

Michael Gabrikow has sinced written about articles on various topics from Language, Foreign Language and Education. Increase your foreign language vocabulary at . The site contains thousands of lessons in different languages from En. Michael Gabrikow's top article generates over 40500 views. to your Favourites.
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