To Improve Comprehension DON'T Try to Understand

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CC subtitles available in English.
As you are progressing in your target language there will be lots of times when you are not going to understand. To reach your goals you need to accept this and keep moving forward.
0:00 Listening and reading comprehension are the most important goals in language learning.
1:11 My biggest tip when it comes to improving your comprehension.
2:16 Learning a new language is like mowing a lawn.
4:02 Don't force yourself to try to understand.
___
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Пікірлер: 1 400

  • @Thelinguist
    @Thelinguist Жыл бұрын

    What are some ways you are currently working on your comprehension in your target language? The app I use to learn languages -> bit.ly/3xB8Cms My 10 FREE secrets to language learning -> www.thelinguist.com

  • @Liliquan

    @Liliquan

    Жыл бұрын

    I use Deutsch lernen mit Video by DW which are on a variety of topics and are all under 5 minutes which is manageable. For longer stuff, currently I’m reading Terry Pratchet.

  • @Aliraza10107

    @Aliraza10107

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Liliquan is this an app or you use the website version ?

  • @Liliquan

    @Liliquan

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Aliraza10107 App.

  • @High_Priest_Jonko

    @High_Priest_Jonko

    Жыл бұрын

    Dear Steve, do you believe all input has to be comprehensible? If so then what about in the case of videos/movies with subtitles in your target language that's above your level? Having to pause every few seconds to look up a word can disrupt the enjoyment and be slower and it'll probably show up in your vocabulary deck later on anyway right? I guess there should be a balance of intensive and extensive reading/listening.

  • @walkawayheatherene341

    @walkawayheatherene341

    Жыл бұрын

    I swear by face-to-face conversations with native speakers who want to practice my native language. I have several weekly convos with the same people on Skype. When conversing with the same people every week the conversation evolves rather than repeating the same first convo every time. This helps us both in speaking, comprehension and grammar. We both speak in one language and then switch to the other.

  • @ralfj.1740
    @ralfj.1740 Жыл бұрын

    I made this mistake.. read a book, wanted to understand every single word.. took me ages to finish a book in a foreign language ;)

  • @samuelemmanuel9384

    @samuelemmanuel9384

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like me ,extensive reading is more practical

  • @samuelemmanuel9384

    @samuelemmanuel9384

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like me ,extensive reading is more practical

  • @danilopablo9848

    @danilopablo9848

    Жыл бұрын

    I think no one should try reading a book in a foreign language before learning around 1000 words or so considering it's not a children's book or a beginners reader sort of book And even at 1.000 words, one should choose a simple book to start

  • @paulinebelford2645

    @paulinebelford2645

    Жыл бұрын

    I did that too. Had to read Flyga Drake (The Kite Runner) for Svenska som andraspråk. Wrote down and found the translations for every word I didn't understand. The list was 300 words long after a few chapters! So I bought the English language version too, but only compared them if there was a whole paragraph or section that I couldn't comprehend. After that experience I have mostly read books that I have previously read in English (though not recently) so that I know the main plot points. Then I only look up a word if not understanding it prevents me from understanding something vital in that chapter. It still takes me much longer to read things than in English, but it's more enjoyable.

  • @nevergiveup4373

    @nevergiveup4373

    Жыл бұрын

    Me too

  • @LOL-cringe
    @LOL-cringe7 ай бұрын

    Came for comprehension advice, stayed for the lawn-mowing advice.

  • @LOL-cringe
    @LOL-cringe7 ай бұрын

    The biggest breakthrough I had with listening was when I trained myself to not stop listening at the first word or sentence I didn’t understand. That’s common when you start: you listen and listen and then suddenly there’s something you don’t know, so you stop and try to work it out. This means you miss what comes next and you lose the thread, including info that may have actually helped you understand that confusing part. Also, and this is the key part to train yourself, I realized that if I didn’t understand something it’s because I hadn’t learned it. It didn’t matter how long or hard I thought about it, I was never going to work it out because it simply wasn’t in my head anywhere. I didn’t have that language at all yet, so I wasn’t ever going to find it. Once I realized this obvious point, I became comfortable ignoring what I didn’t comprehend. I trained myself to spend no more than a second processing a word and if it didn’t come to me in that time, drop it, move on and keep up with the speaker.

  • @tomtian-vi3ed

    @tomtian-vi3ed

    6 ай бұрын

    your seggestion is good

  • @DrOrson

    @DrOrson

    5 ай бұрын

    I listened to lots of 3 - 5 minute videos by "Lucrezia" while learning Italian. I wrote every word in the captions in Italian, also watched the translation. This really helped. I wasn't totally ignorant of Italian at the time but certainly not fluent. I kept this up for about a year, reading, writing, creating conversations with myself. Having studied French helped. The main this is keeping at it

  • @HairyDude-nq4pk

    @HairyDude-nq4pk

    5 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the suggestion

  • @lunarna

    @lunarna

    3 ай бұрын

    Report this bot

  • @zaqimel7096

    @zaqimel7096

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@DrOrsonim learning italian rn lol

  • @AyanfeoluwaAnjoorin
    @AyanfeoluwaAnjoorinАй бұрын

    I’m a 9th grader and I watched this on the bus to school to take my Language Arts Final Exam. I am done with the exam now and I got 100 for the first time everrr,🎉🎉

  • @GSPV33

    @GSPV33

    Ай бұрын

    Well done!!

  • @senjujan6204

    @senjujan6204

    Ай бұрын

    Congratulations!!

  • @iamapokerface8992

    @iamapokerface8992

    Ай бұрын

    yeahh sure

  • @delanis1780

    @delanis1780

    Ай бұрын

    Diss tha' haters, fantastic job young lady 👏 🥳🥳🥳 keep it up.

  • @unger53194

    @unger53194

    29 күн бұрын

    Ok lol

  • @mansmo9513
    @mansmo9513 Жыл бұрын

    I like to analogize comprehension to a puzzle game. if you start with the easy pieces, the difficult ones will eventually solve themselves.

  • @vNill

    @vNill

    Жыл бұрын

    that is exactly how the grammar is aquired, it falls in place naturally

  • @chuvat.255

    @chuvat.255

    Жыл бұрын

    I really appreciate that analogy. I guess the key word that I miss/forget is EVENTUALLY. I need to be patient. Especially when I question if any progress is being made... Like with the puzzle, I just can't see it yet, but EVENTUALLY I will. 🤯

  • @bleakmidwinter5099

    @bleakmidwinter5099

    Жыл бұрын

    that's one great analogy

  • @chuckwavra8832
    @chuckwavra8832 Жыл бұрын

    I'm learning Spanish and I often catch myself "trying a little to hard" versus just letting my brain absorb what it can and then come back later for a "second pass" to absorb more. The lawn mowing analogy was perfect - thank you!

