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Susan
What do you think of Spanish teachers pressuring a student to read outloud faster?

I work with many different Spanish teachers through another service.  Often when I am reading and working on pronunciation with a Spanish teacher, they ask me to repeat it again at a faster pace-- the pace that is natural for them.  Today I felt frustrated and pressured by my teacher, who made me repeat the same sentences several times, wanting me to go faster each time. 

I kept trying to meet his expectation but honestly I had negative feelings.  Part of me wanted to tell him ¨I will starting speaking faster when I am ready to speak faster, I am trying to pronounce it right.¨ 

Have other students of Spanish felt  frustrated by pressure to speak or read at the pace that is natural to a native Spanish speaker, but that makes you feel like you are trying to race through a tongue twister that you can never get right?

Can a Spanish teacher give me their opinion of whether pressuring a student to read or speak faster is actually helpful?  I read and speak much faster than I used to, but I can not speak or read at a pace that is ¨natural¨ for many native Spanish speakers.  This particular teacher is one of my favorites when we are talking, but when he tries to help me read Spanish ¨more naturally¨ it makes me feel like a child being asked to do something overwhelming. 

I am trying to decide whether I will just trust him and keep trying to do what he asks, or whether I will tell him I do not think what he is asking me to do is helpful at my current level. 

This teacher has told me he is aware that I do not speak English (my own language)  at as fast a pace as native Spanish speakers Spanish, but somehow he seems to think it is necessary for me to learn to speak Spanish fast. 



Nov 30, 2016 9:45 PM
Comments · 10
5
I could not disagree with your teacher more. Read as fast as you feel comfortable. Lots of language learners think “native speakers talk fast, so if I talk fast, I’ll be a native speaker.” What you’ll actually be doing is making a lot of mistakes — “but no one will notice if I talk fast enough”. Yeah, maybe not right away, but the faster you practice mistakes, the faster you learn them — the mistakes, that is.

Read as slowly as necessary to produce native pronunciation. By practicing slowly enough not to make any mistakes, you’ll actually be practicing correct pronunciation — imagine that. As you feel more comfortable, you’ll naturally speed up. If you’re in a hurry, I suppose you could use a metronome, like a musician does. BTW, good musicians know that you practice slowly if you want to learn to play fast. For example, I remember Joe Satriani mentioned it once, and his guitar solos are lightning fast. Same thing with the martial arts, BTW.

Edit: fixed three typos. I was so heated up that I guess I wrote faster than I should have :)

November 30, 2016
3
Thank you all for your answers.  I do not want to change teachers, but I think I will tell him I do not appreciate feeling pressured to go fast and will not continue to go along with that. 
December 1, 2016
2

I agree with you, Rock Anthony, that listening skills are the most important thing if one wants to have conversational ability in another language.  Obviously, you need to be able to speak too.  But, when it comes to speaking, one only need know one way of saying something to make oneself understood.  But if there are four different ways to say the same thing in a given language and you only know one of them and the person speaking to you uses one of the other ways?  You're stuffed.  If they speak very quickly and run words together and you cannot pick out the individual words?  You're stuffed.

Speaking personally, with languages that I have learned, I feel that so much emphasis has been placed on me speaking in lessons, that my speaking ability is much better than my listening ability - and this does not actually help me to have conversations with people... what it does is it allows me to talk to people and be understood but then often be baffled, in turn, with the response.

I personally feel that the current orthodoxy that places speaking in the dominant position in lessons needs to be altered somewhat, so that listening plays as great a part in lessons as speaking, if not slightly more so.

December 1, 2016
2
Hi, Yes I have had a similar experience. When I was in high school I had a teacher who loved to make me stand in front of the class and recite what we had memorized.  To this day I have trouble speaking in front of a group of people.  It also put me off the language for a long time.  I don't think that pressuring a student to learn is successful and I think that it often causes negative feelings, and may even hinder the learning.
December 1, 2016
2
Yeah, I don't understand the correlation between being able to speed read a text out loud and sounding more "fluent" either. Even in English, I don't read aloud as fast as I normally speak because they're not my words, so I can't anticipate the words that are coming up and intone correctly. As a result, I slow down. I think it's normal.
November 30, 2016
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