Title | : | How To START Learning A New Language - A Few Principles | Daily Language Diary 011 |
Lasting | : | 12.11 |
Date of publication | : | |
Views | : | 35 rb |
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Great advice! Comment from : Magpie |
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Outstanding content Comment from : kanishk7267 |
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Fantastic video Thank you! Comment from : tallulah2 |
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Thanks for this I think the idea that one should spend weeks and weeks and weeks on the present tense is crazy I can't imagine why schools use this Little children learn all tenses at once, and they do fine Comment from : John Pepple |
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What did you use to learn Italian as a beginner? Comment from : sara devanney |
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めっちゃ同意。日本人の学習法はみんな完璧目指しすぎ、かつ丁寧すぎる。br日本のYouTuber の方より参考になりました、ありがとうございます😊 Comment from : みや。 |
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Hii brIs korean easy or Japanese? Comment from : d |
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To MY needs this was the most insightful video you've ever released, thanks Comment from : King Park |
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Your way of explaining is just exceptional Thanks I learnt alot of great stuff here Comment from : jashan preet kaur |
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Overview is one of the keys to effective learning This is proven by a mountain of quality researchbrbrFar too much language teaching goes one isolated topic at a time and students never understand how they are going to fit togetherbrbrFar better to make successive passes through the whole language at increasing levels of detail A spiral approach rather than a plodding sequential syllabusbrbrThis also accelerates that crucial moment when you can start to engage with real native material Comment from : Tullochgorum |
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Pigsaw puzzle analogies works well indeed, for me atleast Find a point and focus on it Good job Comment from : daniel too |
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Why didnot come across this video before, seriously I feel like i Keep listening you, ☺️ Comment from : Sobia Karamat |
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Siempre estudié idiomas paso a paso, pero me gusta tu método, lo voy a probar Comment from : María2020 |
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I wouldn't take a language lessons in school when learning the language on my own 😂 I would be progressing and I would see that majority of my class doesn't even know how to say that and that and I would start hating the lessons I was considering that if I want to start learning a language I don't understand at all the first week I would be getting to know the language itself which means how it sounds, the pronunciation and sounds and vowels, basic phrases etc than I would buy a bilingual book and after getting though that I would listen to audiobook I've already listened to or read in my target language Those are just my ideas I don't really have any experience learning a language from scratch and making real progress Comment from : Mr Independant |
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I think this was my issue with Japanese I found it too hard to learn in the classroom, but I'm finding now re-learning it at a slower pace while I teach myself spanish because I never liked the format of the Spanish courses in school It's so interesting because I find what's helping me the most is audio files Reading helps, but actually hearing it is sticking with me much better than reading Comment from : Kate |
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This was really cool Thank you Comment from : lululululu |
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I'm learning russian as a english speaker Do you have any recommendations on the best way to approach it Comment from : Tyler Parker |
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Laying on a beach??back to grammar school with you :) Comment from : BritishBloke66 |
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You're awesome!!! Estás maravilloso! Сез бик яхшы укытучы! Вы вдохновляющий, спасибо вам!!! Comment from : Светлана Романова |
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Liked the analogiesGod bless u Comment from : Manoj Acharya |
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What's the book he mentioned? it sounded like "Asenel French Book" or something like that Comment from : Daniel Molina |
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This videos are very inspirational Comment from : Ane Du preez |
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I found your analogy of the jigsaw puzzle very helpful I'm looking forward to listening to more of your videos Comment from : Rej Brodeur |
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maintenant je plains les personnes qui apprennent le français Comment from : Omaima CHHEDI |
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I have a friend who would like to learn French I havd sent her a couple of your videos Great advice Robin, thank you ! Comment from : Brian Saltmarsh |
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Wish I had seen this video at my beginner learner stages! Most of my language learning has been through self teaching, you’ve summarised and consolidated a lot of my thinking around how to approach the early stages I can’t wait to start my next language with these key messages in mind Thank you for another insightful video with great perspectives Comment from : Katie Kae |
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Muito bom os videos Estou viciada :) Comment from : Pesadelo ComPacto |
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thank good ness i found you Comment from : Jw Smart |
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great analogies with jigsaw puzzles, laying on beach with waves washing over you Comment from : Artie Solomon |
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Thank you for the helpful tips 👍 I related a lot with your examples and analogies Keep safe 🙏 Comment from : Lara |
