How To Teach Yourself A Foreign Language - S.A.J. Forbes
How To Teach Yourself A Foreign Language - S.A.J. Forbes
TEACH YOURSELF
A FOREIGN
LANGUAGE
Principles, resources and ideas
to use when learning
S. A. J. FORBES
How to Teach Yourself a Foreign Language
i
Version 1.7.16
Last updated November 27, 2021
Introduction
Welcome to How to Teach Yourself a Foreign Language. This book is designed to get you learning
any foreign language as effectively and quickly as possible. It will help you understand what
resources you need, where to find them, and what you should do to learn most effectively. This
guide has plenty here for any learner—from absolute beginner to upper-intermediate.
If you think something is missing or have any queries, you can send me an email. You can also
find me at my website.
If you are impatient to start immediately, you can skip to Chapter 2: Your Language Journey.
The final third of the book contains appendices with optional additional information. These
will be referenced throughout.
Finally, I advise you to think of this guide as an investment. If you start with a bit of theory,
you will save time in the long run by doing it better the first time.
Principles
Principles are the basic underlying rules and ideas that enable you to be an effective language
learner. They are how you should approach language learning and are the biggest difference
between ordinary beginners and experienced language learners. Many of the points here you will
sometimes hear called “language hacks” elsewhere online.1
This guide collects principles from around the web to save you the trial-and-error most learners
usually have to go through.
I’ve scattered most of the principles throughout the guide to prevent you from getting overloaded.
While a principle may be placed under a certain section where it is most relevant, it will also
apply to other aspects of your learning.
1
This is somewhat of a misnomer. Elaboration can be found in the section Why is the term “language hacks” a
misnomer?
Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii
About me and why I wrote this . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii
How to use this guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii
Principles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii
Contents iii
3 Resources 6
3.1 How to find resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Language repositories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3.2 Choosing resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.3 Beginner course . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
What makes a good beginner course? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Using listen-and-repeat courses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Using Tutors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Budget . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.4 Flashcard program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
What makes a good flashcard system? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Anki . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
3.5 Input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
What makes good input? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Popular tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.6 Other resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Dictionaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Translators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Phrasebooks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
4 Building a Method 16
4.1 The four keys of an effective method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
4.2 Building your own method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
How to build a great method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
4.3 Splitting your time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
4.4 Your study routine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Integrating your language into your life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
iii
iv Contents
4.5 Motivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
4.6 Summary of the book so far . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
4.7 Moving forward . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
11 Mistakes 50
11.1 Fossilisation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
E Common Questions 67
E.1 Can I learn two languages at once? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
E.2 Can I learn like a child? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
E.3 Why do some people seem to know lots of languages? . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
E.4 How important are grammar lessons? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
E.5 What’s wrong with how schools teach languages? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
E.6 Why is the term “language hacks” a misnomer? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
vi Contents
F The Principles 70
F.1 Principles of approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
F.2 Principles of learning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
F.3 Principles of practice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
G Recommended Reading 71
G.1 Podcasts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
H Choosing a Language 72
H.1 Motivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Chapter 1
1. Approximately how many hours are required to reach your desired level
2. How much time you can spend every day
Beginners often underestimate the amount of time it takes to learn a language. How much time
you can spend during the day is the primary indicator of how achievable your goal is.
A good idea of how many hours it takes to reach a reasonably competent level comes from the
FSI Language Difficulty Ranking. For an easier language like Spanish or French, most people take
around 1–2 years to reach a good level. If you studied 10 hours solidly per day, every day, you
could potentially reach the same level in just over two months. If you think you can’t reach your
desired goals given the time available, you need to either make time or adjust your goal’s timing.
To learn a language, you should first set yourself a goal or set of goals. Spend some time
properly considering what motivates you to learn your language and the situations you want to
use it in. Write your goals down somewhere.
The best goals are SMART goals. That is, they are Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant,
and Time-bound.
Specific—Goals need to be something you can hold yourself accountable to. Don’t make your
goal too vague (e.g. “fluency”).
Measurable—Language progress can be hard to measure, but there should be some degree of
visible progress towards your goal.
Achievable–Don’t aim too high. You can’t be fluent in a year without working at it like a
full-time job.
Relevant—Make your goal depend on what you want out of your language. Use Appendix H:
Choosing a Language to help you clarify your thinking.
1
2 Chapter 1 Before you start
Time-bound—Picking a point in time discourages you from slacking off and letting progress
lapse.
If you like, you can have smaller, short-term goals. These can help you measure your progress
and track other important milestones such as vocabulary.
Don’t be afraid to revise any of your goals. If you’re going at it for the first time, it can be hard
to know how long it will take or if the goal you choose is really what will motivate you in the
future.
The good news is you can be conversational in a surprisingly quick amount of time. Once
you have the basics of phonology and grammar down and know around 2,000 words, you will
probably be able to make it through a conversation with an accommodating native speaker. From
there, a bit more practice conversing to build more comfort with the language and you can call
yourself conversational. This is one of the most rewarding parts of language learning.
Conversely, progress beyond the early intermediate stages will feel slower by comparison.
Every new word or form you learn will be much more rare. Becoming fluent means becoming
familiar with an ocean of unknown words, nuance, idioms, and rare grammar. Reaching high
levels of aural comprehension and pronunciation will take a similarly long time. While you might
1.4 You are better at language learning than you think 3
not need all these forms, idioms, and words to get by, they are part of what comprises native-level
ability.
Not every learner chooses to progress to an advanced level. In fact, most stop somewhere
around the intermediate level, with their exact level usually determined by their goals. There is
nothing wrong with this. Learning a language requires trade-offs, and for many people the extra
time reaching an advanced level isn’t worth the effort.
First, you don’t need to be highly intelligent or have a special talent to learn a language.
Everybody learns at least one without too much trouble. The technique for learning your second
language is not wildly different to your first. They key is that a lot is learned when you give
yourself time.
Second, language learning is not as hard as it seems. While many people recall struggling
to learn a language in school, this is more the fault of the school’s curriculum.1 By using content
to let the language come to you, the process of learning will seem far less effortful.
Finally, remember that it’s natural to forget things a lot. For many people this is a frustrating
experience that can cause them to think they’re not good enough. This is not true. Learning is
not instant and every language learner forgets a lot. There is simply too much to learn to expect
you will remember all of it. The best way to move past this is to accept you will forget and seek
ways to prompt yourself to remember without blaming or criticising yourself.
Everyone is different, and you may find something I recommend doesn’t quite work for you.
Remember: you are in control of your learning. If you find something effective, you should
continue to do it without worrying over if other people recommend it or not. You’ll notice me
repeat this point throughout the guide.
That said, if you’re new, it’s not always easy to tell what is working well. Until you’re a more
experienced language learner, I advise you don’t stray too far from the beaten path.
1
For more information, see What’s wrong with how schools teach languages?
Chapter 2
This chapter marks the beginning of the core of the guide and provides an overview of what is
coming next.
1. Grammar
2. Vocabulary
The skills of reading and listening together are called input (or content). The skills of writing
and speaking are called output.
Languages are more than the sum of their parts. For example, simply knowing words and
grammar won’t tell you which words tend to go together, nor will it help you understand idioms.
In addition, languages are interwoven with their culture, and may frequently express concepts
that are unfamiliar to you. All of these are aspects of your language you will encounter in your
learning.
• Basic grammar—Basic verb and noun forms, the general structure and logic of the language
• A functional vocabulary—approximately 1,000–2,000 words, enough to be understood in
basic conversations
• The basics of the four key skills—enough to function in whatever context you are learning
for
4
2.2 The three core resources 5
1. A beginner course
2. A flashcard program
3. Input
A beginner course is any kind of course that tries to teach you the fundamentals, such as the
core grammar and basic vocabulary in a structured manner.
A flashcard program helps you learn vocabulary and grammar by repeatedly showing you
words or sentences and asking you to recollect their meaning.
Input is any piece of content produced in the language such as books, news, or movies.
The three core classes of resource correspond with the three core components of a language
method—the combination of resources and exercises you will use.
Methods can be simple or complex, but regardless of how much effort you put into it, you will
need one.
It is best to dive into building a method after you’ve got a bit more detail on the resources you’ll
be using. In the next chapter I will help you find resources and choose the types you want to use.
I will then cover how to turn those resources into a method.
Chapter 3
Resources
This chapter will show you how to find resources and help you think about which ones will work
for you.
1. Google search for communities of learners that are learning your target language—often
there will be lists of recommended resources or a popular post by a user
2. Google search for guides or articles about learning your target language
3. Language repositories
Language repositories
Language repositories link or store a large number of language resources in one place, including
tools, content, and courses. Well-curated repositories can be a great place to find useful resources
for your language. However, non-curated repositories that simply list a large number of resources
without ranking them can be overwhelming and often include low-quality resources. The top two
listed below are well-curated and recommended.
Repository Description
A fantastic curated list of resources for lots of languages.
All Language Resources
Highly recommended.
Curated list of video content and useful resources in lots of
Zero to Hero
languages.
r/languagelearning Useful repository with links to subreddits containing resources
resources wiki for many languages
Cstrobbe Github Github repository of every kind of resource
Learn Any Language A community wiki with lists of resources
So you want to learn a
A website with lots of resources
language
Multilingual books Another website with lots of resources
Open Culture A website that lists free resources
6
3.2 Choosing resources 7
There are three key factors you should consider when assessing whether a resource is worth
trying:
Course Examples
Text, audio, or video YouTube videos
explanations Free online lectures/courses such as listed here
Assimil (paid, audio)
BBC Languages (free)
Live Lingua Project (free resources)
FSI, DLI, and Peace Corps language courses
Teach-yourself books Colloquial series
Online courses Duolingo (free)
LingVist (paid)
Busuu (free with paid premium)
Glossika (paid)
Babbel (paid)
Mango Languages (paid)
Listen-and-repeat Language Transfer (free)
courses Coffee Break Languages (free)
Pimsleur (paid)
You may also find Cooljugator useful if your language has large amounts of verb conjugations.