  • @peteymax

    @peteymax

    Жыл бұрын

    Yo también, no más

  • @danielreis37

    @danielreis37

    Жыл бұрын

    I watched Rick and Morty 5 times and always get a bit more.

  • @plata-oficial6974

    @plata-oficial6974

    Жыл бұрын

    Yo hablo español!!

  • @falco123123

    @falco123123

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey Chuck, would you like to do a language exchange? I'm a Spaniard learning English and French. If you like the idea let me know, we could talk via whatsapp, telegram or whatever app you prefer.

  • @sebastianalatorregonzalez7462

    @sebastianalatorregonzalez7462

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm learning English, we must be practice !

  • @williamreyes468
    @williamreyes468 Жыл бұрын

    I have found that Steve's advice applies to learning Calculus, and Physics where memorization is not the key skill but practice is. I dare say Stever's approach is useful for any subject.

  • @tannisjett1308

    @tannisjett1308

    7 ай бұрын

    That's so interesting. I was thinking about seeing if it applies to other subjects as well

  • @yellowenn

    @yellowenn

    6 ай бұрын

    That's really interesting. A new way to comprehend such difficult subjects. Thank you for sharing man.

  • @kelvinadimas8851

    @kelvinadimas8851

    3 ай бұрын

    coming from a physics student per se.Yeah all this time i couldn't figure it out what's the culprit that causes severe effect in my learning and development , and this is just what i need

  • @Madcowe

    @Madcowe

    2 ай бұрын

    also business ;)

  • @truthprevails8836

    @truthprevails8836

    2 ай бұрын

    I am studying for civil services and this is how I approach the preparation. I have to read a lot from economics to geography to history to polity and this advice holds true for all those subjects.

  • @PolyglotSecrets
    @PolyglotSecrets Жыл бұрын

    I agree 100%. Creating resistance and forcing yourself is a progress killer. Trying to understand at all costs is like trying to fall asleep - the more you try, the harder it gets.

  • @tsampson6660

    @tsampson6660

    Жыл бұрын

    Its not. People are like 'yeah! she's right! the more you try to sleep the harder it is!' Forgetting the first sentence. Take it to the extreme, do you think if you just sit there for years listening and not engaging that you'll learn quickly/at all? Then imagine you engage with everything you hear, forever. Neither extreme is optimal but to say that just zoning out and letting it all seep in is a load of bull.

  • @PolyglotSecrets

    @PolyglotSecrets

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@tsampson6660 I didn't say anything about not engaging. Please, don't put words in my mouth and distort my comment like that. Both Steve and I have talked about the importance of noticing and paying attention to patterns. But that can be done without creating resistance. It's all about noticing without stress, resistance etc.

  • @GaugeMcArora

    @GaugeMcArora

    Жыл бұрын

    Physics books have to read this way, my friend. It's hard, doesn't mean it's not right.

  • @christopheralbert1321

    @christopheralbert1321

    Жыл бұрын

    AA

  • @Favalify

    @Favalify

    Жыл бұрын

    I understand your point regarding understanding. As for the sleeping thing, many people fall asleep almost immediately after seconds or minutes of trying, myself included, so it's not a good example.

  • @blacksunangel636
    @blacksunangel636 Жыл бұрын

    Real talk! Comprehension doesn't happen overnight no matter how hard you try... it's a process, an everyday thing... thanks man

  • @josepmariaalcoverropons9186

    @josepmariaalcoverropons9186

    Жыл бұрын

    My teacher is 60 years old and he kept telling me, "I needed 60 years to speak at my level."

  • @tttyuhbbb9823

    @tttyuhbbb9823

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josepmariaalcoverropons9186 He's absolutely right!

  • @steveneardley7541
    @steveneardley7541 Жыл бұрын

    I learned Italian when my parents moved to Italy for a year, and put me into an Italian public school. I was in the 4th grade. It was all so weird and different that I didn't think of it as learning a language. I understood most of what people were saying within three months, without any real effort. I wasn't really paying any attention to the learning process. I was just sitting there soaking it all in. No one at school knew any English, not even the teacher.

  • @soilmanted

    @soilmanted

    Жыл бұрын

    @ Steven Eardley. Yup! To communicate with specific people I didn't try to "learn their language." Instead I tried to figure out how to communicate with them -using whatever means I could. If that turned out to be "learning a new language" then it turned out to be learning a new language. It was easier for me if I thought of it just as learning some new words. That, however, doesn't seem to be much use if I a planning to go somewhere where people don't speak much English and they typically speak some other language and if I want to learn how to communicate with them - before I go there - so I don't have to learn while I am there. .

  • @sansumida

    @sansumida

    8 ай бұрын

    Well I had the baptism of fire when I was 5 years old and went to school. I was brought up by my Hungarian mother and only spoke that language at home. At school in England I was forced to learn quickly when I did not know the word to go to the toilet! Consequently I wet my pants and was given a heavy serge replacement 😊 Thereafter I quickly learned key phrases useful for a 5 year old boy😏

  • @sharperguy
    @sharperguy Жыл бұрын

    This is why music works so well for me. You can listen to a song in another language and be fine not knowing a single word. But over time you start to recognize words you learn from other mediums, and then how they string together etc.

  • @danieltorres3662
    @danieltorres3662 Жыл бұрын

    I totally agree. Sometimes I would listen to an audio or video and try to understand as many words as possible and in the end I would realize that I hadn't paid much attention to the main topic because of that. One day, while walking, I was listening to a podcast without forcing myself to understand the specific words, but paying attention and imagining what the person was saying. In the end I understood much of the podcast.

  • @kessiepatt8279

    @kessiepatt8279

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes sir, so true, that is the mistake that language learners make.

  • @dgphi

    @dgphi

    Жыл бұрын

    An interesting exercise is to listen to a podcast in your own native language and focus on understanding all the words. When I try that, I find it's hard to follow the message because my attention is in the wrong place. And that's in my native language!

  • @seriouspipes

    @seriouspipes

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes! I've found just before sleep, listening to something and not trying to translate, I suddenly see pictures of everything being said, even words that I don't really know.

  • @espanol7133

    @espanol7133

    Жыл бұрын

    yea, that is awesome. It works exactly like that and also It is much enjoyable the process of learning a new language

  • @cassiasantos2809

    @cassiasantos2809

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your experience. I'll try to listen podcast whitout to try understand every single Word. Thanks so much.

  • @TheESMAT07
    @TheESMAT07 Жыл бұрын

    A year ago, I was stuck in English reading until I stopped trying understand every single word, only then I starts learning rapidly and I shocked by my comprehension level! I found that novels is within my reach so I quit Oxford stories and forced myself to - finally - read what I want, which is Sherlock Holmes's adventures, I finished them all few days ago. Unforgettable journey!