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Robin, I found your YT channel today Your tips are common-sense and actionable You got a new subscriber! Comment from : guitar107 |
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I'm not even sure why I'm watching this video other than curiosity because I started 4 languages over the past couple years, but I genuinely like the mood of your videos Keep up the good work Comment from : TwelfthRoot2 |
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the quality of your videos and content will make your channel blow up very soon Comment from : Texan Knight |
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I agree with all you said( especially, the past tense) and I would add that one should listen to the rhythm of the language first for about a week or two One could listen to a television program, a podcast, a soap opera, etc The most important thing is to listen for 20 minutes only! Do not try to understand anything! Your job is only to listen Comment from : taino20 |
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This was great! Thank you Working on my first language and starting to finally get some traction This helps immensely Comment from : Marion Richardson |
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That’s not a mug That’s a cup And saucer, too Comment from : WhoLovesYa, Baby? |
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I think your two analogies are brilliant Robin, especially the getting covered in seaweed and crap really made me laugh, but that's exactly what the beginning is like ! Comment from : Brian Saltmarsh |
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Puzzle analogy is superb! Bravo! Comment from : Graham Curtis |
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Could you post a link to the japanese podcast?? Comment from : Un Geek en las puertas de Moria |
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I forgot to writegreat ideas, love the jigsaw puzzle analogy !! Comment from : Brian Saltmarsh |
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Hello Robin I have been stuck on intermediate Spanish for a long time Maybe B1 or B2 ? It doesn't bother me so much as I'm retired now and I don't have any deadlines I have regular chats to my Spanish friends and hold a conversation really well, but sometimes I would like to have that extra bit Do you have any ideas on how to shift forwards ? Cheers from England ! Comment from : Brian Saltmarsh |
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Good topic and great explanation By the end it dawned on me that when I am learning on my own I tend follow similar approaches, especially the puzzle analogy I remember when I took German in college it was largely a lot of endless vocab memorization While I liked our professor, the structure of the class didn't make for the best learning experience On my own, I am free to concentrate at any part of the picture, and move on to another part before stalling out on trying to get that one area completely finished Comment from : John Johnson |
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This is such an important idea! Spending too much time focusing on understanding 100 of a certain element of grammar is a recipe for disaster When learning grammar, I always try to take a quantity over quality approach If you have a general idea of a multitude of grammar concepts in your back pocket, you won't be blindsided when approaching input resources But if you spend too much time trying to perfect your understanding of each and every grammar point, you'll never even have the time to approach sources of input Great points Robin! Comment from : Breanna Belle |
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Thank you for this video! Love it The analogy about waves is the best!!!! Comment from : Англійська мова Відео уроки |
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I love the jigsaw analogy Very helpful Comment from : RetiredAndHappy |
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I think you should make some interviews with other polyglots to bring more people xD! Thanks for the tips! Comment from : Klaus Estrela |
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7:15 Wait, do you mean, like, you wrote this podcast yourself or you listened to it? Because that sounds very close to the road I'm on now with Japanese, and I'm kinda interested to know morw Comment from : KirbyLinkACW |
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The analogy of the waves was spot on I'm really enjoying your content, keep up the good work and keep brewing it strong my friend Comment from : John Banks |
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I hate that way of learning in schools😒 They stretch out a lesson into 2 semesters when you can literally learn all of that with 1 week of learning on Babbel, Duolingo or just learning alone Comment from : AfanDE 818 |
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I can't wait until I can read Thai Little Prince Goalssssss Comment from : Ritchie |
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Do you have dreams in the languages you've learned? Have you ever had a dream that had more than one? Comment from : Sofia Duran |
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When you were learning your first language, how long did it take to feel like your time was paying off? Comment from : Nick Weston |
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I can’t believe we’re already on day 11! I think different methods work of different people- I’ve had friends start with the most common words but I find that not very fun at all I always find it really interesting to begin with words we already know and finding the actual meaning of those- for example in Italian I looked into what food names actually mean These kind of things really build up a passion for the language as well as cultural notes that’ll keep growing your passion of the language if that makes sense It’s about finding interesting and engaging content Brilliant as always :) Comment from : Jasmine Maedbh |
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First comment! Comment from : Nick Weston |
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