Best Way To Learn A Foreign Language

Reference & EducationLanguage

  • Author Richard Henderson
  • Published August 10, 2007
  • Word count 421

I have never quite understood how to learn a foreign language. It is a shame too. Learning a foreign language is pretty necessary in this day and age. If you learn foreign language, it makes you more employable in a variety of areas, as well as enhancing your cultural experience. Say what you want about modern translations, but until you learn foreign languages you never get to experience the beauty of foreign writers. Nevertheless, I have only managed to learn a foreign language once, and it was so difficult for me that I doubt I will ever try it again. It was just too much work!

I managed to get all the way through college without ever successfully completing a learn foreign language program. I took a little bit of French in high school, but I dropped it after a couple of semesters. In general, I was a good student. Most subjects came easy to me, but I couldn't manage to learn foreign language no matter how hard I tried. I loved French culture and French literature, and I desperately wanted to learn how to speak French, but it just wouldn't come. I ended up taking an American sign language class to get rid of my learn foreign language requirement. Even that was difficult!

I struggled with learning a foreign language all through college. I went to a liberal arts university that demanded it, and I knew that I could not graduate with the degree that I wanted unless I managed to learn foreign language. I tried using how to speak French software, hiring a private tutor, and working with conversation partners, but nothing worked. I only successfully managed to learn foreign language when I finally went abroad. I spent a year in France, and it was one of the most difficult years of my life. Ultimately, however, it was also one of the most rewarding. I would never have managed to learn foreign language without it, you see.

To this day, I believe that the only way to really learn foreign languages is to completely immerse yourself in another culture. If you can speak English at all, you will not learn how to speak a foreign language. Instead, you will keep falling back on your English skills. If you need to learn foreign language in order to interact on a daily basis, however, it will come much more quickly. If I learned a foreign language in a year, you can probably do it using the same methods in six months!

Rich Henderson runs his own internet marketing business from home.

Check out these great Learning Online resources or the more specific Learn Languages Online.

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Article comments

Jo
Jo · 16 years ago
Couldn't help but comment when I read about your hard time with French. The same thing happened to me - I spent 8 years studying French, and when I finally went to stay for a few months in France, it was useless. I just could never pronounce their throaty 'r's and nasal vowel 'grunts', so much to my dismay, all the French I had studied and could read and write was irrelevant when it came to speaking the language. BUT - do not be disheartened: I felt pretty down, like I had 'failed', but decided to try another language, give this 'foreign language thing' one more shot. I chose Italian because it sounded so beautiful. Within 6 months I found myself in Rome and Florence, chatting to Italians effortlessly (the Italians are generally much warmer and friendlier than the French, so that made the experience a lot easier as well). For the past 3 years I have used my Italian for my job, speaking on the phone, sending emails etc, so it was a success you could say. And it was all done through audio cassette courses, I never lived there for a long time or took any professional study. I have since then learned up to intermediate levels of Spanish and German. I think the reason for this is because those 3 languages have very few 'sounds' which we don't already use in English (especially Italian). But French uses loads of nasal grunts and nuances, I find it a great effort to try to force out an unnatural sound. So the moral of the story is: just because you have difficulties with one language (esp French, which I think is extremely hard for non-native speakers to pronounce), that does not mean you are bad at languages in general. I am still determined to conquer French one day, but if I can speak Spanish, Italian and German fluently, I think I could live without succeeding in French! :-)

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