  • @saeedyahya9020

    @saeedyahya9020

    Жыл бұрын

    ليش تركت قصص اكسفورد ؟

  • @TheESMAT07

    @TheESMAT07

    Жыл бұрын

    @@saeedyahya9020 قصص اكسفورد مبسطة لمن يتعلم اللغة الإنجليزية، تركتها لأنني تجاوزت هذه المرحلة وصرت قادر على قراءة القصص العادية مثلي مثل من لغته الأم هي الإنجليزية.

  • @saeedyahya9020

    @saeedyahya9020

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheESMAT07 نصائحك عن مهارة الاستماع اريد اطور مستواي من مبتدئ الى متوسط افهم

  • @lanlin8267

    @lanlin8267

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome 👌 try the audiobooks on youtube ;)

  • @noushadbekur

    @noushadbekur

    Жыл бұрын

    Only reading??

  • @joaquin8693
    @joaquin8693 Жыл бұрын

    fruitful way to avoid early frustration

  • @saeyyy
    @saeyyy Жыл бұрын

    I'm finding this is particularly true as I'm learning Korean. With French and Spanish, sentence structure is quite similar to English, but with Korean I have to constantly remind myself to just let the whole sentence wash over me before I check if I understand it. Because actually, context is a big piece of comprehension even for our native languages! There are homonyms and different meanings within English even that get cleared up if you just keep listening for the whole sentence or paragraph or more of the conversation-language is about more than grammar and vocabulary, so while we do have to learn these things, this video is a good reminder that PATIENT persistence is key.

  • @ravireddyism

    @ravireddyism

    Жыл бұрын

    What is your purpose in life ? Learning Spanish , French , Korean , Hindhi etc has any impact on your career!!

  • @Learninglotsoflanguages
    @Learninglotsoflanguages Жыл бұрын

    Nice analogy. I’ve had to move away from my old perfectionist mindset and realize that language is learning something, forgetting it, learning again, forgetting again, over and over but with each relearning it gets stronger until it’s set in our brain.

  • @matiasrodriguez6981
    @matiasrodriguez6981 Жыл бұрын

    I had this thought about what he said: when learning a new language try to listen the same way you listen to music. I say this as a non native english speaker.

  • @KhryztyamCR
    @KhryztyamCR Жыл бұрын

    I'm a native Spanish speaker, and I really like to hear you speak, Steve. I utilize your videos as a listening practice, and I must tell you that I understand 99% of everything you say. I feel happy because I can confirm that I'm now at an advanced listening level.

  • @ChristoChristo03

    @ChristoChristo03

    3 ай бұрын

    The problems start when you try to speak your vocabulary adquired out loud :( , it becomes all like if you never learned anything as if you had just a few begginer words . That happens to me , i understane too much but if i try to speak what i wrote here it becomes a hell for me . What do you say about my problem ? , does that happen to you too?

  • @pablojure3550

    @pablojure3550

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@ChristoChristo03 Yes brother, it is normal, but as Steve has said in several videos, you must first listen a lot, read and finally read aloud and gradually imitate the sentences in English, you must be patient, and enjoy the trip brother

  • @ChristoChristo03

    @ChristoChristo03

    2 ай бұрын

    @@pablojure3550 thank you very much my friend for your help :D, God bless you .

  • @guitartailor
    @guitartailor Жыл бұрын

    I think this point applies to learning mathematics, too. I'm studying a very mathematical university course and too many times I have tried to really understand each line of a textbook and made slow progress. Much faster to keep pushing on and not getting hung up on what you don't understand right away. Very interesting.

  • @grandpraline

    @grandpraline

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey Colin! Thanks for sharing. This was an answer I was looking for, cause I'm learning Python, etc now and sometimes struggle to get a full grasp of things. But does this approach really help? What's your experience? Eveuntually you manage to understand things deeper?

  • @guitartailor

    @guitartailor

    Жыл бұрын

    @@grandpraline hi! Yes, I think with learning Python you have to try and push past the parts you don't understand as well and try and get code working. You need to immerse yourself in the language just like maths I think. It will take time but it will make more and more sense with time. Hope that helps :)

  • @DavidLoveMore

    @DavidLoveMore

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@grandpraline Yes, just keep coding and don't worry too much about what others tell you is the right way. Either you will appreciate why they said that later by making the mistake or after you do try their way you understand why they are wrong. Code and keeping coding. Learning is like a tree growing. You don't see it grow. But come back next year and you will see a difference.

  • @bleakmidwinter9481
    @bleakmidwinter9481 Жыл бұрын

    This 'don't try too hard' is actually true. Sometimes I'm beating my head against the wall trying to 'understand' a certain piece in one of my languages and end up giving it up. But then I come across that again eventually and it clicks! That's because acquisition happens unconsciously. You do your part and take your time. The brain assimilates things during sleep.

  • @stephencindrich6787

    @stephencindrich6787

    Жыл бұрын

    Sleep is critical.

  • @yGKeKe
    @yGKeKe Жыл бұрын

    What this video boils down to is: you need to switch what you're studying repeatedly to force your brain to store things in long term memory. If you just keep studying the same thing until you "Master it" it'll be stuck in short term memory and you'll almost never move on.

  • @abm9056
    @abm9056 Жыл бұрын

    Very well said! As a non-native English speaker, when my English skills were at their lowest I used to watch English youtube videos and barely understand 5% of what was being said, and I just kept watching regardless, and now that you made me think of that, I think that is what helped me get better the most. My skill is still far from perfect however, as you might've noticed. 😅

  • @meansonofagun3425

    @meansonofagun3425

    8 ай бұрын

    Your writing skills are excellent my friend!

  • @Tion_Dudley_Gaming

    @Tion_Dudley_Gaming

    8 ай бұрын

    I think this is great😂

  • @spaulass
    @spaulass Жыл бұрын

    Very nice analogy. I'm an English teacher and I always say something similar to my students. The key to learning is repeatetion. Every time you repeat you understand a bit more. Also sometimes students want to understand every single word and then forget to listen what is being said.

  • @emmanuelimumolen8660

    @emmanuelimumolen8660

    Жыл бұрын

    I somehow hate repetition, it's like programming something you might not use even in hundred years time.

  • @cesarchiarelli8039
    @cesarchiarelli8039 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Steve I’m from Brazil and hereby to thank you for all your work and effort dedicated in teach and advise us for free on yt. I’ve been learning English for about 2 and half years and, thanks to you, I’ve been improving so much that I can’t measure or describe this improvement. I’m really proud for my little achievement’s and now I can read read and understand any book or even series and podcast effortlessly. I wrote all this above from the top off my head and sorry if I got some mistakes. Thank you again!

  • @lukasbalchunas1272

    @lukasbalchunas1272

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm a gay Lithuanian man and I want to visit Brazil. I want to go to the beaches in Rio De Janeiro, eat açaí, and have fun with gay handsome Brazilian men.