A good course:
A bad course:
No course is perfect, but the downsides of the course you use can be countered by the other
components of your method.
3.3 Beginner course 9
The different types of courses I outlined also have their own advantages and disadvantages.
Table 3.3: Advantages and disadvantages of each of the six types of beginner course
Using Tutors
Tutors are one of the best supplementary resources as they can structure learning to your prefer-
ence. Tutors are highly recommended for those who can afford them.
Since tutors can be expensive, using one simply to explain the basics to you is not the best use
of your money. Any information they give you will also be freely available on YouTube or another
website. It is generally a better use of your money to use tutors as a source of input, to identify
errors, help you start speaking, and provide correction. Remember: learning is a fundamentally
internal process—you still need to put in hard work regardless of the source of the information.
You can find tutors in real life, through your local community, library, or university. Relatively
inexpensive tutors are also available online on websites such as iTalki.
Budget
Budget can be an important consideration for many people. There is no direct correlation between
price and quality—many poor resources cost money, while many of the best resources on the
internet are free. However, there is a general trend towards paid resources being better. Paying
for something that is recommended by others and works for you can be a good investment.
If you prefer a cheaper option, a good path could be using text, audio, or video explanation or
free online course in combination with a listen-and-repeat course. If you’re willing to spend a
bit of money to make your life easier, you will likely find value in using a paid online course in
combination with a personal tutor to help you practise and identify errors.
Anki
The most popular flashcard software is Anki. Anki is popular due to its free desktop and android
app, large community, functionality, customisability, and clean interface. The flipside is that there
can be a fairly steep learning curve, depending on what you want to do with it. I recommend
you use the fantastic setup guide and introduction here. You can also find some clear video
explanations here and here.
Anki allows its users to export and share flashcard decks they make. There are many pre-made
shared decks for you to use to get started here. If you’re a complete beginner, find a deck with
words ordered by frequency. The best decks also have example sentences. Feel free to download
multiple and try them out.
Settings
The default settings are not particularly good. If you like, you can change it to more closely
resemble the settings in the setup guide I linked above. Keep in mind, these settings are optimised
for single words. If you use sentences, you will need to make it a bit more supportive with new
cards and reviews.
You will find yourself confused by Anki at some point, so it is recommended to read the manual
soon after you download it. You can find it in the table above and here.
3.5 Input
Sometimes content will already be integrated in the course you are doing. Even if your lessons
already include texts or audio, it will be useful to find your own that interest you. More content
is always good.
12 Chapter 3 Resources
Mode Example
Reading Books
Articles
Reddit-like websites
News websites
Conversation transcripts
Watching Interviews
YouTube channels
Movies
TV series
Listening Music
Podcasts
Dialogues for learners
A common method is to use content intended for children; however, the vocabulary is often
not very useful nor the topics very interesting to an adult.
Content such as TV series, music, movies, and real news websites is generally made to be
understood by adult native speakers. This content is usually too difficult for beginners to use
effectively. I do not recommend you use them at the start.
Finding content as a beginner can be difficult, particularly for languages that are not as popular.
If you’re starved for interesting content or just want to, feel free to try something outside of the
typical beginner range—you can still learn with it.
3.5 Input 13
Source Description
Easy Languages Street interviews with dual-language subtitles—quality
YouTube channel beginner content in lots of languages
Netflix Great source of foreign language TV and movies with subtitles
WordLab YouTube Massive catalogue of learner-appropriate channels in lots of
catalogue common languages
Shows you some good YouTube content for some of the most
Olingo
popular languages
eja.tv Live TV
r/languagelearning
A list of good media resources
media section
Project Gutenberg,
Free public domain e-books
Wikibooks, Loyal Books
Gloss Website with a lot of beginner content
The Fable Cottage Dual-language fairy tales
Conversations and Short Stories series of books available on
Books by Olly Richards
Amazon
You can also use other learner’s guides online and the Language repositories section further
back to find good input.
Popular tools
There is a variety of useful tools to help you improve your learning with input. I recommend you
check all of these out.
14 Chapter 3 Resources
Tool Description
Import texts and get instant translations by clicking on words,
Readlang
has a built-in flashcard program
A popular paid service similar to Readlang that provides lots of
Lingq
content and records and highlights known words
A fantastic chrome extension that gives you more control over
WordLab Netflix and YouTube playback and subtitles—highly
recommended for intermediate learners
Chrome tip to help you search dictionaries faster using the
Keyword lookup
search bar
ImTranslator Dictionary lookup addon
Here are a few dictionaries that offer translations for multiple languages:
Dictionary Description
Linguee Clean interface. translations are sorted by frequency
A poplar dictionary with helpful pronunciation guides and
Wiktionary
support for a wide variety of languages
Great interface and lots of sample sentences. Has a built-in
Bab.la
verb conjugator
Reverso Useful example sentences
Tatoeba Helps you find example sentences
Example sentences and pronunciation recordings—no
Forvo
definitions
WordReference Standard dictionary
Translators
Translation software can help you understand entire sentences. Avoid becoming over-reliant on
translating whole sentences. Try to understand a sentence yourself first.
3.6 Other resources 15
Software Description
Google Translate The most popular translation software on the web
DeepL A powerful alternative to Google Translate
Phrasebooks
Phrasebooks are optional, but phrases can help you get a feel for the language and greatly improve
your communicative ability when travelling. A cautionary note: phrases cannot be learned simply
by reading them. Learning needs to be supplemented with flashcards.
Website Description
Book2 Phrasebooks in lots of languages
LanguageGuide Interactive way of showing simple vocabulary
Building a Method
A method is the combination of resources and exercises you will use, including how you divide
your time between these resources. The goal is to build the skills you need to reach an intermediate
level as outlined in What you will learn.
In this chapter I will provide an overview of what a method needs and how to build one yourself.
1. Structure—learn the basics first and build your knowledge from there
2. Drills—practise areas key to enabling you to progress
3. The four skills—don’t neglect to properly learn skills such as listening when they are
required for your goals
4. Practice—use input and later output to build your language ability
The first phase is build-up. This is the point where you focus on building the skills necessary
to begin using input to learn your language. How long this phase is depends on how different the
language is from English and the availability of good input to practise with. If you are learning
French, this phase is very short. If you are learning Japanese, you may find you need a larger
window to build the basic reading skills and vocabulary you need to start using content. There is
nothing stopping you using content here; you’d simply have to spend most of your time with a
dictionary and grammar resource, which is not particularly efficient.
The second phase is input-based. This is the rest of your study. Once you have the basics
down, you can take advantage of that base to begin learning with content.
16
4.2 Building your own method 17
There are lots of ways to structure your method while following the four key requirements.
Note that nothing mandates how you drill or structure your learning.1 Next, I will discuss how
the key requirements benefit you and how you might like to utilise them.
Structure
Courses are highly recommended because they provide all the structure you need to build a
comprehensive foundation in the language. More advice will be given later here. This component
simply drops off once you no longer need it. Without a course, you will need to structure your
learning by assessing your weaknesses carefully and finding resources to help you improve.
Drills
A drill as an exercise that isolates a single aspect of your language so that you can develop it
separately from the other skills you need. For example, flashcards are a common drill, but there
are many activities, such as practising pronunciation or writing verb conjugations. As a beginner,
your drills should focus on aspects not well-covered by your course. We will look at a larger list
of drills later here, but for now, the two key ones for you to think about are:
Flashcards help you achieve your vocabulary goals at a good pace, but are also useful for
grammar. More advice on flashcards will be given later here. Drilling with content helps you
focus on any aspect of your language, but does so in a way that lets you see it in use. This will be
covered later here. Drilling with content is not essential for a beginner.
Practice
Practising your language integrates everything you have learned together. The key types of
practice are:
Input helps you understand how the language goes together and repeatedly exposes you to
essential words and forms. A helpful activity, extensive reading, will be covered later here with
more advice here.
Output is a great activity you might like to start early that helps solidify your knowledge and
get feedback on your weaknesses. Output is harder to benefit from at a very low level, so can be
1
This even means that you can go without using flashcards or courses. There are learners that do this, though I
don’t recommend you attempt it until you are a more experienced learner.
18 Chapter 4 Building a Method
left out of the early beginner stages. A great activity, conversation practice, will be covered later
here.
Using others’ methods is useful for two reasons. First, they will often give good resource
recommendations, which I can’t give you here. Second, you will often find good advice on your
specific language, such as common beginner pitfalls or useful areas to focus your attention.
Remember: the specifics of any method aren’t the key, so don’t stress about following someone’s
method exactly. It is perfectly fine to only take parts.
You will need to adjust how you spend your time based on the nature of the course you are
using. For example, if your course uses little content and focuses on exercises, you have a greater
need to supplement your learning with content.
Your most important time is that which you spend with content—it is crucial to progressing in
your language. Many learners spend up to 75% of their time practising with input. Avoid reducing
your time below one third. Progress through input can be hard to notice in the short term, but
2
If you’re wondering how some people become conversational in a large number of languages, check out the
discussion in Why do some people seem to know lots of languages?
4.4 Your study routine 19
it will solidify your knowledge far beyond the basic level you will get through your course and
flashcards.
The best technique is to build a routine. To do this, have a set time each day you devote to
study without any pauses or distractions. It helps if a block deals with a single resource, such as
an article, course lesson, workbook chapter, or podcast episode.
