Encuentra profesores de Inglés
Steve Walthew
How do you prefer to learn English?

So, do you prefer to learn English...

1. By sistematically studying grammar?

or

2. By learning in an intuitive manner, listening to native speakers?

19 de may. de 2016 11:14
Comentarios · 8
3
All your discussions are very interesting and helpful :) As far as I'm concerned, all your suggestions and views coincide to the questions and doubts formed out of my mind. I wish to thank you and hope you will keep up sharing the same.
19 de mayo de 2016
3

Hi Steve.

I'm a language teacher and in my classes at school I have to deal with grammar because it is part of a syllabus. When it comes to my own learning process, however, I prefer to learn in an intuitive manner. I've been learning Spanish for 5 months now, and it seems to work. I like to "notice" how language works, compare and contrast Spanish with my mother tongue (Portuguese), but I never do grammar exercises because I find them excrutiatingly boring.

How about you? How did you learn Italian?

All my best,

Guilherme.

19 de mayo de 2016
1
I used to learn languages in various ways, a communicative, direct method and a classic method with boring coursebooks with boring teachers as well. Nothing worked well for me. I do not have any possibility to speak to native speakers at all. To learn any language COMPLETELY I need: 
1. Very experienced, encouraging teacher with a passionate interest in teaching me who let me speak as much as it's possible and willing to correct my writing tasks, 
2. really interesting coursebooks(some of them are really very good!!) and any reading texts/books that interests me a lot
3. a possibility to listen to everything I want and can, 
4. a lot of time and persistence in order to do it every single day for a long time! Grammar is crucial, but the method how to learn it matters. As a learner I do not have to be able to explain it. The  properly use of it suffices. 
19 de mayo de 2016
1

Hi, there!

So, I prefer to learn in an intuitive manner, listening to native speakers. I'm using youtube.com and reading some book about physical education, my prefered subject.

19 de mayo de 2016
1

When I was learning Japanese I noticed that each language consisted of two sub-languages - spoken and written. In Japanese you can see it more clearer. I knew people who were  skilled in one sub-language and absolutely incompetent in another.

So, if you wish to learn the written sub-class you have to drill books and grammar. Without grammar it will be hard to understand long sentences.

If you chose the spoken one - you have to listen, repeat and speak. In some way it is easier, as the spoken language generally consists of short finished models. Generally people speak using models and nothing more. They hear them, unconsciously make them their own stuff and blod and speak. It's like how learns to speak a baby.  But the models have to be good and correct, that's why I say "in some way". I am sure if one learns  by heart about 200 good models of a new language, he/she will be able to start an easy conversation.

But if you want to learn language in a whole ( both sub-classes together), you have to get through both grammar and speaking.

19 de mayo de 2016
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