Transcript
Page 1: Polyglot Beginnings - Amazon S3...Polyglot Beginnings Congratulations on picking up "Polyglot Beginnings: How to develop the right mindset for learning a new language" The book came
Page 2: Polyglot Beginnings - Amazon S3...Polyglot Beginnings Congratulations on picking up "Polyglot Beginnings: How to develop the right mindset for learning a new language" The book came

Polyglot Beginnings

Congratulations on picking up "Polyglot Beginnings: How to develop the right

mindset for learning a new language"

The book came to life, because I realised how important the beginning of

learning a foreign language is. It can literally make or break you.

If you start well and balanced you will become fluent faster than you ever

thought possible, and you can become a very successful polyglot (speaker of

many languages) very quickly.

If you start on the wrong foot, you might give up after 3 weeks and never

learn a foreign language.

Scary, right?

The book is useful for language learners at any stage, whether you are just

looking to start learning your first foreign language or you have learned

multiple already.

The reason for this is that it's never bad to reinforce solid fundamentals for

language learning.

During the book you’ll also be presented with how mindset and mental focus

are key elements to early success in language learning.

What you’ll discover as you learn about these elements of learning, is they

are applicable to all areas of life. If you want to become a better golf player,

or do better on your school papers - the advice I'm about to share with you

is useful for everything and anything.

In the back of the book, I'll also share my list of favourite resources sorted

by medium. This way you can jump straight in to learning after finishing this

book.

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But first, allow me to share my story with you, this is my own personal

polyglot beginning.

MY STORY

This book is about beginning a journey into learning a language, for me

personally this was also the beginning of getting my life on track.

In the end of 2013 I was stuck. Feeling depressed and finding myself doing a

university degree I couldn't care less about. I only did the bare minimum to

avoid being kicked out.

Then something changed. I had previously come across the “Internet

polyglots” but the idea of learning languages as a hobby, and perhaps even

many of them seemed quite unrealistic for me.

I didn't have a job, so I relied entirely on the grants provided by the Danish

government. Now I'm never going to complain about free studying and

getting paid to do it, but we’re not talking huge fortunes after rent is paid.

On a cold January evening I was browsing randomly, as I did so often and I

came across Benny Lewis’ Fluent in 3 Months blog. I spent the entire night

reading the website from start to finish. We’re talking hundreds of posts.

I was drawn to his story because some 10 years prior, he had simply left

Ireland, speaking nothing but English and now he lived in a new country

every 3 months as well as speaking some 12 languages to varying extents.

This was exciting to me. Here I was depressed, isolated and without any

apparent future ambitions.

Reading Benny’s posts gave me the empowerment to believe that if he could

do it, so he could I.

Before I dove head first into being a full-time language learner I took some

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time to work the idea around in my mind. Two short months after, Actual

Fluency was born as a way to keep myself accountable.

I was a serial quitter and I wanted to give myself added incentive to keep

going when things got tough (as they invariably do.)

I was following a few other language bloggers and one thing I was noticing

was that podcasting was very unexplored in the niche. I figured it would be a

great excuse to ask some of the brightest language learners any question a

new language learner might have.

That is how the Actual Fluency Podcast came about. As of writing this book

I've published more than 50 interviews that is guaranteed to motivate,

inspire and answer all the questions that arise when talking about foreign

language learning.

You can check out all the episodes on AFPODCAST.COM

A year after I started my journey I could successfully converse in two new

languages.

Had I learned Russian and Esperanto to fluency?

Far from it. But I now had 1 hour talks with my Russian tutor entirely in

Russian, and I took part in a whole weekend of nothing but Esperanto in

Berlin.

I know some people are more talented, maybe even faster, at learning

languages that I am. To me that doesn't matter.

I didn't know any Russian a year prior, and now I could speak in it,

understand news articles and even follow along in Russian sitcoms.

That was an amazing feeling.

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I found a job through the language learning network and quit my dead-end

university degree I was pursuing just for the government support, uprooted

from Denmark and moved to Budapest, Hungary.

All this was made possible by becoming a language learner.

I'm not saying language learning is some kind of miracle cure for depression.

I'm not a doctor either so this is simply what worked for me.

What I can say though is that becoming a language learner literally

transformed my life and I'm confident it can change yours for the better too.