  • @cesarchiarelli8039

    @cesarchiarelli8039

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lukasbalchunas1272 lol I’m not from rio and am not gay as well. But surely you’ll be welcome in our country. Rio is a very lively and bustling city.

  • @theocurtis02

    @theocurtis02

    Жыл бұрын

    Your English is great! Congratulations on your progress!

  • @cesarchiarelli8039

    @cesarchiarelli8039

    Жыл бұрын

    @@theocurtis02 thank you so much, bro. I appreciate your feedback. Even though I don’t feel like that fluent and sometimes I struggle with the language, especially when it comes to speaking, i feel like getting better and better. Take care!

  • @davidtorres718

    @davidtorres718

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cesarchiarelli8039 let matters take their course! I'm a native Spanish speaker and I think I've reached an English proficiency level in which I feel comfortable interacting with other people and in general just using the language as any other person would. Just keep immersing yourself in the language, talk to other people (in English ofc), and without you noticing, time will take care of things and you'll just keep getting better! I wish you success in your journey, learning another language is not an easy task. Be proud of the progress you've made so far, your English is great!

  • @welovfree
    @welovfree Жыл бұрын

    Frequency is the best ally when it comes to language learning, assuming people expose themselves to their target language a lot. While exposing yourself to the language you are trying to learn, some words will repeat themselves a lot and will be learned easily and automatically. As for other words they will not repeat with the same number or frequency, some of them will stick and others will be forgotten.

  • @joyfulburger2395

    @joyfulburger2395

    Жыл бұрын

    if your seeing new words, should you try and translate them or just expect to understand their meaning after repetition in different contexts?

  • @welovfree

    @welovfree

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@joyfulburger2395 If you are advanced enough in your learning journey you can use your target language's dictionaries to define words you encounter, otherwise if the word refers to an abstract concept you can translate it to your native language. If it's referring to a concrete concept it is preferable to just google it and find the meaning through an image.

  • @ChekMaFresh
    @ChekMaFresh Жыл бұрын

    The lawn mower analogy is really helpful. I’ve been studying languages for the last 10+ years, and I found that several passes over the same material really helps to reinforce my studies.

  • @tommyhuffman7499
    @tommyhuffman7499 Жыл бұрын

    That lawnmower analogy was fire, and it's exactly what I do. Know your limits. Push hard, but don't let yourself get bogged down by pushing too hard the first pass.

  • @FrostySharkSpain
    @FrostySharkSpain Жыл бұрын

    As a kid I learned way more english through videogames and TV shows than in the classroom at school. I used to watch Tarzan on Disney Channel with either English or Spanish (my nativa language) subtitles, and quite often those episodes would be repeated. I think that is exactly the phenomenon you're decribing. I need to get on to doing the same with Russian, my current target language.

  • @fibonaccisrazor
    @fibonaccisrazor Жыл бұрын

    Lawn mowing is a brilliant and lucid analogy. The second run is the fun one.

  • @Nikelaos_Khristianos
    @Nikelaos_Khristianos Жыл бұрын

    I'm doing Classics at university at the moment. I had a surgery earlier this semester that meant I had to miss a tonne of content in both Greek and Latin, it was crazy. It's meant alot of self-teaching and this week I was feeling really down about my skills and progress. I was also really feeling the pressure that comes with learning these languages quickly. This video really calmed me down and settled my mind. Thank you!

  • @smzee27
    @smzee27 Жыл бұрын

    Very true. I went through the military's language school many years ago, and the pace and length of that course washed out a lot of people. One of the biggest reasons was that students would get frustrated and give up because they felt they weren't understanding everything. I think those of us who made it through just accepted that we wouldn't get everything and just needed to hang on. Read/listen to something, grasp as many essential elements of information as possible given time constraints, and just move on. Full comprehension, especially at first pass, can take years to develop.

  • @cindys2995
    @cindys2995 Жыл бұрын

    Once I accepted my imperfections, I flourished!

  • @garyarthurs
    @garyarthurs Жыл бұрын

    After trying myself to “force the mower” I can relate to this … and I understood this concept some the first time I thought about, but now I understand it a little more after watching this video ;)

  • @dieseldan5189
    @dieseldan5189 Жыл бұрын

    I have been learning Polish the last 12 years. I have been listening and reading Polish without trying to understand everything. And it works, after 12 years I still don’t comprehend anything when reading or listening.

  • @yoshineitor
    @yoshineitor Жыл бұрын

    I am currently learning my third language and you managed to say what I experienced learning english, not trying to be perfect is the way in almost any stage of learning a new language, thanks for reminding me that.

  • @ramon_803
    @ramon_803 Жыл бұрын

    interesting perspective. To me, learning a language feels like growing something in my head, which indeed requires mainly patience, a kind relaxation, repetition, and novelty. I would never have thought of a mowing analogy.

  • @ArcRCG
    @ArcRCGАй бұрын

    I love that this not only applies to learning languages but also for material in your own language irrespective of the topic. Great advice

  • @user-dc1ud6px3s
    @user-dc1ud6px3s Жыл бұрын

    What you said was refreshing and makes sense! I read in English without consulting a dictionary, mostly because it prevented me from enjoying a book. I find myself slowly getting a vague picture of the English language. I didn't "learn" English within a period of time but improved it over years.

  • @kd1389
    @kd1389 Жыл бұрын

    I started doing this with books I’ve read in English, would look up a few words I didn’t know but didn’t worry about searching every word/grammar point I was confused on. Since it’s something I’ve already read, it’s not like I’m missing any big ideas! This has helped immensely by using books with audiobooks at the same time.

  • @kerim.peardon5551
    @kerim.peardon5551 Жыл бұрын

    My Polish tutor has been off for a while due to having a baby and I've been doing nothing but reading Harry Potter using LingQ. Occasionally I will practice having a conversation with myself and I'm amazed at how much more I can say. I think my tutor is going to be surprised at how much my speaking has improved doing nothing but reading. I hit level B1/Basic Intermediate back in March. Right around the time I hit it, I found it was easier to read and I was starting to get to the point that I could read for fun/because I wanted to enjoy the story, instead of reading because I needed to do my daily slog of language practice. Now I often read way more than my goal and I can make up to 20 known words per session (as opposed to the handful I used to do). I'm on the 3rd Harry Potter book, and I think that helps because authors have a style of writing and words and phrases that they will repeat. And, of course, there's HP-specific words that get repeated all the time, like wizard, wand, cloak, cauldron, etc. So there's a lot of repetition that I wouldn't necessarily get if I bounced between unrelated books.

  • @Karanagi
    @Karanagi Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this piece of advice, Steve. Keeping a certain momentum and avoiding this idea of a "fail state" in which you reprimand yourself for not understanding everything on the first go was not just more pleasant, it got me better results too. In my case it has worked well with language learning, but also other things, like math and programming.

