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Saturday, 22 September 2012

How to Learn a New Language - 3 Errors

Learning a new language is easy and possible for anyone who wants to speak a second (2nd) language. However there are some misguided ideas or Errors about learning a new language that I will like us to look at and see how untrue those myths are.  
I will explain three of those commonly used “errors” about language learning that will be discussed below.  

Error 1) It is not possible to learn a new language fast
It is not TRUE - It is possible that you have heard this exact line from one of your teachers when you took a language in school. Or you may have heard it from one of your friends who is living in a foreign country and making little headway in the native tongue. Fortunately, it's a myth. Today’s technology has made it possible for anyone who want to learn a new language whether old or young to learn it fast enough.

Error 2) It is much easier to learn a new language as a child.
It is a LIE... It is a familiar story and it goes something like this: you only have a limited window during your childhood to learn languages. During this time your child brain is much more capable of absorbing linguistic information. If you don't learn a second language then, your circuitry shuts off and this window slams shut on all of your aspirations to be bilingual. Or at least you are condemned to a much more difficult path should you even attempt to try as an adult. 


The reason is that: I am no longer a child; therefore I will not be able to learn another language easily or at all. But try this logic on for size instead: this idea is a myth, therefore it's false! Again, technology has made it possible for even an old man or woman to learn a new language like a child at their own pace.  

Error 3)
The best way to learn a new language is to go to that foreign country and immerse, immerse, immerse…
It is a LIE… Immersion is a very fashionable word when it comes to concocting language learning catch-phrases. And for good reason, surrounding oneself with other native speakers and being forced to communicate in the target language most if not all of the time is a powerful way to learn a second language. 

But here is the thing: you do not need to go to Germany to immerse yourself in German, Italy to immerse yourself in Italian, Korea to immerse yourself in Korean, and so on. This belief just puts another obstacle in your path, and gives you an all-too-tidy excuse not to take your language learning seriously in the meantime. It is true, the onus lies on the individual to plan and take his new language learning seriously. 

To your love for languages.

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