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LET'S GET STARTED

Before starting to give advice, tips and tricks on how to get started learning

foreign languages the best way, it makes a lot of sense to take a bird’s eye

view and consider the question: Why even learn a foreign language in the

first place?

you might be familiar with some of these already, but my hope is that, by

reading these reasons and benefits before or even during your language

studies you can mentally boost your motivation.

And namely motivation is one of the most discussed topics of language

learning. Without proper motivation it is very difficult to put in the consistent

time and effort to learn a language.

Some languages will have more advanced grammar than you are used to

and some will have strange pronunciation patterns, but the fact of the

matter is that anyone can learn any language as long as their motivation is

right.

That’s why this book deals primarily with motivation and mindset. But before

we look into that, let’s take a look at some of the reasons why you would

even consider learning a foreign language in the first place.

1. Open your mind to other cultures

When you start to embrace a foreign language you also start embracing a

foreign culture. This could start out small as in songs, literature and other

written texts but eventually you might even go to the country, make friends

and dive even deeper into the culture of your target language.

Culture is this esoteric thing that is so massive, it's actually hard to explain.

It transcends music, food and tradition - it's everything that the subgroup of

people offer to you.

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For instance, going to Denmark you might find that Danish people are very

cold and not very welcoming towards strangers. However, once you start to

get to know them and take part in their "hygge" - that's the untranslatable

word of extreme cosiness, like the feeling of curling up in front of a fireplace

with a cup of hot chocolate - You'll discover that beneath the veneer of cold

lies a beautiful culture waiting to be explored.

As far as I'm aware, learning the language is the only way to truly get into a

country or region's culture.

Sometimes it starts the other way around. Many people get fascinated about

manga for example, the Japanese comics and then decide to study Japanese

to enjoy the comics in their original language.

However it is also very possibly somebody decided to learn Japanese for a

different reason (we’ll look into that more later) and then stumbled upon the

manga, and used it to stay motivated and focused in their learning.

The point is that it’s very easy to be quite oblivious about how other

cultures, countries and languages work and operate. By learning a foreign

language you get tuned into not only how the culture works, but also how

the people think and express themselves.

2. Exercise your brain and delay brain degeneration and dementia.

A recent study published in the academic magazine "Neurology" came out

with the following conclusion based on a study of 648 people:

"Overall, bilingual patients developed dementia 4.5 years later than the

monolingual ones" Source: Neurology.org

That's pretty significant. So the brain gymnastics aspect of language

learning is definitely not to be ignored.

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3. REALLY Talk to more people

This one is quite obvious. There are still many countries and areas where

people actually don’t speak English, so unless you learn the language you’d

have a better chance of communicating with your cat than these speakers.

There’s also another point. Speaking somebody’s native language is way

more powerful than speaking a common language such as English.

When I came to Hungary in 2015, for example, people would always be

relatively cold towards me when I spoke in English. Professionals, random

people on the street and so on.

However when I started to speak even the tiniest bit of Hungarian people's

eyes would just lit up and a huge smile would form on their mouths.

Not many people bother to do this, so when you do, the reactions can often

be priceless.

you might think English is just fine, particularly in Europe, where the level of

English is incredibly high. Foreigners come to the country and while all

communication is possible in English, they don’t feel as though they really

get to know anyone.

However the native language, even when spoken poorly can often be a

direct key to break the ice and form great lasting friendships.

Nelson Mandela said; If you speak to a man in a language he understands it

goes to his head and if you speak in his mother tongue it goes to his heart.

So that's what we'll do.

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4. Because not everyone speaks English

There is a common myth going around, that the whole world speaks English.

This couldn't be further from the truth.

Talking about my move to Hungary in 2015 again, I would frequently run

into people who did not understand or speak a word of English. Literally

nothing.

This is very scary when you try it for the first time. I've always been living in

countries where almost everyone speaks English, so coming here where

good English skills are really rare was a bit of a wake-up call.

It was also exciting, because now I HAD to learn Hungarian - I couldn't

simply rely on English any more.

So in other words, learn a new language, make communication possible and

open more doors than anything else.

5. To make yourself more attractive to potential employers

Multilingualism is a huge asset in the job market. Globalisation is making the

world smaller and by doing so companies are always looking for people who

can communicate across different languages.