COG Principle: Spend as much time as you can with your language
Time is the key factor determining how fast you learn your language. To help
build your time with the language, it is important to study every day. Ideally,
commit to study at least an hour per day. There is no maximum—the more
you can commit each day, the faster you will progress.
It also helps to intersperse your learning. As long as you are doing a block of at least 20 minutes,
then the rest of your learning can be interspersed throughout the day. Similarly, try to study
consistently every day rather than doing it all at the end of the week.
There are lots of clever ways to help you spend more time than you otherwise would. We will
look at these next.
• Spread your learning out throughout the day rather than segmenting a single large block
of time
• Switch the language of the media you consume
20 Chapter 4 Building a Method
• Try to find a friend or group of friends that speak your target language
• Change the language of the devices you use
A big advantage of the modern world is you can easily take your study materials and content
with you wherever you go. To do some extra learning, you can use the small bits of downtime
throughout your day, such as on the bus, in a queue, or walking between class. Here are a few
ideas:
• Get a penpal on a chat app such as HelloTalk; use any downtime to read and send messages
• Use digital flashcards on your phone
• Use a beginner course that has an app
• Listen to podcasts while cooking, cleaning, walking, or during any activity where you don’t
have to carefully focus
• Carry a book with you
4.5 Motivation
Here are some ideas to help you keep your motivation high:
• Use resources you enjoy—Try different methods and choose one that you enjoy the most.
This will take the edge off the study process. Read more in the key tip here.
• Use content you find interesting—There’s lots of interesting content out there. You will
find yourself enjoying learning your language a lot more when you find content you enjoy
for its own sake.
• Work towards your goals—Striving towards your goals, making progress, and successfully
engaging with those parts of the language can be a motivating experience. It can be helpful
to keep your goals around you. For example, hanging around with speakers of the language
you are learning.
• Refresh—Try changing your routine by studying at a different time, studying in a different
place, doing exercises you wouldn’t usually do, or using content you don’t usually use.
Find a goal and build a method comprising of a course, a bit of drilling, and practice. You can
use a basic method at the start, but there are plenty of ideas you can get from others. How you
4.7 Moving forward 21
split your time is up to you, but be sure that content retains an important position. Spend at least
20 minutes a day in focused study. Increase your time with the language by integrating it into
your life. Keep up your motivation by choosing resources that you enjoy using.
The purpose of this chapter is to help improve your method using the core resources from the
earlier chapter on finding resources. We will cover how to use your course, flashcards, content,
and dictionary.
There is one universal rule: Don’t try to memorise your lesson content. Using a language is not
the same as being able to remember all of the rules and exceptions. Notice that you speak your
native language perfectly well, but would struggle to talk about the grammatical rules you are
applying. The same applies to your target language. Languages must be acquired, not memorised.
There are many learners who prefer to skim through workbooks or online resources to get a
broad understanding before using content. Focusing hard and spending a large amount of time
trying to learn well during your course is not mandatory.
You may also like to make a workbook. Many people make their own workbook and write
22
5.2 Using flashcards effectively 23
down everything they learn. This is a time-consuming process you may find slower than simply
using content; however, the choice is yours.
COG Principle: Don’t try to learn things perfectly the first time you en-
counter them
Learning happens slowly over time, usually well after you are first introduced to
a word or concept. You don’t need a perfect understanding of one lesson before
you learn the next. The very act of moving forward with a loose understanding
will help teach you things already covered as you encounter them again.
It is helpful to finish your course. This will give you a wider knowledge base that will let you
recognise forms you might miss otherwise.
• Don’t learn too many new words at once—you will be fine to start, but reviews will quickly
overwhelm you
24 Chapter 5 Using Resources Effectively
Flashcard review
There are three ways you can review your cards:
1. Prompt with target language, try to recall native language (receptive learning)
2. Prompt with native language, try to recall target language (productive learning)
3. A combination of both
How you choose to use them is up to you. Productive learning (that is, trying to produce your
target language) is more challenging, which will aid your learning and support recollection, but
is generally slower as a result. Receptive learning can be faster, but generally helps much more
with understanding than it does producing your target language. This can be great for getting
you using content quickly.
I recommend a combination of both, based on your needs. What you do should be determined by
your goals. Some words you might need to be using soon, so you might practise them productively.
Others might just be helpful for understanding, but not something you expect to need soon, so
you’d practise them receptively.
Lightbulb Key tip: Aim to get about 90 percent of your cards correct
As I have noted, flashcards utilise the forgetting curve to try to prompt you with
a word just before you forget it. You will begin to notice that this doesn’t always
work perfectly. Sometimes you will have already forgotten a word, forcing you to
relearn it, but other times you will get the answer easily. While you can improve
your retention by setting Anki to show you your cards more often, this has the
effect of slowing down your study, as you will see cards you know comfortably
far too often. Conversely, if you set Anki to show you cards less often, you may
find yourself forgetting lots of words before you see them again. The best spot
sits in the middle. Aim to “strategically forget” about 10 percent of your cards. In
the long run this will save you time.
Phrases
While you can learn words on their own, I recommend you use phrases. This can mean you
include an example phrase with your word or simply learn the phrase itself. Anki also allows for
cloze-deletion, a popular method that shows a phrase with a word or words hidden.
• They can teach you key phrases for early communication or travelling
5.2 Using flashcards effectively 25
• They help you use more complex but common constructions earlier in your learning
• They provide insight into how the language is used
• They provide context for how words are used and what other words tend to be used with
them
• They can teach you grammar by forcing you to absorb certain forms
• They give you passive exposure to other words, cementing them in your mind
There are several ways you might engage with phrases in your flashcards. You can try to learn
the phrase productively or receptively, and you can learn the phrase on its own or a word with
the phrase.
Productively Receptively
Word + Learn word productively, Learn word’s usage, phrase
phrase phrase provides support provides context
Phrase Learn full phrase
Repeated exposure to phrase
only productively
When you use phrases receptively, you are generating repeated exposure. This process will
help build some familiarity with the constituent words and grammar, but won’t easily enable you
to produce the language. This means that these types of phrases are best at providing context for
usage.
If you use phrases productively, this can be great for forcing your mind to absorb the nuance of
a construction. This is also quite challenging and time-consuming. It can be immensely helpful for
understanding the word or grammar intuitively and learning to use it, but quite slow at building
vocabulary.
It is common for learners to begin with essential phrases such as “how do you say…”. These are
very useful for understanding how native speakers express themselves and will help you a lot
when first communicating.
Grammar flashcards generally consist of a single sentence, as simple as possible, that demon-
strates the particular grammatical rule used in context. This might be as simple as creating a set
of cards for all the verb conjugations, one for each type. It can be helpful to bold or highlight the
particular feature you want to focus on.
I recommend you find phrases online to ensure they are correct—grammar can be very easy to
get wrong as a beginner.
26 Chapter 5 Using Resources Effectively
How you use input depends a lot on what you are doing. There are two broad types of activity:
those in which you sit and focus with a difficult piece of content in order to learn something new
(active learning), and those in which you simply use content for enjoyment without focused study
(passive learning). You will do both during your study. Content used for passive learning tends to
be easier.
No matter how you use it, the key to input is that you try to understand as much as possible.
One way to ensure interest is to use content similar to what you already find interesting
in your native language. That is, do the things you already enjoy doing, but using your target
language instead. This can be watching YouTube or TV shows, reading comic books, or even
gaming. As a beginner, finding good content can be hard, especially for those learning rare
languages. You may have to compromise and choose something less interesting because it is
closer to your level.
Your content should already be mostly understandable, meaning you already understand 90–98%
of it. This is the principle Use the language in order to learn it.
More important than what you do is what you avoid doing. Here are four key don’ts:
1. Don’t simply look up new words as you encounter them. First, attempt to understand
the sentence, then finish the section or text. You are unlikely to remember the meaning of
a word if you immediately continue reading.
28 Chapter 5 Using Resources Effectively
2. Don’t look up uncommon words when there are plenty of common ones to learn.
A large portion of the new words you encounter will only appear once, meaning there will
not be repeated opportunities to help learn them.
3. Don’t blindly trust single-word translations. Translations are imperfect. Languages
use words differently. For example, the English word “exercise” has two completely different
meanings, one to do with fitness and the other with study. A dictionary won’t know which
one you mean.
4. Don’t use dictionaries to learn words on their own. This can cause you to learn less
common words without being aware of their proper usage.
Flashcards are best used by prompting with both your target language and your native language.
This ensures you encounter words and forms in a variety of ways. Make sure you use simple
sentences with your flashcards.
Input is best used in mass amounts. Use input that is already mostly comprehensible.
Use dictionaries to search for key unknown words. Use it once you have first attempted to
understand the text you are using and have completed the paragraph you encountered it in.
Chapter 6
In this chapter we will look at how you learn, starting from the core principles and moving to
how you learn, grammar, vocabulary, and the four skills.
Learning does not happen after completing textbook exercises, memorising a word or rule,
or repeating after a teacher. Language is a skill you must practice and refine. In many ways, it
is more like learning to ride a bike or play an instrument than learning facts or rules. Without
seeing how it all goes together you will not learn to use the language, nor will anything you learn
through exercises stick. Later, speaking and writing in a low-pressure environment will further
solidify your knowledge and let you practice the skills essential to use your language.
You can find Krashen’s book, Principle and Practice in Second Language Acquisition, free online
here, watch a great video demonstration here, or read a summary of the book here.
29
30 Chapter 6 How to Learn Your Language
In the next three sections we will cover how to approach grammar, vocabulary, and the four
skills.