  • @Jahova3131
    @Jahova3131 Жыл бұрын

    Just stumbled across this video and channel. I don't speak multiple languages, but I find this fascinating because it's a direct analog to something I do work with - teaching mathematics. Students who try to "understand" everything upon the first lesson before any practice tend to do worse, or at least take longer to fully grasp the material. Students who push forward through the practice and repetition while accepting their initial lack of understanding will usually develop that understanding much quicker. I think it speaks toward the way the human brain works in general across different disciplines. Thanks for the great material!

  • @KillasStayFly

    @KillasStayFly

    Жыл бұрын

    Similar experience with coding!

  • @zwein1817

    @zwein1817

    7 ай бұрын

    This is generally good advice for nearly all non-linear subjects. Or better put, any subjects that relies on ability rather than simply knowing. Anything you can "work a muscle" for.

  • @thatchbro1234
    @thatchbro1234 Жыл бұрын

    thank you for motivation boost ! My experience after two years: The more I want to understand everything the weaker the motivation gets and I stop for a long period of time. The more I dont care about understanding everything then I keep on moving and accept my level of where I am right now.

  • @sojournerkarunatruth4406
    @sojournerkarunatruth4406 Жыл бұрын

    Lol that was a fine mowing the grass analogy, especially for some one who’s never mowed a lawn in their life ☝️🌞🫠

  • @henrytan5707
    @henrytan5707 Жыл бұрын

    I took understanding approach learning English when I was young, the result was it took me a little more than a month to master English grammar. In some cases it just works.

  • @jayminshah8641
    @jayminshah8641 Жыл бұрын

    This is so true even in other types of learning and life in general as well. Perfection is the enemy of progress...

  • @slowlearner4341
    @slowlearner4341 Жыл бұрын

    It was so pleasant and positive to meet you again, Sir. As I just read few notes below, many people are completely agree with your viewpoint. There are dozens of appreciation notes there! Stay healthy and keep encourage people loving foreign languages. Thank you.

  • @critogni
    @critogni Жыл бұрын

    I think you're exactly right! Your analogy to cutting the lawn is brilliant! Thank you! It will help me in my Italian language learning journey for certain!

  • @kmake8321
    @kmake832110 ай бұрын

    This advice really hit the nail on the head for me personally - I feel like someone moved a huge rock off my shoulders… thank you.

  • @mariuslakomczyk3662
    @mariuslakomczyk366210 ай бұрын

    Thank you Steve! This is something I learned through the course of learning languages as well and its good to hear that what i felt is important for progression and having fun is to simply keep going. being brave at being bad and keeping it going. Thanks for your input!!

  • @bungouyevsky
    @bungouyevsky Жыл бұрын

    I did this for English, French and Latin and I still do. It works quite well. It doesn’t make any sense to make the process painful for nothing, learning a language is fun and I always try to enjoy it as much as possible.

  • @sevret313
    @sevret313 Жыл бұрын

    This is quite inspirational. I always burn myself on trying to understand too much and ends up giving up.

  • @user-cq8tp6df7o
    @user-cq8tp6df7o Жыл бұрын

    This is so true. The moment I understood that I don't need to understand every single word in a book to enjoy reading it, the process has become much easier and I learn more.

  • @LarryLatham101
    @LarryLatham101 Жыл бұрын

    This is good advice. Learning a language is not a linear process. It's more like something cyclical. It's also good for students if teachers keep this in mind. It's a mistake to think that if you have studied something or taught something that it is then done without the need for revisiting the same material several times. Each revisit is likely to expand the understanding, because what you might have learned later will enable you to grasp what you could not first time around.

  • @SpanishLikeaPro
    @SpanishLikeaPro Жыл бұрын

    Steve, you are always spot on. Amazing content and tips! Thank you for the amazing work you do for the language learning community!

  • @solea59
    @solea59 Жыл бұрын

    The lawn is a good analogy, but I think the biggest problem is impatience with oneself. I would say " leave the lawn longer, it's nicer on bare feet rather than prickly short grass "

  • @ernestorevollar3632
    @ernestorevollar36328 ай бұрын

    Steve, your pieces of advice are really helpful and importantly straightforward for me. In this case, trying to comprehend the language in question can be pointless and it could hold me back from absorbing my target language further in order to be confident when listening to it. It's crucial to maintain the concentration when the language is spoken rapidly and natively and trying to get familiar with the natural rhythm of it is key without the need to live in a country where the language is spoken. Listening and reading are such practical skills to skyrocket my solid knowledge of English in my case. Moreover, let's be honest, we can't understand everything we hear from a foreign language, this happens to us even in our native language depending on many factors such as the unusual words used in a specific situation, the given area of learning, the high-quality speaking rate and stuff like that.

  • @terraincognita1481
    @terraincognita1481Ай бұрын

    I am so happy that I am not a native speaker and I have eventually the full comprehension of that video! Learning the language is an amazing stuff. I have been learning English for so long and finally I begin to really enjoy English-langunage content without my dictionary opened. So amazing. Learn the languages!

  • @wilaustu
    @wilaustu Жыл бұрын

    It's nice to hear you saying this. I'm going to be quoting your line that "experienced learners accept uncertainty." I haven't been able to articulate it so concisely to my students. I have also used percentages when talking about this idea with students. The way I frame it is that ideally in the future, we want to get as close to 100% comprehension as we can. However, if we're starting from 0% comphrension as beginners, then any increase in comprehension, even if it's just from 10% to 15% is progress we should be happy with. This is how I try to get them comforable with the idea that they don't need to try to understand everything.

  • @miketeo4000
    @miketeo40007 ай бұрын

    Totally agree with Steve. I realise that people who are too careful with vocabulary and grammar at the early stage , they usually are too shy to make mistakes. The fact is we normally learn from the mistakes. The more mistakes we make the faster we learn.

  • @1sola1verita
    @1sola1verita11 ай бұрын

    So true. I have been telling my students the same thing for ages. After all, babies and little children don't understand everything... but that doesn't stop them at all, they keep going! In many ways, we need to become like children to learn a language

  • @osonhodeleon
    @osonhodeleon Жыл бұрын

    Wise words. Repetition is the key to learn any language.

  • @reneel4108
    @reneel4108 Жыл бұрын

    Very important video!! I need to have this imprinted in my brain cause i keep falling into the bad habits of pushing that lawn mower through the high grass

  • @myungbaklee8123
    @myungbaklee8123 Жыл бұрын

    I totally agree. When you struggle to comprehend something, just move to another one and other one...and then come back to try again. Repetition and novelty are the most important things when you learn a language.

  • @williambailey9917
    @williambailey9917 Жыл бұрын

    bud i have been mowing that neglected lawn on the lowest setting all my all life, your theory makes perfect sense. i wish i would have heard this 50 years ago but late is better than never, thank you

  • @sandrad3346
    @sandrad3346 Жыл бұрын

    I like the lawn mower analogy with language learning, it makes a lot of sense!