Think of it this way, if you have the same qualifications as somebody else,

but you happen to also speak Spanish you'd get a huge priority for the job.

Not only can you improve the standing of your current job, get promotions

and pay raises but you can also use languages to make you eligible for

completely new job titles, or go freelance as a translator, interpretor or

other language-based jobs.

With languages, the world is your oyster.

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6. To make new friends

When I was suffering from depression back in 2011 and before, I had a

massive problem making friends and socialising.

Becoming a language learner totally changed this, because there are so

many like-minded people on the planet who also share the passion of

language learning.

Furthermore, as previously discussed, speaking a foreign language is a great

icebreaker and gateway to new and amazing friendships.

I've made more close friends in the last 2 years than the previous 25

combined. That's saying something.

I hope these reasons gave you a bit of a boost to crack on, because now

we're getting into the meat of this book.

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HOW TO GET STARTED

Language learning is not a technically complicated process when done right.

It's not like understanding how quantum physics work.

Actually the moving parts of learning a language are quite simple and better

yet, all of us have learned at least one language instinctively from birth.

So how come so many people don't start learning a language because it

seems impossible?

Why is it so many people give up only a few weeks in?

The reason is our mindset. The mental background for doing anything, and

it’s the single element that actually makes learning a foreign language

difficult.

We are constantly at war with ourselves, from we get up in the morning till

we get to bed at night.

Whenever we encounter the tiniest bit of resistance our brains try and tell us

that we should probably stop doing what we’re doing, to avoid putting

ourselves in awkward or difficult situations.

It’s the same reason why maintaining an exercise routine is hard. Every time

you run out of breath or your muscles start aching, the mind starts sending

signals of doubt to our logical and reasoning brain.

You go from super excited about a new routine, to slowly, but surely

stopping it all-together. Then you end up on the couch watching TV or on

the laptop watching netflix.

It’s important to understand our self-discipline that is linked heavily to

motivation and mindset is like a rubber band. When we get up in the

morning the band is completely soft and every act requiring self-discipline

tenses the band a little bit.

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Eventually, if you keep giving your self-discipline tasks during the day it will

snap and regaining productivity is like climbing mount Everest.

Some people are able to bounce back, but most people need a reset, usually

sleep to repair the band.

Just like real muscles, if a ligament is torn enough times, eventually it will

not be able to grow back. This is when we give up on our new routine all

together.

There are good news, however. If we apply the right thinking and mindset to

our new routines, we can learn to make the band stronger and most

importantly realize when we are tensing it too hard and just take it easy.

Here’s the secret to learning a language: If you keep learning, no matter the

method, you will eventually learn the language. This means that our number

one priority is to put ourselves in a position where we keep going no matter

how tough or hard it feels.

Later I will get into ways on how we can start a language learning routine

without fail. There are some simple steps you can take.

For now, simply understand that the challenge of learning a language is all in

your head. Approach the learning with a “yes I CAN!” attitude, and stay

positive. This will pay huge dividends in the long run.

"Why" is the most powerful word in the world. It’s the word that explains

every action of every human being. The reason it’s important in language

learning is that without a strong why, it’s really hard to keep going.

Again going back to weight loss (you can see how language learning theory

can apply to multiple areas of life) if you don’t have any reason for losing

weight, be it a partner, family, health or anything then it’s going to be really

hard to put in the time on the treadmill.

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Language learning is similar, but has an important key difference. Progress

in language learning is a lot less obvious than losing weight or getting in

shape.

So in a way language learning can feel tougher, because progress is hard to

measure.

You can look at the amount of flashcards you learn or the length of

conversation you’re able to have, but more often than not the progress is a

bit subtle.

The other thing is that many people want to learn languages mainly because

“it could be nice” as a kind of vanity. I admit to also have been victim to this

way of thinking early on, and I felt the negative effects very early because I

was missing my strong why.

About 3 months into learning Russian I was doing great. Regular work, good

progress and I was regularly adding words to my completed flashcards.

Then disaster struck. I was feeling like I was no longer getting anywhere.

Words were getting harder, longer and more Russian and my self-discipline

was being severely tested by this, somewhat minor resistance.