6.3 Grammar
While it might seem like there is a lot of grammar to get your head around, the core grammar of a
language forms a kind of “hump” that, once you get past it, opens the language up and enables
progression with greater ease. Once you’re done with the core grammar, you will probably never
have to approach it as systematically again.
Your initial grammar learning comes from your beginner course. This can be supplemented by
exercises such as sentence flashcards and exercises, however this should not be the majority of
your time. Of the four mediums, the most effective will be Encountering in your content.
There are some learners who go mostly without studying grammar.1 This is done by compen-
sating with lots of input, making sure to notice grammatical forms as you encounter them. It is
best not to go without studying grammar until you are more experienced.
1
Further discussion of the debate on the efficacy of grammar instruction can be found in the appendix.
6.4 Vocabulary 31
6.4 Vocabulary
Vocabulary is generally the more underrated of the two core components. A huge portion of
speaking a language is really just knowing enough words.
For a language like English, the number of words you’d need to be fluent is over 10,000.
Increasing your vocabulary is therefore always a useful task when you don’t know what to study.
While 10,000 is a large number, you will get there eventually by chipping away at it every day.
Start off by learning the 1,000 most common words as fast as possible. Stretch for 2,000 if you
can. That lets you understand a lot of basic language.
It is rare that you will learn a word simply by having it introduced to you once. Vocabulary is
learned after repeated exposure, either in content or with flashcards.
Learning words that are personally relevant to you is a good way to ensure you are practising
what you are learning. To meet this criterion, the words you learn need to be appearing in your
resources often or be ones you think you will need to meet your goals.
Choosing words based on the frequency they appear in the language is useful as they are
the most likely to be useful to you in the future. Words in natural language follow something
called Zipf’s Law. This means that the most common word will occur twice as often as the
next most common word, which will occur twice as often as the next most common, and so
on. This means languages are heavily dominated by the most common words. Once you have
learned 2,000–3,000 words, you have covered almost all the words you will hear in daily
conversation. With only a few hundred words, you will have access to almost all the filler words,
which make up most of spoken language.
32 Chapter 6 How to Learn Your Language
Word Lists
It can be helpful to keep a list of those words or phrases you have looked up and find interesting
enough to want to remember. This can serve as a useful reference and the act of writing a list by
hand can aid memorisation.
Word lists should not simply be read over but revised with one side covered to get your memory
working.
You can find much more info on learning vocabulary in Appendix C: Further Advice on Learning
Vocabulary.
Mnemonics
Mnemonics are versatile tool that turns vocabulary into easy-to-recall mental images that help
you remember a word. Mnemonics can be very useful to learn vocabulary quickly, however the
word won’t be truly learned until you don’t need the mnemonic and can use and understand the
word automatically. Mnemonics are a useful stepping-stone towards getting there. They are not
an easy way out of having to absorb the language.
The most common method is the keyword method. This links the word you want to learn
to a similar-sounding word in your native language. For example: Imagine you want to learn
the French word for car: voiture. You might note that the word voiture sounds like vulture in
English. You can mentally link the two by imagining a car with a vulture on top of it, or, if you
are very imaginative, that someone built a car shaped like a vulture. Now, when you want to talk
about a car, you’ll remember the vulture on top and that the French word sounds like vulture. The
more vivid, bizarre, or surprising your mnemonics are, the more effective they will be. You will
be surprised by how well they work.
Further details are too much for a guide such as this, so I will provide you with some links to
learn more on your own if you are interested.
• A general overview
• A quick explanation on how to use mnemonics for vocabulary
• The memory palace technique
Learning numbers
Learning numbers can be a surprisingly difficult task, particularly with large ones, making dates
an early challenge for many learners. It helps to spend focused effort learning them through drills.
6.5 The four skills 33
It is best to focus on those skills most closely related to your goal. For example, if you want to
have conversations, you need to focus on listening and speaking.
The best way to learn a new script is by using it. Start trying to understand the basics and
move quickly into applying your knowledge by reading simple sentences and words.
For those learning a language with characters such as Chinese hanzi or Japanese kanji, learning
to read and write can be a long, slow process. It is generally recommended to start early. The best
way to learn them is already well-covered elsewhere. I recommend you search online to find a
good guide.
Listening
Listening well is mostly comprised of the ability to hear sounds and distinguish and understand
words quickly.
Practising listening
It is helpful to practise listening throughout your learning using beginner podcasts or other audio
resources. This aspect is often underemphasised in beginner courses. Here are some ways you
can improve your listening:
• Listen to resources that have a written transcription; read and listen first, then try to listen
without the transcript
• Find listening resources that are deliberately slowed down
• Use listening resources that are easier than something you would typically read; this allows
you to focus solely on listening without being distracted by unknown words or grammar
• Spend time learning how letters correspond to sounds (orthography)
Speaking
Speaking is a combination of accurate pronunciation and good knowledge of words and forms. To
become good at speaking it helps to develop good listening as well, since it is difficult to produce
sounds you cannot distinguish.
34 Chapter 6 How to Learn Your Language
Learning pronunciation
Unless you are learning a tonal language, learning good pronunciation is not absolutely essential,
especially for a beginner; however, good pronunciation can ease communication a lot. Poor
pronunciation learned during the early stages can become ingrained and hard to fix.
Good pronunciation typically does not come naturally to adult learners, so it can be important
to pay focused attention. I recommend you learn as you start speaking. Most of the advice on
learning pronunciation is placed in Appendix A: How to Learn Pronunciation.
For those who would like an early start without too much effort, I recommend you use Google
or search a community to find a pronunciation guide for your target language. The best guides will
explain each sound using diagrams, explanations, or special symbols (called the IPA) in addition
to audio to show you how they sound.2
Spend focused effort improving those aspects of your language you find difficult. Use a
dictionary such as Forvo or Wiktionary or any audio input to get a good example to try mimic. It
is helpful to practise throughout your study by trying to read texts, flashcards, or anything you
encounter aloud.
There is a difference between your ability to perceive words and using them yourself in speech;
however, this barrier can be overcome. These two types of knowledge (perceiving and producing)
link to the same concept; they are different, but not fundamentally so. The simple fact is that
producing requires finding the word in your memory without an easy reference, making it harder
to do.
The most natural way this gap is bridged is by gradually building greater familiarity with the
word over time. Often, learners are only superficially familiar with a word, making it hard to
remember. However, with exposure and experience, words eventually gain a certain salience that
lets them come to mind when needed. Often, the best course of action is to simply be patient and
practise.
If a word is particularly important, it can help to practise that word productively. You can do this
by practising speaking aloud, writing sentences, or by simply using your flashcards productively.
All your grammar and vocabulary will be acquired through one of the four mediums (direct
explanation, drilling, encountering in your content, and language output). Your beginner course
will do a lot of the work to introduce you to a lot; however, you will generally need to do a lot of
flashcard study and reading and listening to build your knowledge.
2
A common method of many courses, guides, and dictionaries is to give an English approximation for each sound.
This ok to start but is insufficient to achieve accurate pronunciation.
6.6 Chapter summary 35
Start by learning the 1,000 most common words as quickly as you can. Don’t over-focus on
grammar, but don’t ignore it either.
Focus on learning your language’s script if it is different and focus on pronunciation. Early
effort will pay off in the long-term.
Chapter 7
Now that you hopefully have a good grasp of how to learn a language, we can now turn to some
great activities to do as you approach the intermediate stage. Despite the label, you don’t have to be
an intermediate learner to do them. In fact, these can be highly beneficial for upper-beginner-level
learners.
Get a piece of content, ideally written, that you already understand 90–98% of. You will then
choose something to actively improve. For example, you might focus on listening ability or
vocabulary.
The key is this: learning using content will require multiple passes. Trying to use and
understand the entirety of text, audio, or video content at once is usually too difficult. It’s
impossible to remember the meaning of all new words and forms as well as comprehend the
meaning of entire sentences and how they flow together to make a broader point on your first
read through. The best approach is to chunk it up into manageable activities so that nothing is
too difficult.
You should frequently read or listen to your content multiple times (up to ten, even). Repetition
is a powerful principle that ensures you remember what you learn. Each time you will read more
carefully and try to gain new insight. Here are the key phases:
1. Skim read for broader context—lets you derive meaning from context more easily
2. Brief read—read quickly without looking anything up, try to guess the meaning of key
words
3. Deeper read—read again, focusing on those parts that are still unclear to you
4. Lookup—search for the meaning of key words and forms that are preventing you from
understanding fully
5. Repeat reading—as many times as necessary to understand the text
You can also follow-up by using the resource for a range of activities. Here are some ideas:
36
7.2 Extensive reading 37
If by the end you can comfortably understand the content, congratulations! You are now
measurably better at your target language.
There is nothing objectively wrong with listening instead, however written content has every-
thing easily accessible to be referenced, returned to, and looked up. It is also better in terms of
sheer quantity of content available to learners, meaning there are more things that interest you
available in the written form. Reading and listening are simply different ways of accessing the
core components (vocabulary and grammar), which remain largely unchanged between the two
content types. Feel free to listen to audiobooks or podcasts if you prefer.
The key to extensive reading is that you read widely and a lot. Content you use will need to
already be 98% understandable to you. Use the suggestions from the resources section to find
some good tools and content to read.
Find a book
The most common way learners tend to get lots of language exposure is by finding a book they
enjoy reading. Graded readers, which are tailored to your level, are ideal. However, learners often
find books for teens or even pre-teens that they enjoy enough to read. If the book is a translation
of one you have already read in your native language, that will help you read a more difficult book
without losing track of what is happening. Here are some books commonly re-read by learners:
In addition, there are books written specifically for learners at various levels. You can find
them on Amazon.
a burst of insight that can come from beginning to speak as their target language turns from
memorised rules and phrases into a living language that they can interact with.