  • @DANGJOS
    @DANGJOS Жыл бұрын

    I cannot agree with this more! It's more than just getting little by little though. What I've noticed is that the stress of trying to understand more actually hinders the brain's natural comprehension and acquisition. I heard Stephen Krashen mention this as well. When I forget about whether or not I'm understanding, and just enjoy the content, while trying to understand without stress, I understand so much more!

  • @michelbouchet3605
    @michelbouchet3605 Жыл бұрын

    You are totally right. It matches my own experience in language learning. Unfortunately many people give up just because they don't understand.

  • @Minimalrevolt-m83
    @Minimalrevolt-m83 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much! Your contents are much helpful and well-equipped. May everything ease in your life, Steve. You are so talented and willing to share your knowledges and experiences through this platform!

  • @Liliquan
    @Liliquan Жыл бұрын

    I think this advice applies well to beginners and intermediate learners. But for advance learners one needs to challenge oneself with difficult content or else one would feel that they are making too little progress.

  • @marcelosilveira7079

    @marcelosilveira7079

    Жыл бұрын

    B1 to B2?

  • @MG-ln1yw

    @MG-ln1yw

    Жыл бұрын

    @@marcelosilveira7079 B1 Low intermediate B2 Upper Intermediate C1 Advanced C2 Native level

  • @wolfthequarrelsome504

    @wolfthequarrelsome504

    Жыл бұрын

    Read challenging books.

  • @aquarius4953

    @aquarius4953

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MG-ln1yw The vast majority of natives don't have a C2 level. C2 is an academic level.

  • @connorjohnmark

    @connorjohnmark

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aquarius4953 Why would "academic" be considered a higher level?

  • @coscorrodrift
    @coscorrodrift Жыл бұрын

    Love the metaphor, quite clever. Also funny that you took pictures lol. I'd like to figure out why is it that now it takes me so much to tolerate uncertainty. I learned English pretty well and I seemingly navigated uncertainty well, I had some outside encouragement but I was mainly motivated internally, English just became a part of what I use to interact with things and I cannot remember how I dealt with uncertainty back then

  • @mustafatofiq3987

    @mustafatofiq3987

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm dealing with uncertainty I don't know how to compete this issue .

  • @mommydickbirby9689
    @mommydickbirby9689Ай бұрын

    When you think about it, the uncertainty thing actually applies to every aspect of one's general life experience.

  • @Claudette68
    @Claudette68 Жыл бұрын

    You are right. I love to read and wanted to know the whole content of a book therefore if I do not understand a phrase I forget about and continue to the end. Then go back to find out the meaning of what I did not understand before. I watched your video because of the title but the reason I watched it to the end was your perfect English and the tone and the clarity of your voice. I wish all people were able to speak English like you. I love it. I gave you a like . Keep up your good work

  • @slayerpuppet1694
    @slayerpuppet16947 ай бұрын

    I think this advice can apply to any area of study, and I do love the lawn-mowing metaphor. Be easy on yourself and enjoy studying.

  • @darktimesatrockymountainhi4046
    @darktimesatrockymountainhi4046 Жыл бұрын

    When I was a kid, I was a "slow" reader. Most everyone in my class finished reading assignments before I did - every time. We used some color-coded resding materials, and I progressed more slowly than my classmates. Not sure what passed as reading "instruction" in those days, but it seems likely that my teachers took me to be an average or lesser reader. My SAT Verbal score turned out not to be below average, and, in college, I regularly read some very challenging material with no problem except that I took more time perhaps than many readers. Once I started taking pedagogy courses to become a teacher, and learned more about learning & teaching reading, I realized that my habit was to go back & read every sentence until I understood it. Sometimes once or twice was enough, but occasionally I might have read more complicated sentences 3-4 times for full comprehension - as I then understood the term. This lead to my realization that slow readers might have better comprehension, but their exposure to material & ideas could have limitations. Indeed, sometime after college, I performed well on the GRE & entered grad school, where I performed well enough - but reading, for me, took extra time, as I expected good comprehension. As I look back, I see that, while my reading comprehension was high, it was at the cost of slower volume of reading. Now, as an ESL/ELL teacher, I use shorter selections & lower-level reading materials to help students learn comprehension, which skills students can then apply to longer or more complicated selections. This approach of disregarding some of the concern over comprehension, and instead pushing through more material, is also very relevant, so I will begin blending or alternating these two approaches for further student development & success.

  • @PabluchoViision

    @PabluchoViision

    Жыл бұрын

    Terrific story & growth in self awareness. Even today, I fear, and maybe there’s actually a regression in this regard, for all the talk of different learning styles and the uniqueness of each student, I think there’s a rather brutal one size fits all approach that ends up valuing only certain kinds of learners… with the rest left to feel somehow deficient. A terrible disservice with incalculable human cost

  • @TheAnarchist99

    @TheAnarchist99

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought that as you read more the better you get at it and therefore the faster you can read the same material while retaining a good level of comprehension. Btw do you have any advice that has struggled his entire life to get into reading? I'm pretty fluent in English but I've always struggled with developing the habit of reading. No one in my family nor my social circle is fond of reading and as a kid I always hated reading even though I was good at math. Probably the environment has a lot to do with my perception and as result it's so hard for me to read for pleasure

  • @darktimesatrockymountainhi4046

    @darktimesatrockymountainhi4046

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheAnarchist99 You & I are very similar in background, talent, and experience! Read topics that INTEREST you. Your own interests should guide your reading & you will find it more relevant & pleasant. For example, there are some very good topics in math that one can read & learn about. You could choose a known topic & read deeper about it - or pick a new topic in math or a related skill (such as economics) to broaden your knowledge & practice your reading skills in context.

  • @scobeymeister1

    @scobeymeister1

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@TheAnarchist99 I realize this comment is old by now, but maybe this'll still be helpful. I'm someone who was an avid reader as a kid but struggles badly with it as an adult. See if your local library has a collection of audiobooks! If the time commitment is a hurdle to sitting down with a paper book, throw one on while you do something else. There's this weird stigma around it that it doesn't count but it absolutely does. It's got me into reading again, maybe it can get you into reading in the first place :)

  • @Sourena291
    @Sourena291 Жыл бұрын

    thanks Mr.Kaufmann.actually,I'm Persian and glad to see that you like Persian language . the point you mentioned is of utmost importance.I'm not perfect in English but I've completely realised that for better comprehension you most just keep going and this is a day in day out process. I'm always thinking about it and good to hear that from you .

  • @jackbooth9058
    @jackbooth9058 Жыл бұрын

    Steve, você está minha inspiração. I am learning Portuguese and your videos give me freedom to learn what I want. Consequently I am learning for hours per day because I love my process(‘s) so much. Many thanks 🙏

  • @aureissimus
    @aureissimus Жыл бұрын

    I tried an experiment with my Spanish students. On an answer sheet, they were given three possible responses to the statements I was making in Spanish. When I gave them time to think about what choice to make, they didn't score very well. When I told them to choose an answer without thinking about it, they scored much higher.