It brought my learning to a standstill and if I hadn't started the blog I'm

fairly sure I would have quit right there and then. The blog and podcast with

its relatively humble audience became my why. The feeling that some

people, even if only a few, were really enjoying the content I was putting out

made it a lot harder for me to quit.

Luckily many people have really strong whys for learning a language

already. They might have a close personal connection like a grandmother or

partner speaking the language, or they’re living in the country and are

surrounded by whys.

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This doesn't apply to everyone though. I've met plenty of people who

wanted to learn languages, but they weren't really sure why. Sometimes the

why can also come after you started learning the language.

So how do you come up with a strong why, when it’s not apparent what it

might be?

You could of course start a blog like I did. People, myself included, love to

read about other language learners. Be warned though, it's a lot of work to

stay consistent and while it is definitely rewarding you need to make sure

you're ready to commit to it before you go into it.

The other way is to visualise yourself speaking your target language. REALLY

imagine yourself speaking the language. Think of the happy feelings and

emotions that come with suddenly speaking a completely new language.

If you know anyone who speaks the target language natively, you can also

visualise talking to them and the look on their face as you now communicate

in their language.

Ideally write your whys down on a piece of paper. The act of committing it to

physical paper will enhance the emotion attached to it. After you've done

that be sure to frequently revisit it when you’re feeling like giving up.

Many people who start learning a language don’t even consider why. Just by

considering this before you begin, you’re miles ahead of the curve.

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PICKING WHAT LANGUAGE TO LEARN

This next section is on how to pick the foreign language you want to learn. If

you've already got one, then feel free to move on to "On the importance

of confidence"

However, I'd advise you still read through this section as it could help you

make sure you picked the right language to learn. I also include a bit of back

story on why I picked Russian.

Picking what language to learn is an interesting problem in several ways.

When I first thought about it, it didn’t seem so complicated. Just pick

something that’s related to you, your hobbies or your life and you’ll be fine.

However, in reality this is not as simple as such. First of all, what if no

language emerges when considering those factors?

Are you doomed to never be able to learn a language? Of course not.

You will have to work harder on your motivation and on-going commitment,

but of course anything is possible.

In the summer of 2015 I attended a polyglot workshop arranged by

well-known polyglots Alex Rawlings and Richard Simcott, here they spent a

fair amount of time talking about what language to choose, and this really

cemented for me, just how difficult this is.

They even included a check list, where if you were unable to check off all

points they cautioned you might not be properly motivated to learn that

language.

I agree to a large extent you need good whys to learn a language, as I

presented in the previous chapter. I don’t agree that every single box must

be checked before we can successfully learn a language, but it goes without

saying that the more boxes the better.

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Let me tell you when I chose Russian.

When I first started my language learning back in 2014, I like many other

new aspiring polyglots had no idea what language to go for first.

I knew I wanted to learn a new language, I just didn't have any idea which

one. To my knowledge my entire family is from Denmark, so no hits there.

I thought about picking up French, because I had it in school, so I couldn't

imagine it being too hard.

However, as much as I tried to find anchors or interest points to learn

French I just couldn't find any. It was a feeling of “it-would-be-nice” and it

just wasn't powerful.

At the time I was playing a lot of the video game Dota 2, which had a

considerable fan base in China and Russia. It was a bit of a toss-up, but I

was more fascinated by Russian as the Russian players had a reputation for

being terrible at the game and also rude to the other players. They were also

often in my games, whereas I would very rarely see Chinese speakers.

So I went into Russian with a desire to actually understand how these people

behind the avatars where thinking and not least saying in the chat box.

Most of the time it was pretty rude things, but as I got deeper and deeper

into the language I started to understand that a lot of the frustration simply

came out of misunderstandings.

The Russian players didn't speak English, and if they uttered one word of

Russian, English speaking Europeans would get mad and shout at them.

So the Russians would retort and suddenly two people who have no idea

what the other person is saying are in a verbal war.

There were also plenty of tournaments with video streams in Russian. In

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other words, there were plenty of ways to combine my hobby for the game

with a new language.

But EVEN then I think my why, as we talked about in the last chapter,

wasn't as strong as it could be because I started on a bit of a whim.