Other than listening and speaking skill, which has already been addressed, there are three
common barriers learners experience beginning to speak. I will address each of them with a
section. They are: knowing when to start speaking, getting conversation practice, and confidence.
There are other methods of getting practice. If you live in a big city, there are often meetups
for language enthusiasts or more generic meetups that are often attended by expatriates and
travellers. You might get lucky and find a native speaker there who is willing to let you practise if
you ask them. The country associated with your language may have a community of speakers in
your city. You can also pay for a tutor to get conversation practice, either online or in real life if
available.
Building confidence
The next big barrier to fluent speech is usually a lack of confidence. Having the confidence to just
try even if you might be wrong ensures you maximise your opportunity to practise speaking.
7.3 Conversation practice 39
If you are feeling nervous or anxious about starting to speak, it is best to ease yourself in. Find a
good conversation partner. Most people will be accommodating. A good partner will understand
your level and speak at an appropriate level for you. In return, any help they give using your
language will be good practice for them. Make sure you are clear about your level and your initial
difficulty will not be a problem. If you have the money, hiring a tutor can be a good way to ease
yourself into speaking with less pressure.
The initial hurdle of starting to speak is the largest, but there is no way around it. After that,
speaking becomes increasingly easier, even when first speaking any future languages you may
learn.
This chapter marks the end of the advice tailored towards beginners. From here, I provide
more frameworks to help intermediate learners choose better study activities and progress more
effectively.
• Drilling key forms and words is still a useful activity to target key weaknesses
• Flashcards are still a useful resource—while some learners use flashcards less, others increase
their usage because they like to consciously focus on improving their vocabulary
• Content is still essential
Nearly everything you do will be centred around content. There is a huge amount of nuance to
grammar and vocabulary usage, so the only way to properly absorb it all is with content.
40
8.2 What should I study? 41
1. Your goals
2. Your weaknesses
Your goals
The best activities for study either closely simulate or match your goals. For example, if you are
learning a language for its literature, reading a book is a perfect exercise. If your goal is to have
conversations, your focus should be on listening and speaking activities.
Your weaknesses
A weakness is anything that prevents you successfully completing your goal. Based on your
experience engaging with your goals, try to decide what is most holding you back. For example,
if you can read but struggle to watch TV shows without subtitles, you may need to work on your
aural comprehension.
If you’re not sure, it’s a good bet your vocabulary is holding you back at least somewhat. A
fluent speaker of English knows over 10,000 words, and you’re probably not there yet.
Once you’ve identified a weakness, choose resources and do activities that let you improve that
aspect or skill you are lacking in. For example, you may choose podcasts because you struggle to
understand spoken language, or you may pick some written content that interests you to help
you learn words.
Core component or
Aspect
skill
Grammar Function of verbs, nouns, adjectives, adverbs
Tense
Mood
Number
Gender
Word order
Suffixes
Other grammar (language-dependent)
Vocabulary Number of words known
Prepositions and other particles
Collocations
Common phrases
Numbers
Reading Orthography
Characters (for languages like Chinese or Japanese)
Listening Sound perception
Distinguishing words
Speed of comprehension
Speaking Phonetics
Tone
Intonation
Fluidity and pace
Writing Spelling
Writing speed
1. Meaning-focused
2. Language-focused
3. Fluency-focused
Each falls into a niche that helps you apprehend your language.
How much you do of each is up to you, though the nature of meaning-focused language learning
activities means they will likely take most of your time.
Next we will look at what these categories are and some activities for you to consider doing.
You don’t have to do every activity; in fact, people commonly get away with doing only a few.
43
44 Chapter 9 Language Learning Activities
Activity Description
Already mentioned earlier. Reading as much as possible and on
a wide range of subjects. The goal is to be exposed to as much
Extensive reading
vocabulary as possible while still understanding what you read,
even if not fully.
Staying within a specific topic area when reading can help you
encounter many of the same words over and over to improve
your vocabulary retention. It can also help you target the kind
Narrow reading
of vocabulary you learn. You can achieve this by following the
same topic in the news or reading about a specialist area of
knowledge you already know about.
Conversation Already mentioned earlier. Talking and listening to native
practice speakers in real conversation is highly beneficial.
Reading while Helps you get used to sounds while reading, as well as
listening improving comprehension over simply listening.
This works like extensive and narrow reading, but by listening
Listening to audio to podcasts or radio. This can be harder since listening is a
more difficult skill to master.
Try reading and then writing a short article about a topic. If
Read and write you want to mix it up, you don’t have to read, but can instead
watch or listen and write.
Activity Description
Drilling with content. This means carefully reading a specific
text with the objective of learning a new piece of language.
Intensive reading
Your goal is to understand the text by repeatedly reading it and
consciously choosing what you will focus on.
Memorising
sentences or words This technique is well covered in the sections on flashcards.
using flashcards
Writing new forms Self-explanatory. Many people find the act of writing to be
and words down helpful for memorisation.
If you have a dual-language text, you might try to translate
Translating between
your native into your target language, then compare your
languages
translation to the actual text.
Using a rather small text (approx. 200 words), read it first to
understand it, then follow up by going through, trying to
remember the first four or five words and writing them on a
Delayed copying
piece of paper without referring back to the text. You can
gradually increase the number of words. This helps you hold
longer and longer phrases in your head.
Write something and send it to a native to be corrected.
Writing practice Optionally, write a follow-up text integrating what you have
learned.
Activity Description
Focusing on sounds rather than meaning to hear how words
Listening for sounds
sound in connected speech.
Listening to dialogues with text and trying to mimic the
speakers as closely as possible. After a few repetitions you can
Shadowing
try to speak over top of them. Helps work on intonation and
pronunciation.
Writing, getting it checked and corrected, looking at it carefully,
Repeated writing
putting it away, and then writing it again from memory.
Record yourself speaking a text and play it back, listen and
Repeated speaking
compare to a native.
46 Chapter 9 Language Learning Activities
In this chapter I give you a framework to assess if the activities you are doing are helping you
achieve your goals. You can apply this knowledge to the chapter on activities earlier. You may
notice you already do a lot of what is here. The purpose is to help you understand what is
happening beneath the hood and use that knowledge to do it better.
Practising is using the language for your goal in an integrated fashion. Practice blends and
hones the skills and knowledge you already have with less focus on gaining new knowledge.
These are the meaning-focused activities.
Drilling, often referred to using the more general term, “studying”, is the act of trying to
improve a specific component of language. Usually this is something that is too difficult to focus
on when you are trying to practise. Drill is about improving on individual weaknesses without
worrying as much about how they go together. These are the language- and fluency-focused
activities.
10.1 Practice
It is often best to directly practise the thing you want to get better at. For example, if you want to
improve at conversation, then talk with native speakers. If you find your main goal too difficult,
you can do similar tasks, such as listening to podcasts or speaking aloud in a mirror, if necessary.
You may often find yourself doing other forms of practice that are not your goal. There can be
good reasons for this:
This type of indirect practice can be useful; however, it is usually slower at helping you achieve
your goals. As much as possible, your practice should be direct.
Learners often substitute direct practice with a related task when they shouldn’t. Those who
want to communicate will pass time drilling grammar, vocabulary, or reading news. These tasks
have their place but will not result in progress without a lot of practice.
47
48 Chapter 10 Practising and Drilling
10.2 Drill
Drilling is an effective way to fix weaknesses and improve at a faster rate. Drilling reduces your
cognitive load and lets you focus improving on a single thing or subset of the full task. You can
drill grammar or vocabulary, or specific skills.
Drills don’t have to be simple rote-learning activities. In fact, some drills are far superior to
others. When you do a drill exercise, you should assess if it is truly helping you. A good drill
exercise:
• uses real language as much as possible, such as the content you use
• simulates the part of the real-life situation you are looking to improve in
• is relevant to the weaknesses currently preventing you from achieving your goals
• focuses on building skills or knowledge crucial to understanding
It is also recommended to avoid drilling too much. A lot of the skills learners choose to drill
will be developed over time with input anyway.
10.3 Transfer
Transfer is the concept describing how knowledge and skill at one task applies to other situations,
such as how our study of the components of a language translates into the ability to speak or
do whatever our goal is. Transfer does not happen automatically.1 Real-world skill at language
(or any task) is a complex melding of its constituent skills that involves novel scenarios and
unpredictability that drills can struggle to simulate. This is why basic workbook grammar
exercises are not a recommended drill. You’ll get very good at doing tests, but what portion of
that will easily transfer to your speaking? Not so much.
1
Tests of economic reasoning comparing college economics majors to other students showed a surprising lack of a
difference between the two groups (source).
10.3 Transfer 49
Both drill and practice will help you improve, but each has strengths and weaknesses that play
off each other. It is useful to have a balance between the two. Excessive study without practice
will not translate into skills that help you achieve your goals. Learning may become stale or you
could lose track of what direction your learning is headed. Excessive practice without study could
cause you to develop fossilised errors (this often often occurs with people who speak a lot) or
cause your rate of improvement to stagnate. Exactly how you divide your time is up to you.
Mistakes
Earlier I discussed the need to let go of the fear of making mistakes so that you can practise more
effectively, and this remains true. However, there are ways to learn faster and avoid making
mistakes.
Mistakes are accidental. The learner knows they are wrong. For example, you might be taught
to use the subjunctive in Spanish but will often forget to use it when you are speaking or writing.
You would recognise the mistake if you had a chance to check your own output carefully.
Errors are incorrect use of the language caused by a learner’s lack of knowledge. This could
be failing to use the subjunctive because you are not aware it should be used in a certain context.