  • @donmegace
    @donmegace Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for all this insight! I find your videos very useful. Keep up the great work! Blessings.

  • @futurez12
    @futurez12 Жыл бұрын

    I would agree with this, Steve, but I'd caveat it by saying it's fine to want to understand everything if it's completely engrossing/compelling content. Straining and struggling to understand something you're not that into will lead to burn out fairly quickly, but if you're loving the content and you don't want to miss even a single word, I think it's completely fine. On the subject of allowing yourself to go without understanding some things, I believe this to be the most natural and legit way to learn a language, it's how we all learned our native language. You can reach fluency just from understanding parts of sentences (obviously, eventually you'll understand full sentences), hearing patterns over and over is all that matters, by doing so, the grammar will click in eventually, and the vocab will come, albeit slowly. I watched a video not so long ago (I believe it was a Lingq vlog) where a lady was feeling 'guilty' about not finishing books she'd started to read. I thought about that, and commented that actually you could probably reach fluency by reading just the first page of thousands of different books. I don't see why not.

  • @melaniesyx

    @melaniesyx

    Жыл бұрын

    I also feel guilty about not finishing a book I've started, so I usually just flip through the rest if it doesn't interest me any more. Strange mindset. It's probably due to the amount of time already invested in reading the book.

  • @user-rk6fl5yw1m
    @user-rk6fl5yw1m10 ай бұрын

    wow, honestly I just develop my comprehension just by listening what you're saying without worrying about every words just chill and analyze the key words and points

  • @curtisbogue3707
    @curtisbogue3707 Жыл бұрын

    When I was attending college I learned that this applies not just to language learning, but just about any subject! Whenever I'm reading something very complex, I'll find that accepting that I'm not going to understand much if not most of it will help me get the most out of what I'm reading.

  • @slowlearner4341
    @slowlearner4341 Жыл бұрын

    I am not buttering you up, Sir, but I'd like you know: whenever I need recharge my battery while learning my English, I prefer to watch YOUR video, especially like this. According to my understanding, this is kind of learning strategy, encouraging and quite therapeutic. Stay healthy and keep guiding us. Thank you again.

  • @jarrettlee1921
    @jarrettlee1921 Жыл бұрын

    I think I’m one of the biggest beneficiaries of comprehensible input. I learned English from scratch in 2014, and because of comprehensible input, mostly I spend my time on watching KZread and reading BBC news, I achieved an overall band score of 7.5 (L8, R8, S7.5, W6.5) in IELTS just last month. I think my English proficiency got improved immensely during the past 3 years because firstly I turned off subtitles on KZread regardless of if I understand it and secondly I read a lot on BBC everyday, which enabled me to gain a lot of new vocabulary. I remember that when I just turned off the subtitle, I did not fully understand every single word but I still kept the subtitle off because I was able to understand the general meaning. As time passes by, now I can understand at least 99 percent of news lated videos and 100 percent of everyday life related videos. I do not know why but I assume that it’s all because of comprehensive input.

  • @NSh-xn9en

    @NSh-xn9en

    Жыл бұрын

    So how u get the meaning wt actually they try to say. Do u listen them repeatedly

  • @Aditya-xz2dg

    @Aditya-xz2dg

    Жыл бұрын

    Could you tell me how much u dedicated specifically to listen English In the past 3 years without subtitles? Am curious cuz am trying to learn or understand Norwegian and am just interested in the stats

  • @dhiraj9599

    @dhiraj9599

    Жыл бұрын

    @@NSh-xn9en if you don't get it's okay just keep listening, eventually you'll figure it out

  • @tacomania7954

    @tacomania7954

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@Aditya learning any language takes time. If you plan to be extremely proficient pretty much immersing yourself everyday for hours is the way to go. At least that's what I do for japanese

  • @TorMax9
    @TorMax9 Жыл бұрын

    Go with the flow. Get the overall meaning, gist, not individual words or the grammar structure. That will come later. Naturally. I grew up speaking three languages fluently - English is my third - and learned eight more - more or less - and would go from melody to meaning to words, top down. When I was first learning French, I knew how to order a coffee and simple phrases but did not know how the phrase - the array of sounds - broke down into individual words, but it worked, got the job done. When speaking, I would ram through making all kinds of grammatical mistakes, but that was better than stopping, trying to get the sentence perfect in my head first before speaking because by then the conversation would have advanced and I would never have said anything. Above all, relax, have fun, and if you have the chance to be immersed in the new language, in a place where everyone speaks it, it will come. I never learned a language without being in the country where it is spoken. German I learned by reading comic books in German - Tintin - with at first an English translation of the same story to check things I didn't understand, and later moved on to German fairy tales, Märchen der Gebrüder Grimm, and then American films dubbed into German. And then going out and doing my best in society. Instead of a lawnmower, I liken it to learning how to ski. Enjoy the slope and the snow even if you're not a very good skier. If you stay at it, relaxed, you will improve over time.

  • @kelvinadimas8851
    @kelvinadimas88513 ай бұрын

    this is just what i need in my life, i've been forcing myself to a detrimental extent that, its unacceptable for me to not undertstand things at the first time, not only limited to languange itself but other topics as well especially when i learn physics and math.So i ended up wasting most of my time pondering how can i make this make any sense to me.Thankyou so much Steve!

  • @BPCost
    @BPCost Жыл бұрын

    Hi Steve - this is encouraging as I struggle with comprehension in French. I have an on-line tutor and I think even she is a little baffled at my struggles to understand. She gives me stuff which I feel is too difficult for me and I find this demotivating. I prefer the comprehensible input approach but I know I'm making slow but constant progress so I'll just keep at it. Thanks for your tip on the subject.

  • @slicksalmon6948

    @slicksalmon6948

    Жыл бұрын

    Learning to comprehend spoken French is so hard, because the spoken version of the language is very different from the written version.