If I had sat down and spent the time on the action steps, then I think I

would have done better with Russian.

If you are still unsure, here are some questions that can help you on your

way.

USEFUL QUESTIONS TO ASK YOURSELF

● Do you have family or friends who speak a foreign language?

● Do you have hobbies (like games) that have large foreign

language followings?

● Does your employer operate in more languages or territories,

where you could potentially be promoted or just more valuable to the

company?

● Do you enjoy any foreign culture such as literature, songs or

movies?

Consider learning the language to enjoy the works in their original language.

This is particularly popular for Japanese, where people get into Manga or

Anime first and then want to learn the language to watch or read in

Japanese.

Consider also picking a language with someone else. The partnership will

keep you both more motivated and be a constant reminder of your why.

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You can also consider learning Esperanto first, if you only speak one

language at the moment. Many studies have shown that learning Esperanto

before a foreign language can highly improve the rate of which the foreign

language is learnt.

In one study, French students in the UK were split into two groups. One

group would do 2 years of French and the second group would do 1 year of

Esperanto followed by a year of French. After the two years the second

group outperformed the first by a significant margin.

Why is this?

Esperanto is a very regular language, which means that it’s super easy to

learn and pick up. This boosts confidence and faith, which are crucial

elements to success.

Furthermore Esperanto also introduces a minimal amount of grammar, so

students will be quicker to understand grammar in foreign languages

because they can parallel to Esperanto.

Whether or not to learn Esperanto is your decision, but be informed that if

you do decide to learn it, you also gain access to a huge social network,

meet-ups and events, couch-surfing (Esperanto has had it’s own

couch-surfing since the 60’s!)

Many people love it and some people hate it, either way the effects of

language learning is not disputable. If you’re ready to learn Esperanto I've

collected a few resources that helped me, along with a few tips on:

http://actualfluency.com/learn-esperanto

Once you've picked your language it’s time to move onto learning it, but

before we get into the juicy details let’s talk a little bit more about the

mindset of a good language learner.

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THE IMPORTANCE OF CONFIDENCE

Language learning is a daunting task and there is a reason many people quit

before they get properly going, or worse yet - don’t even begin.

This is because they lack the belief or faith that learning a language

independently is actually possible.

People might see successful language learners learn languages and falsely

attribute their success to something esoteric like genes, talent, aptitude or

other silly excuses for why they are not out there learning a language.

The fact is, anyone can learn a new language.

I was in a deep hole, isolated and ambition-less and I still managed to learn

Russian and Esperanto by myself to reasonable beginner levels.

As I said earlier I'm by no means an expert, but comparing my level now to

a year ago is like comparing night and day.

I would not have made it here, if I gave up after a few weeks.

I want to take this last page of the first section to truly, genuinely, honestly

tell you;

You can learn a language. Trust me. Don’t let anyone or your brain tell you

differently.

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GOAL-SETTING

I promised in the last section that I would get into the practical lessons of

learning a language that I have learned from interviewing over 50 polyglots

in this section. I will very shortly, but first I need to once again help you

establish a healthy mindset for when you get started.

There’s a huge risk that you after having read or listened to a ton of

motivational and inspirational material want to jump straight into the game

of learning languages. This is totally fine, but the risk with this is you start

way too enthusiastic and then burn out. It’s frequently called the

honeymoon feeling. Analogous to coming back from a honeymoon to “real

life.”

What I suggest is, and this is the sentiment that’s been backed up by almost

anyone I've interviewed so far is that it’s way better to set conservative

goals in the beginning. If your goals are too easy and you outperform them

every day you feel great, but if your goals are too ambitious you will fail and

the act of failing will really hurt your progress.

Learning a language, particularly on your own, requires a long consistent

effort so be sure you start on the right foot.

Before we can begin learning a new foreign language we need to set some

goals that we can follow and refer to if we feel lost or unmotivated.

Setting goals is a science in itself. There have been countless books written

on the subject and people seem to be always interested in how to achieve

their goals.

Commonly books will tell you what a good goal is, but I’d like to present you

for the what a bad goal is. When I first started Russian I set very bad goals,

so I feel like an undisputed expert on this topic.