In this case, you would still fail to correct yourself after checking your output.
Mistakes are a natural part of speaking and become less common over time with practice. Even
native speakers occasionally make mistakes. Errors, on the other hand, tend to stay around much
longer and are more difficult to fix. For that reason, it is errors rather than mistakes that we
should be focusing on.
These sources are, of course, very normal parts of learning a language. In either case, you
will probably eventually learn the correct form and the error will become a mistake and then
eventually disappear. When this does not happen, this is known as fossilisation.
11.1 Fossilisation
Fossilisation is the process in which the learner acquires a specific form or way of speaking that is
not native-like, and this error or mistake becomes stuck in the learner’s speech. Fossilised errors
and mistakes are often resistant to correction and the learner’s efforts to change.
Fossilised errors arise when a learner repeatedly (and successfully, in terms of being understood)
uses a certain form without being made aware that it is not native-like. This happens to the point
of hearing and using it so often, it sounds natural and comes to mind easily. Fossilised mistakes
usually start off as fossilised errors, but remain an unwelcome feature used habitually by the
learner even after they are made consciously aware it is incorrect.
The good news is that doing things to avoid fossilisation is also generally good language learning
50
11.1 Fossilisation 51
technique. Here is how you can mitigate the risk of developing fossilised errors and mistakes:
1. Practice by learning the language in context. Use texts and videos over drills that isolate
the language. (Principle: Use the language in order to learn it)
2. Focus on listening and reading. Don’t feel like you have to start speaking early if you don’t
feel comfortable.
3. Try to be aware of how words and forms are used around you. Focus on shifting your
speech to resemble more closely that of native speakers. (Principle: Noticing)
4. Get feedback or correction. This can be done by a friend, tutor, family member, or language
exchange partner. Make sure they understand that you would like your errors to be
corrected. Most people will avoid correcting others’ speech to facilitate smooth conversation.
(Principle: Get feedback on your ability)
Chapter 12
12.1 Summary
Here are the key ideas that underpin your learning:
Progress through your course. This will structure your learning. Make sure you follow
others’ recommendations but prioritise what you enjoy using. Do not rely on your course to
make you learn. You will learn once you use the new words and forms you encounter in your
course by drilling and seeing them in your input.
Drill and reinforce your knowledge. This allows you to develop aspects of your language
you might be neglecting.
Use flashcards to drill grammar and vocabulary. Words are the biggest barrier to compre-
hension, so focus on them if you want to understand more. Using sentences is ideal. Learn to
make your own flashcards and add in words you encounter in your course and input.
Drill using content. This lets you learn any aspect of your language in a way that lets you
see it in use.
Listen and read as much as you can using content that is interesting and comprehen-
sible. YouTube, Google, and language-specific communities are your best shot at finding good
content. Reading a book is a great way to get input for learners of all levels.
Speak and write to help solidify your understanding. Find a conversation partner and
start speaking when you feel comfortable.
The latter parts will have given you lots more activities to try and principles to integrate into
your learning. Choose what you study based on your goals and weaknesses. You can choose
activities that are meaning-focused, language-focused, or fluency-focused. Do a range of study
activities to get some variety.
Practise then drill. Practice will help you combine your skills together and identify weaknesses.
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12.2 Conclusion 53
Drill will help you focus on these weaknesses to improve your performance.
Mistakes are a common feature of language learning. Avoid building fossilised mistakes and
errors by using the language in context and getting feedback on your output.
12.2 Conclusion
Congratulations on making it to the end! You should now be in a comfortable position to learn a
language all on your own. Having read it all once, the full guide is unlikely to stick in your mind,
so be sure to save this guide somewhere and come back at a later date once you feel your study
stagnating or you need some fresh ideas. There will probably be something here to help.
Next you will find a large set of appendices that provide more guidance on using flashcards,
studying grammar and vocabulary, using content, and more. Be sure to check it out if you’d like
some more ideas.
If you have gotten here by reading the whole thing, please take a moment to send me an email
with any thoughts, feedback or error corrections you may have, no matter how small. I am always
trying to improve and your input is greatly appreciated.
The advantage of learning good pronunciation is that it is probably the easiest way to sound fluent
at an upper beginner or intermediate stage, and early effort will continue to help you throughout
your language endeavours. If you’re the outgoing type or are learning primarily to communicate
verbally, good pronunciation is a good way to keep people happy conversing with you and get
compliments on your skill.
Pronunciation is especially important for languages with very different phonology, such as
Chinese. This is because the differences are so great as to make mispronunciation a barrier to
communication. If you are learning a tonal language or one with many new sounds, consider
paying closer attention to pronunciation.
Pronunciation can be split between sound, syllable, word, and sentence. Every target language
has different rules governing these. This is known as the study of phonetics, split between
phonology and prosody.
Sound inventory: Every language has a set of distinct consonants and vowels. These sounds
can be very different from English (such as tones and click consonants) or only slightly different.
Oral posture: This is the way native speakers tend to hold the muscles in their mouth.
Tone: This is the use of tone to distinguish morphemes. This means two words can be identical
but for their tone and carry completely different meanings. If your target language is a tonal
language you will need to become proficient in order to communicate.
Difficult sound clusters: Different languages have different rules surrounding which sounds
can fit into a single syllable. This means some languages will have clusters of consonants you will
find difficult to pronounce.
Stress: Languages have different rules around what syllables are stressed within words, as well
as how they are stressed
Connected speech: Words flow together in a way that makes them sound different than if
they were spoken individually. Notice how this sentence sounds different in your mind. when. I.
type. the. last. part. like. this.
Intonation: This is pitch when used to convey other types of information. The most simple
example is rising pitch to indicate a question. Intonation is often used in other ways and these
54
A.1 What to learn 55
Rhythm and tempo: Languages are spoken with a different sense of pace and timing.
Sound inventory
The difficulty with learning new sounds is understanding precisely how to make them. If you
would like to master the pronunciation of your language, it helps a lot to learn some of the
terminology around sounds and parts of the mouth.
Your best tool for learning the sounds of your language is the International Phonetic Alphabet
(IPA). The IPA is a system of writing all the sounds of human language. Knowing the core sounds
associated with your language and familiarity with their IPA symbol is very useful. By googling
any IPA symbol, you can find the Wikipedia article describing it, which has a sound file to help
you. Here is the Wikipedia entry for the phonology of English to help you.
Next I will provide you with some resources to understand the fundamentals of consonants
and vowels. It can be very easy to think you are producing something correctly. However, careful
study of the sounds of your language can reveal differences you were not previously aware of.
The Encyclopedia Britannica entry on phonetics will be a useful reference later on.
Vowels
The IPA also includes a vowel chart, which is very useful for understanding how different vowels
are formed. Here is a great video analysing English accents that also serves as an interesting
introduction to the vowel chart.
Consonants
Consonants have three fundamental aspects. Here they are with links to a series that describes
them:
• Place of articulation
• Manner of articulation
• Voicing
Oral posture
Oral posture is one of the more difficult concepts to grasp, but understanding it can provide a
huge boost to your pronunciation. You can think of oral posture as the natural resting place, or
“home base” of the mouth of a native speaker. Every sound is produced from this base.
You can learn from this home base by adjusting the posture of your own mouth when you are
speaking. This should help you achieve more accurate pronunciation.
Pronunciation guides rarely talk about oral posture, so the best way to learn it is often by
paying careful attention when watching a video of a native speaker. The best time to spot this
is often by watching the mouth of the speaker when they pause between phrases, or by paying
56 Appendix A How to Learn Pronunciation
attention to how they sound when they make the equivalent of our word for uhhh. Here is a
video of an accent trainer describing French that may help you understand the concept.
• Lips
– Lip corners
– Pursing
• Cheeks
– Tensing or relaxation
– Location of tensing (can be the whole cheek or isolated parts)
• Tongue
– Bunching up in the back of the mouth
– Flattening
– Arching or cupping
– Bracing (often against upper teeth)
• Jaw
– Height
– Retraction or protrusion
• The positioning of the velum
• The width of the pharynx
Stress
For most learners, it is important to pay focused attention to where and how stress is placed on
words. English stresses by a raising of pitch and lengthening of the vowel. In other languages,
stress can be more subtle or expressed differently.
Here are some aspects of stress that may be relevant to your language:
• Pitch accent
• Vowel reduction
It may take some time to train your ear. For a while, different sounds will seem the same to you,
but if you persevere, they will eventually begin to sound different. Eventually, you will wonder
how they ever sounded alike.
A.2 How to practise pronunciation 57
You don’t need to learn everything about pronunciation at the start. A good understanding of
each of the main sounds is sufficient. A lot of pronunciation skill comes naturally as you begin to
talk more and try to bring your speech to resemble more closely that of native speakers you hear.
I recommend you plan out some sessions where you focus on pronunciation early on, ideally
when you first start speaking. To do this, you can use the suggested exercises below.
Exercises
As I mentioned, you will need to spend time isolating the aspects that are relevant to your language
and focusing on improving them. Dedicate some time to doing some activities in which you
practise speaking some words alone in front of your computer. You don’t need to do this too
much, just until your brain is made aware of what it needs to do to make the new sound. After
that you can gradually integrate the sound naturally as you practice your language.
Use good dictionaries to help you. Wiktionary is the most consistent dictionary in showing the
IPA pronunciation. Forvo is a great pronunciation dictionary.
Activity Description
You may need to get used to pronouncing individual sounds
before you can use them correctly in words. You can do this
Isolate sounds using the Wikipedia articles for the IPA symbol associated with
the sound you want to learn (example: English schwa). Play
the audio and repeat it aloud.
