Learning Spanish: Begin By Listening - Part 6
Learning Spanish: Begin By Listening - Part 6 by
Most folks, when they set out to study a new language, begin by
enrolling in Spanish I at their local Junior College. This is not
the way to begin. In fact, the formal learning about the language
in a course at the JuCo is about 5 years away from where you are at
if you've had no experience at acquiring the target language.
You begin by listening. You need this exposure to grow accustomed
to the sounds of the language. You need this period of silence in
which you listen, not produce, so you can bombard your brain with
lots and lots of visual and auditory impressions in the new
language you are seeking to understand and speak. You've got to
learn "the music" of the language. You've got to experience
comprehensible input.
It is relatively easy in today's technology to immerse yourself in
languages through television. Those seeking to acquire spoken
fluency in Spanish have it made in the shade while living in the
States. You not only can find multiple radio and cable TV stations
that are 100% Spanish, you will most likely find an
American-Hispanic community living in a neighborhood near you. You
can listen to Spanish almost anywhere in America now. And, if your
goal is to develop spoken fluency, you will need to listen and
listen and listen.
There are some pretty terrific home study courses that have risen
to the challenge of providing "comprehensible input" from a very
beginner's level to a high intermediate level. Some even will guide
you through to advanced levels. While using these courses, you've
got to continue listening to lots of Spanish even when it sounds
like gibberish to you. Together with the home study courses, your
ear will slowly break down what sounds like one long word into
separate components and allow you to understand even the fast
talkers. Children, by the way, are the best teachers. They are slow
speakers and seem, more often than not, to speak with crystal
clarity.
When you reach the point of actually producing speech in the
language, and are using a home study course, make sure the
environment is as relaxing and free of anxiety as possible. Anxiety
is one of the most profound reasons adults do so poorly in classes.
In a classroom language learning circumstance, students are
constantly put on the spot to perform. You will be asked to produce
speech in the class in front of other adult (and sometimes
college-age) learners. You may not be ready at that point to
produce anything in the language. You may personally need more time
to listen. However, in a class, you are put on the spot to produce
in the language. The fear of screwing up and looking stupid will be
a huge hindrance.
It takes time. It takes time to reach that point at which you are
ready to begin showing off your new linguistic skills in a
pressured situation. I interviewed multiple people who have an
impressive proficiency in Spanish as their second language. All of
them said it took 6-10 years to reach the point they were currently
at in their Spanish proficiency. And when I say that, I mean not
only speaking but also reading and writing. Language acquisition
and language learning take time. It isn't going to come after a
year of studying Spanish in a Spanish-speaking country. If it took
a Mexican child 6-7 years of non-stop bombardment in Spanish to
reach his or her first grade level of spoken fluency, then just how
long can it take an adult whose first language is not Spanish? It
is not an overnight thing. You've got to curb the expectation that
after you've shelled out a few hundred dollars (or more) for
classes, you are going to have bought yourself fluency.
It isn't going to happen.
Listen actively. Listen passively.
You've got to begin by listening!
Learning a New
Language Has Never Been Easier
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