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Bad goals

This is what characterises bad goals:

● Unrealistic: My first Russian mission had the ultimate goal of me

speaking in 3 months. LOL. If your goal is too unrealistic you will burn

out and abandon language learning all together. Avoid.

● Shallow: If you’re not fully emotionally committed to the goal, it

won’t have any effect on your studies. This also happens when your

goal is too ambitious or easy - you simply disregard the goal as

impossible or easy peasy and don’t leverage the motivational effects of

the act of setting goals.

● Vague: Take my goal from the previous sentence: Learn Russian

in 3 months. Well, what does learn even mean?

I've had multiple discussions with other learners about what “learning”

means and we all have different theories and ideas.

Some even consider learning to be impossible because we never fully learn a

language. Imagine your native language, are there words you don’t know

what means? Of course.

This is why the goal has to specify exactly where you want to be when the

goal is completed. In the next paragraph I’ll show some examples of some

great goals you can use in your language learning.

● Untimely: “I want to learn German” When do you want to do

this? There’s a great law called Parkinson's Law:

"work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion"

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So it goes without saying, without a deadline you never have any pressure

or reason to actually work towards your goals.

● Unmeasurable: How are you supposed to measure how you are

progressing towards your goal if you have not set goals that allow

measuring? For instance if your goal is to be fluent in German, how do

you actually measure fluency?

A word on the phrasing of goals

Studies have shown that the brain is very susceptible to persuasive thinking.

This means that for greater effect, we should avoid using hypothetical

language like:

● I’d like

● I would

● I could

The goals will be stronger if you put them as fact.

● I WILL

● I AM

● I SPEAK

Fake it until you make it. If you keep telling your brain you speak German,

eventually it will believe you and you will gain a ton of confidence, that can

carry you until your saying actually becomes the truth.

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To help you set good goals in the beginning you can use the S.M.A.R.T

criteria. I won’t go into much detail about these but they are:

● Specific

● Measurable

● Attainable

● Realistic

● Timely

Here’s for example my last goal for French: I will have a 15 minute natural

conversation with a native speaker after 3 months. By the time of the

conversation I have finished 100 out of 100 Assimil lessons, All the Michel

Thomas tapes and The French tree on Duolingo and I would have learned

1000 new words as well as completed 20 tutoring lessons.

It might seem a bit verbose, but all the components are specific,

measurable, realistic, attainable and timed by the 3 months goal. There can

be no question if progress has been made towards this goal.

What this allows is to also make logical sub-goals as you get started. Now I

have my 3 month goals it would make sense to break that down into

monthly and then weekly goals for all elements of the goal.

Weekly goals

90 new words 9 Assimil Lessons 2 Tutoring lessons 15 Duolingo Lessons 7

Michel Thomas lessons

This might seem like a lot, so be sure to make goals that suits you

personally. Overly conservative is usually better than overly ambitious in the

long run.

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LANGUAGE LEARNING METHODS

Now that you've set great goals, let's get to work finding the methods you

will use for learning that next language.

I often get asked, what are the best methods to learn foreign languages?

The answer is shockingly simple. The method which you enjoy the most is

likely the one that will give you the best long-term results.

Why?

Because language learning, as we previously established, is a marathon -

not a sprint. To become fluent requires consistent efforts of a long period of

time and you just can't do that unless you actually find something you enjoy

doing.

People are also very different. My friend Robin McPherson, who I interviewed

on the podcast (episodes 9-10) really enjoys reading early on, attacking the

foreign language book with a dictionary to build his skills.

I personally find that extremely boring. It's all about your individual

preferences.

I can give you some ideas though, just to get you started.

There are 3 general categories of learning methods, they are audio-based,

text-based or video-based. Within these we have a lot of subcategories, but

these 3 provide a good starting point.

In the next section I've included a list of my favourite methods. These

involve a variety of systems, courses, books, websites and much more.

Explore this list to try and find your favourite.

One essential component, that possibly can't be avoided is to do some kind

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of vocabulary training. I'll also list my favourite ways to do that, but bear in

mind you don't have to use digital flashcards. Many people rely on

handwritten wordlist-type systems that also show great results.

Ultimately it comes down to you as the learner.

Incidentally that's also where this starting-guide leaves you. I hope you've

found it helpful for your new language learning studies.