Once you have the sounds roughly right, try to use them in a
Isolate words simple word. Use Forvo, Wiktionary, or any other dictionary
that has audio to get a good example to mimic.
Ask your partner to critique your pronunciation. They may
Correction with your
have trouble identifying what you are doing wrong. This is
conversation partner
why the IPA can be very useful.
Play back a recording of yourself reading a text. Even better is
if you have a native audio recording you can compare it to. For
Record yourself single words you can just use Speech Jammer and increase the
delay to max to hear yourself right away. This will take some
getting used to.
Listen to an audio recording of a native speaker with a text
Shadowing reference and try to speak over them, copying their intonation,
pace, and pronunciation.
If you study alone, try practising by reading aloud texts you
are reading for study. It helps if the text also has a native audio
Read aloud recording. It is also helpful to practice throughout your study
by trying to read flashcards or anything new you encounter
aloud.
the way that sounds the least silly to us—the sounds of our native language. It is important to
understand that good pronunciation will initially feel very weird to you.
A helpful tip is to try speaking your target language with an exaggerated caricature of how
people from that country speak your native language. More often than not, you will land much
closer to a good estimation of the correct pronunciation than by starting from the default of your
native language.
Appendix B
I recommend making the phrases personally relevant and interesting to you, since you’re going
to be finding them anyway.
It is not recommended to build your own phrases unless you are sure it is native-like (i.e. you
have made it with a native teacher). Because of that, you will have to either take the sentences
from your content or use services that provide sentences. If you are lucky, the language you
are learning has a good dictionary that also provides phrases (such as Spanishdict for Spanish
learners). Otherwise, you will need to use another service.
Anki also provides pre-made decks which often have sentences. These can work too if you like
them and the sentences are relevant and at your level. They can also save you time if you don’t
have the time to build your own deck.
1. Languages are far too complex to be adequately described by any book or course. To be
introduced to all the different ways and specific contexts words and forms can be used
together, you need to be exposed to a lot of the language.
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60 Appendix B The Core Resources
2. Input introduces you to new forms and words in context in a way that is interesting, which
helps you remember.
3. Input gives repetition of words and forms that solidifies them in your memory.
4. Input builds your intuition for the language. This is what happens when certain things
can just sound correct or incorrect without you having any explicit understanding of why.
Much of your native language knowledge is intuition.
Imagine your listening level is comparatively low. An audio dialogue with all known words
would still present a challenge for your ears. Utilising this principle, you would use this resource
focusing only on your ability to hear different words. You may also want to do a first pass over a
text version of the audio so you know what to expect. Be careful though, you don’t want to listen
simply relying on having near-memorised the text.
If you want to finish a long text, you are reading without a dictionary, or you just want to
expose yourself to as much of the language as possible without stopping to look up words, 98%
known words is closer to the ideal +1 amount. If you are prepared for a careful study session and
want to make multiple passes over the same text, 90% is acceptable. If 90% sounds high to you, try
this and see what 80% comprehension feels like.
In addition, real word factors such as resource availability often result in the learner using
resources that are slightly too difficult. This is okay, but if you understand less than 80% of the
vocabulary, you should strongly consider abandoning that resource regardless.
Appendix C
Learning words is such a large topic that it doesn’t easily fit in a beginner-oriented guide. To help
anyone interested, I have placed a large amount of useful information here.
Consciously learning the many different meanings of these words is a good way of avoiding
common learner mistakes and making your speech sound more natural. In this case, you’d need
to put focused effort into the many definitions of poner as if it were several words rather than
one. This will be greatly helped by using example sentences in your flashcards.
On the other hand, there are also common English words with many meanings where your
target language may have several words instead. These are much harder to spot. The best you
can do is watch for phrases where you think I’d have translated that differently.
61
62 Appendix C Further Advice on Learning Vocabulary
Many words are derived from others and form a grouping of related words. For example,
understanding the English root mech- can help you remember or derive the meaning of many
words, such as mechanic, mechanical, and mechanised. You can use this type of association to link
known words to similar-sounding known ones. Some root words have derivations that may not
be immediately obvious. For example, the root -spir- is the link between the words inspire, respire,
and spirit. The associations you use to help you remember words may be more abstract because
of this.
Take advantage of these connections by trying to spot them where possible. You should also
try to avoid learning large words if you don’t know anything about their constituents.
You can also spot similarities between words in your target and native languages. For example,
the English word citizen and French word citoyen.
Appendix D
The following appendix is a set of discussions on how learning happens in our minds, applied to
language learning specifically. While I reference language learning throughout, the sources for
this info come from elsewhere and can be applied more generally.
D.2 Be curious
The best way to learn something is when there is clear relevance and usefulness to you. The
mere act of “wanting” to know something seems to help. If you want to cultivate this effect,
approach unfamiliar words and forms with a sense of curiosity. Prime your mind by genuinely
trying to figure out how a word or form affects the meaning of the sentence before you look it up.
It also helps if you encounter words multiple times, giving the word a sense of familiarity and
importance.
• Context—Use phrases and content to link words to others, showing you how they are used
in context
• Logical connections—Words often share roots or affixes in common with other words
you know which you can use as prompt to help you remember
• Mnemonics—Read the section on mnemonics for useful techniques to create other logical
connections
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64 Appendix D How the Brain Learns
Top-down processing involves using context to make deductions about what some content
is about. Bottom-up processing involves understanding the pieces to build up to a coherent
whole. Using both helps you learn new words and constructions from context.
For example: while watching a video you encounter a new word. You might note that the
speaker appears to be indicating an apple in their hand. In this case, top-down processing involves
picking up that the word means “apple” naturally.
Bottom-up processing is any word or form you already know that helps you understand the
sentence. Pausing a video to try to recall the function of a form you just heard is a good example
of bottom-up processing being practised and applied to learn effectively.
When engaging with content, both processes work in tandem to help you apprehend meaning
in real time. Knowing this lets you take advantage of it. Before you start something, make sure
you understand the context and have formed expectations surrounding what the resource is going
to show you. One common method of doing this is beginning a text by skim reading or starting a
TV episode with a plot summary.
D.5 Chunks
Which ordering of letters do you think is easier to memorise: “orhezo esn rinyg bivt”, or “snoozing
by the river”? You would probably find the latter much easier to remember, though both contain
the exact same letters. This is because you are already familiar with the constituent parts. You’ve
already memorised the correct spelling of each word and their order fits comfortably in the
patterns of language you find intuitive (it is grammatical).
This idea of already-learned aspects of language is a concept we will refer to as chunks. The
concept was brought into the public consciousness by Barbara Oakley, who posted a good overview
of the idea here. Known aspects of language constitute chunks which don’t require effort for you
to comprehend or use. These known chunks are an aide that will help teach you how the new
word or piece of grammar is used.
It is far easier to learn something new when other aspects you are presented with at the same
time are already easily understandable. For example, learning the meaning and usage of a new
word in an example sentence will be much easier if you already know all the other words, just like
how it is much easier to remember all those letters once they are organised into words. Grammar
will be easier to memorise if one concept is presented to you using words you already know. The
additional context provided by known chunks will assist you in understanding the new part and
you will learn faster overall.
Once you learn something, it becomes a new chunk to help provide context for learning new
D.6 Difficulty + successful recall 65
concepts.
Building new chunks is difficult and takes focused effort. The core insight of this idea is that it
is almost impossible to learn a lot of new chunks of language at once. Learning using a
text or example sentences chock full of new grammatical constructions and words might seem
like a really efficient way of learning, but there will be no familiar connections or context to aid
understanding, and your learning will actually be slower. Recollection will be particularly hard,
akin to recalling random letters in order. Focusing on learning a single aspect at a time allows
you to build new chunks easily while minimising the chance of forgetting.
This principle does not mean “don’t try to learn quickly”. It means that when you learn a
new word or grammatical construction, you will learn it much faster if it is presented to you
in the context of other chunks of language that are already familiar to you. If you are learning
something difficult, learn that difficult thing in context of already known things and rely on that
context and knowledge to help you learn. The texts you use to learn should already be mostly
comprehensible, and learning words or grammar is best done with understandable context, either
in text or with example sentences for your flashcards.
Your brain learns optimally when you encounter something, expend mental effort, and
eventually succeed. To ensure your mental effort results in learning, aim for just the right amount
of difficulty—not too difficult that something presents an insurmountable barrier, but not so easy
that you don’t learn anything new. This is the principle Your level +1.
When something is too difficult, a lack of context and meaningful connections create a barrier
that results in a lot of tiring mental effort with relatively little payoff. When something is too
easy, there is no mental challenge, and you don’t learn anything. When a resource is mostly
comprehensible, all the known words and forms surrounding something new provides useful
context that reduces the barrier to understanding and enables optimal learning.
Avoid doing activities that are too much of a struggle until you are able to do slightly easier
ones. If you constantly find yourself struggling without understanding, you need to find an easier
activity.
Often you will struggle to recall the meaning of a word or form and will be forced to look it up.
This is perfectly natural and very common. While re-looking things up helps learning, it is not
optimal. Try to find ways to prompt yourself to remember the answer.
66 Appendix D How the Brain Learns
While passive activities such as simply watching a show are generally much more enjoyable
and easier to do in large amounts, active recall is more efficient in terms of progress per hour
spent. Active learning by using your content for focused study will let you gain new knowledge
faster. At the same time, learning a language takes enormous amounts of input and there is no
way to realistically expose yourself to all the forms and words you need without large amounts of
passive learning.
Be sure you are doing both types of learning. You may find it better to use more difficult
resources for active learning and easier ones for passive learning.