  • @Tighris

    @Tighris

    Жыл бұрын

    I`ve been learning french for a year now and I can by now watch most french KZread videos and understand pretty much everything. It took me a lot of time tho just listening, re-listening and re-listening. Maybe a few content tips that I love: - InnerFrenchPodcast (probably the most known one for learners. It has over 100 episodes right now and every episode is transcipted, so that you can read as well as listen to it. The difficulty increases slowly from episode 1 so that you dont even realize it. I almost exclusively used this podcast for the first say 3-4 months just listening to it ALL THE TIME until I got kinda "bored" and wanted to increase the difficulty even more with content for natives.) - Nota Bene (pretty big histoy channel with A LOT of interesting videos of wich most are subtitled by humans. Can be hard to understand sometimes tho. I just download the subtitles, import them into Lingq and read them like a book.) - Mamytwink (also pretty big history channel thats focused mostly (but not only) to the second world war with very interesting storys that fit the small story in the big context. Almost all videos are subtitled by humans and I think pretty easy to understand. They talk in slow, precise sentences) - Questions d'Histoire (history channel as well with a lot of their videos subtiteld) - Secrets d'Histoire (about 2h long videos about history, not subtitled tho) - Colas Bim (funny animated videos. Hard to understand as a beginner. He talks pretty fast but the videos are funny even if you dont understand lol. I sometimes found them even more funny when I didnt understand :D) - quoi de neuf docteur (big french streamers taking a pretty long interview in the form of a (fake) psychiatry session. I like it because they mostly have the same structure and questions. So you know at least about what they are talking about and if you dont understand, there will be a next question soon. They all talk naturally and without soundeffects or other distracting things in the background. Just hours of pure talking. No subtitles tho. - Joachim Mouhamad (chess channel with a guy on his quest to become a grandmaster. As I'm learning chess as well right know its pretty useful to do both (french and chess) at the same time. - Koinsky (Lets Player with games I like. Great tip if you like lets plays. Just watch a lets play with a game that you know and you will understand a lot from that context alone) - french comprehensible input (a lot of videos with varying difficulty. Can be nice for beginners because he has a lot of very basic stuff.) You see these are a lot of history realated stuff because I love history. A big part in learning a language is finding content that you love in that language. Its hard to learn with content that you dont like or that you consume just because its in your target language. Dont rely on your tutor to provide you with content. When you are intrinsicly motivated to understand, it will be a lot easier to stay motivated even if you dont understand everything. Also notice that there are still videos that I dont understand anything even tho in others I understand almost a 100%. LAnguage learning is just like this but it gets easier the more time you spend with it. And its not only getting easier, its becomes fun to watch stuff in french and learning on the go while you have fun. Trust me its worth it. (sorry for long post and teacher-like attitude)

  • @BPCost

    @BPCost

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Tighris Thanks for taking the time to share your French learning experience with me and also the various French websites and You Tubers - I have been listening to the InnerFrench podcast and find it very good although I'm sure he talks slowly for us learners but that's okay. I will check out the others and will I'm sure fine some useful content. My tutor gives me TV5 B1 oral comp exercises but I find these difficult and they take (me) quite a bit of time to do. So I tend not to do them. I prefer to listen to a longer piece with no interruptions, that I can understand (75%) and I think I get more out of my listening this way. Thanks again.

  • @Silkytoaster

    @Silkytoaster

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Tighris many thanks for your suggestions . I am also on a journey of learning and being fluent in French. I live in ontario canada and just a few hours drive to Quebec . After reading your message I subscribed to 3 of the you tube channels and the pod cast. Thanks again

  • @xxChacaronXX
    @xxChacaronXX Жыл бұрын

    The idea that came to mind for me here is “what you learn from one thing can be implemented into others” You said (basically) 1- we need a simplified approach to learning so that we get hands on experience. This frees up our mind to later analyze the skill further. 2 - we need novelty If you sit down and think about those two and deliberately plan to apply them to multiple areas of life it should theoretically improve the process!

  • @MedicinUA
    @MedicinUA Жыл бұрын

    My wife now learning german and she wants to know meaning of every single word. I have tried to explain her that it doesn't work so, but she didn't listen me. This video is for her. Thank you.

  • @behroozkarami9832
    @behroozkarami9832 Жыл бұрын

    Such a wisdom just revealed to me (after 30 years in science learning) through your incredible insight! Each sentence agem. Accept uncertainty!! Analogy with lawns was amazing. Thanks a lot!!!

  • @rapemap
    @rapemap Жыл бұрын

    There were times when I tried to understand, espa. when reading textbooks in English. But, reading fictions made me realised, imagination and thinking while reading is the effective way. It works the same at the end with non-fiction textbooks. Still, dictionaries are the best friends 😁

  • @craignicholls5711
    @craignicholls5711 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Steve, timely video. Currently wrestling with German and oh boy is my lawn long!

  • @mateuszzielinski2166
    @mateuszzielinski2166 Жыл бұрын

    Tbh this feels like a good idea for studying as well not just for language learning. Dont understand something? Dont stay stuck on it, go over it then move onto the next thing. Let it be in the back of your mind and when you come back to it it will make much more sense

  • @mohiuddinyousuf1198
    @mohiuddinyousuf1198 Жыл бұрын

    Best lecture ever heard about learning language, I always had doubt about the method and always wonder why children with low intellect, even under 10 years of age speaks a lot better than adults who were trying to learn their language. The lawnmower example and other explanations clears everything as crystal. Right now I am living in Russia and trying to learn very difficult Russian language, this lecture of yours has given me high hopes.... God Bless You.

  • @okamichamploo
    @okamichamploo Жыл бұрын

    Yup, the method I tell people time and time again of how I improved my Japanese listening and comprehension basically goes like this. Watch a drama in Japanese and expect to understand about 10% of it. Watch it again with subtitles and now you understand the content, maybe not any more of the language, but at least now you know what to listen for. Watch a third time with no subtitles again (you could also add a viewing with Japanese subtitles as well if you like), and now you'll probably understand about 25% of it. Don't worry about the other 75%, just go on the next episode of the drama. If you finish the drama you can come back to that first episode and by that time you'll likely understand 60% or more of it. *This is of course meant to be a compliment to regular language study outside of these viewings as well. And actually if the drama is based on a manga, you can read the manga in between episodes and take notes on the vocabulary that comes up as well.

  • @concentrateddarkmatter7991
    @concentrateddarkmatter7991 Жыл бұрын

    Reading L'italiano secondo il metodo Natura, on chapter 10. I repeat the chapters because I sometimes grasp words I didn't know. Pretty cool, i can basically understand most of the words. Before I started reading that book I learned about how the 7 articles were used and learned basic pronunciation for it. Too much to try to grasp every single word especially when you first read a section

  • @rolandochavarria466
    @rolandochavarria466 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Steve, I really understand years and years late, that first we need to learn anything is to learn how to learn. I have learned this with you. Better later than never...

  • @cardozzzo
    @cardozzzo Жыл бұрын

    Thank you again Steve, your content is incredible. Like always, giving simple and rich advices!

  • @ignacioa4114
    @ignacioa4114 Жыл бұрын

    Supongo que la mayoría de los estudiantes están tratando de leer textos demasiado difíciles, porque cuando leemos un texto interesante y que está bien adaptado a nuestro nivel de comprensión, los problemas desaparecen y no tenemos que interrumpir nuestra lectura con cada frase o cada párrafo. Simplemente disfrutamos con el texto, porque es divertido, curioso o algo inesperado pasa en la historia, etc. y como leemos sin interrupciones, leemos más : terminamos antes el libro y podemos empezar antes el siguiente.