Thank you + a quick favour

Before I introduce my list of favourite resources, I'd just like to thank you for

picking up this guide. I've been working on it for a while and seeing it in it's

full form is really amazing.

Before you go and learn your next foreign language, which I have no doubt

you will, faster than you ever imagined, I'd just like to ask you one quick

favour.

Would you share this free guide with your friends and family who are

interested in learning languages? It would really mean a lot to me.

You can find all the sharing options on this page:

http://actualfluency.com/beginning

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RESOURCES

I'm going to list only resources that I have personally worked with. There's

too much low quality crap going around, so it's essential that the

recommendations you see in this list are genuine. If I'm not a fan of

something, you won't see it here.

By extension I'm naturally limited in the languages I can recommend

resources to. Luckily some resources are available in a ton of languages so

even if you're not learning Russian, Esperanto or Hungarian (As I was by the

time of writing this) then there are still good things for you in this list.

The list is split into 5 main categories. They are labelled conveniently.

I've added a few META-resources as well. Any of these would be a great

continuation of this beginning guide to help you become a better learner in

general.

Like Abraham Lincoln said: "Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will

spend the first four sharpening the axe"

In other words, learning to be a better learner improves your learning

tremendously upfront.

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META

Fluent in 3 Months Premium: Benny Lewis runs the world's most visited

language learning blog, is a best-selling author and speaker of 10+

languages. In this premium area of his website, he shares a large selection

of resources to help you, including two of his previous courses, video

tutorials, sentence packages and much more. Updated for 2015!

IWillTeachYouALanguage Foundations Course: Olly Richards has taught

himself 7+ languages and runs the popular blog: I Will Teach You A

language where he inspires and teaches people how to learn a language.

This course is a perfect next step after this book.

Add 1 Challenge: The Add1Challenge is a community of language learners

that go together to form unbeatable motivation and accountability so you

can learn to have a 15 minute conversation in just 90 days.

TUTORING

Italki: The biggest and best tutoring directory on the planet. Learn or Teach

here, end of story.

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AUDIO-BASED

LanguagePod101: Available in 31 languages the format follows a native

speaker and a learner who teaches you everything from the very basics to

advanced levels of the language. Also tons of extra content. You can

download their entire library for $1 by following this guide.

Glossika: You know spaced repetition for text, Glossika is spaced repetition

for Audio. You learn natural sentences from a native speaker and thus learn

vocabulary, pronunciation and grammar.

Pimsleur: Although I have struggled at times with Pimsleur and it comes at a

relatively high price tag, the fact that you can borrow it for free in many

libraries makes this a valuable resources in many languages. Focuses a lot of

pronunciation and conversation.

Michel Thomas: By far the best introductory audio course. Michel teaches a

style where you make tremendous progress in very little time. Only

downside is that it caps out at a relatively low level and is not available in

too many languages.

Forvo: Look up the pronunciation of words. Tons and tons of languages.

Rhinospike: Request a text to be spoken by a native speaker.

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BOOKS

Colloquial Series: I'm not a huge text-book person, but I do enjoy the

colloquial series and the fact they offer all their audios online for free make it

a great choice.

Penguin Russian Course: I found this book GREAT for Russian, it contains

upwards of 2000 words of vocabulary and introduces most of the grammar

concepts in a good pace.

TEXT

Readlang: Input any foreign language text and get in-line translation. Also

available as a Chrome Plugin so you can hover over words on ANY website.

Duolingo: Although heavily criticised I think DuoLingo is fun and a great way

to learn languages on the go using their app. Gamification is a great

motivator.

Lang-8: Send in foreign language text to be corrected by native speakers.

By helping others you get priority for your own texts.

VOCABULARY

Memrise: The largest collection of online flashcard courses. Also my

favourite due to it's ease of use and excellent mobile apps. You can also

make your own.

Anki: The old-school rival of Memrise. A bit more rudimentary, but gets the

job done.

LearnWithOliver: Pre-made advanced flashcards with lots of functionality and

games to teach you the words better.

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Thanks for reading my guide. I always maintain an updated list of

recommended resources on the website here:

http://actualfluency.com/resources

I'm always available for questions, comments or feedback. Simply email me

on http://actualfluency.com/contact

To your success,

-Kris Broholm

Actual Fluency.com