D.8 Habit
We are creatures of habit. One of the keys to maintaining your routine is habit. Build a habit of
studying at a regular time each day. The best time is usually first thing in the morning, while
you are still fresh and probably don’t have anything else scheduled. With a good habit, your
automatic process should be to begin studying without you having to think about it. If you have
to ask yourself “should I study or should I do something else?”, it takes mental effort to force
yourself to study that will wear you down over time. Instead, your default should be that time is
dedicated to study. If you want to use that time for something else, you need to find valid and
specific reason.
It helps a lot if your interaction with the language is consistent. Try not to take long breaks
from learning. Do at least a little bit every day. Too tired? Just do five minutes. Those five minutes
now keep you in the habit of doing something every day and keep the language active in your
mind.
Another key to maintaining your habit and routine is discipline. Discipline is not an
inherent trait, but a set of habits and mental tools that help one start projects and stay on-task.
Not every day will you find it easy to keep your habit. If this is you, you may need to find ways to
force yourself to at least begin studying. Try promising yourself to simply start with the intention
of only doing five minutes. Usually you will find it easier to continue once you have already
started.
Appendix E
Common Questions
While children do learn their native languages very well, it takes around ten years of complete
immersion to get there and another ten to become a fully functional adult.
To fully acquire languages, enormous amounts of input are necessary. Children are given
far more comprehensible input than adults and, without the grammar book or dictionary, are
generally much slower at acquiring basic forms and wait a lot longer than adults before they try
speaking. Once they do acquire these forms and start speaking, however, there is no example for
them to follow except that of perfect native speech. Also keep in mind that by the time they are an
adult, the child will have spent an enormous amount of time in school practising their language
skills and having their output critiqued. This video by Tom Scott provides a great overview.
Adult speakers frequently learn rules and then quickly move to applying them by speaking.
The result is that most of the adult’s first attempts at communication will not resemble native
speech.
For those adult learners who want to speak like a native, the answer is not to attempt to learn
like a child, but to surround themselves with as much comprehensible input as possible. Adult
language learners can also spend time in focused study to find and improve weaknesses and learn
words and complex forms faster.
You can read the article I wrote on the topic here for more information.
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68 Appendix E Common Questions
As we noted earlier in the section How you progress, language learning progress is significantly
faster at the beginner and early intermediate stages. You can get very far with basic grammar and
a small vocabulary. Often, the true barrier to being conversational at that level is skill speaking
and listening and having the confidence to try.
If you’d like to be conversational in a lot of languages, you can do so without needing any
special technique or talent. In fact, much of it is just good language learning as described here
where the learner has fully integrated the principle Work towards your goals and focused heavily
on conversational skill. You can read the r/languagelearning FAQ entry for more info.
If you want to minimise the usage of grammar instruction, good technique is required. You will
need to make sure you are noticing grammatical forms and incorporating native-like elements
into your speech and writing.
1. They use poor technique—Learning optimally happens when there is just a bit of struggle.
Enough to make the brain work but not too much the learner can’t succeed without
looking at the answer. Schools typically explain a concept once and then force you to
fill out stale grammar exercises. This is not an efficient method because the gap between
present knowledge and that required for the activity is too large, leaving the learner feeling
frustrated.
2. They focus far too much on grammar—The majority of successful language learners
will tell you to focus on speaking and reading more, as this time will actually help you learn
the grammar better and faster than doing exercises. If you like grammar, you are free to
focus heavily on it, though a lot of people do not.
3. They are not timed well—Learning languages takes a lot of time and practice, and lan-
guages require active usage and integration into your life in order to improve at a decent
speed. The school format of spending a limited and segmented time with a subject while
being completely isolated from it at other times is inefficient for languages.
4. They teach to a test—Your learning is determined by your own goals. Build your skills
towards fulfilling that goal. Assess your own progress by thinking about how much closer
you are to achieving it. Skills with grammar exercises help you succeed in tests—they don’t
help much in the real world.
E.6 Why is the term “language hacks” a misnomer? 69
5. They can be overly structured—If you only study a topic for a few lessons then move
on without a chance to continue to use and practise your new knowledge, you will find
yourself gradually forgetting it all. Languages are best learned by actively using them, not
segmenting them into a series of topics that need to be rote learned.
You absolutely can learn faster and more effectively by following a few principles. These princi-
ples are derived from our collective knowledge of how to learn effectively in any domain, applied
to language learning. They let you learn faster and choose your objectives more intelligently.
For that reason, the term “principle” is used throughout this guide. You could comfortably call
most of what you read here “hacks”, but that would not leave the reader with any more clarity
over what “hacking” really is. Using the “principle” framework, the learner better grasps what is
required of them and why it is recommended to do something a certain way.
You need to spend a lot of time with the language, but learners often can’t engage directly with
their goal—perhaps there are no speakers around—so it can be helpful to use a substitute.
Appendix F
The Principles
• Build a base and work up—start with simpler concepts first then build up from there
• Work towards your goals—practice whatever tasks you are learning the language for
• Keep up your motivation—find ways to stay interested in the language
• Spend as much time as you can with your language—Time is the key determiner of how
fast you learn
• Trust the process—learning can be a slow process, so sometimes you need to trust that you
will progress with time
• 80 percent of your results come from 20 percent of your study—find the most effective
activities and biggest weaknesses and focus on them
• Push yourself—constantly challenge yourself by moving on to harder resources
• Use the language in order to learn it—listen and read as much as possible, you will learn
the language when you use it, not when you learn about it
• Repetition—you need to encounter something a lot before you learn it
• Engage your memory—try to actively recall the meaning of words and forms before you
look them up
• Noticing—Noticing forms in your content is a powerful way to learn
• Don’t try to learn things perfectly the first time you encounter them—you need to see the
language in context a lot before it will stick in your mind
70
Appendix G
Recommended Reading
Here you can find links to all the useful sources that have informed this guide:
G.1 Podcasts
71
Appendix H
Choosing a Language
The first thing you need to do is consider your goals and motivations. Those factors that are
most important to you are going to be the things that ensure you retain the long-term motivation
required to learn a language. People choose a language for a multitude of reasons, here are some
you might consider:
• Personal interest—Personal interest means you find the language inherently interesting
and want to learn it for the joy of engaging with it. Some people learn languages because
they think the grammar is cool, the language sounds beautiful, or they may simply like the
culture, food, or music. Personal interest is generally a very powerful motivation that can
persist for a lifetime.
• Work—Knowing a language can create job opportunities and improve the look of a CV.
Generally, the languages chosen are widely spoken or are the language of a country that
your own frequently trades with. While it’s true more jobs benefit from fluency in Chinese,
French or Spanish, other languages are still useful in a globalised world.
• Utility—Utility means how useful the language will be to you personally. The languages
with the most utility are typically those that are spoken where you live. Utility also comes
from learning the languages of places where you would like to live or visit. Because many
learners learn to communicate, utility is often a very motivating factor.
• Practicality—This means availability of resources. If your target language is relatively
obscure, resources in your native language may not be easily accessible. Difficulty finding
resources or interesting content can severely hurt your motivation and interest, so learners
who learn such languages are typically more motivated by other factors. Having family or
close friends around that speak the language can mitigate the resource problem. Learners
of more uncommon languages often use another more popular language as a bridge. For
example, if you would like to learn Catalan, it will be helpful to learn Spanish first so you
can use more resources.
• Family—This means relatives you wish to communicate with better or a family heritage
language. If you want to use members of your family to practise with, it is a good idea
to make sure they are willing to help first. Talking with a complete beginner is rarely an
interesting task for the native speaker, and as a learner you will only become engaging to
talk to once you are at least at an intermediate level.
• Ease—Languages that are more similar to ones you already know are significantly faster
to learn. If you want to get to a communicative level faster, learning a similar language
is better. If your only language is English, then the fastest languages to learn are Spanish,
Swedish, Norwegian, French, Dutch, Portuguese, and Italian. If the target language uses
many different sounds, has little common vocabulary, or has a radically different grammar,
you must be willing to invest more time into it. For a quick idea, check the FSI ranking,
which serves as a rough approximation for someone who is dedicated but speaks only
English. You can see that the hardest languages take over three times as long to reach a
certain level as the easiest ones. While ease matters, in practice, people learning “harder”
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H.1 Motivation 73
languages out of personal interest tend to be more successful than those who merely want to
learn a language and simply pick the easiest. This is because the former has more motivation.
Rather than thinking of difficulty, it is better to think in terms of the number of hours with
the language it might take to reach a certain level. This is because languages you are bored
by will be hard for you to stick with. You won’t enjoy the necessary hours of exposure. On
the other hand, learning a language you love can be a lot of fun, even if it takes a bit longer.
The most important of these six categories is probably that of personal interest. Whatever
language you really want to learn the most is the one you should probably choose. At the end of
the day, you choose your own life priorities. What you prioritise needs to extend from what makes
you happy. While the other five criteria can make you happy, they only do so indirectly. The
consequences of learning an easy language or a language useful for your career are what make
you happy. For languages you rank highly in personal interest, engaging with the language itself
will be sufficient to give you fulfilment. This fulfilment will be necessary to spend the hundreds,
eventually thousands, of hours you are going to spend with your chosen language.
Consider how important each of these categories of reasons are important to you and how the
languages you are considering align which each of these. If you need to, write it down. By the
end of this exercise, you should have a better idea which language you prefer.
H.1 Motivation
One of the biggest factors that determine your success is if you stick with the language you choose.
You unlikely to learn a language you have no motivation to continue with. Consider if your
reasons for learning are enough to keep you motivated. If not, you need to find a reason that will.
If there is some factor on your list that is important but you don’t feel it will motivate you to
sit down and study, you need to consider why you feel that it’s important to consider in the first
place. It may not be truly important to you.