Rytis
Learning Article : Learning Multiple Languages At A Time

Discuss the Article : Learning Multiple Languages At A Time

<a href='/article/609/learning-multiple-languages-at-a-time' target='_blank'>Learning Multiple Languages At A Time</a>

Language learners often find themselves wanting to study many different languages, even going so far as tackling more than one foreign language at a time. However, is it really efficient to do so? Does the language matter? Is the method of doing so important? Should one be more patient with the language learning process? Well...

2 gru 2015 00:00
Komentarze · 5
3

Thanks Rytis, Very helpful. At one time I was trying to learn Spanish and French as a beginner, too similar, too confusing. I had already thought to wait until Russian is clearer in my mind before thinking about learning another language. You have confirmed that, or at least for me and the way I learn.

11 grudnia 2015
2

Mixing up languages is due to one or more of them being at a low level. It's not because they are at different levels. So some of what you wrote is incorrect, and some of your advice ineffective. 

2 grudnia 2015
1

Agree with the fellow above about mixing up languages being a problem of incomplete learning / language acquistion.  I spent give years on Korean (for travelling and survival conversation -- it's easy to learn to read and write that script) and three years on Japanese (academic focus -- to pass an exam) and now (10 years later) -- I can recall words / phrases in each language but I often have to think hard about what language the word is.  I have to remember how it's spelled (hangul??? or hiragana/katakana???) to tell them apart and that's because I was only a low intermediate speaker in each.  The things that I know well (the basics of conversation, some nouns, verbs, place names) -- these I 'know' and don't mix up.

Your point about persona / taking on the second language identity really struck home for me though because I never was able to make the necessary shift to identifying with Korean / Japanese culture enough to make self-expression feel normal and natural.  It always felt like I was 'outside' the culture and that the psychic boundary was ... pretty tough to transcend (though it was always pleasurable to study these very foreign languages, esp the kanji / hanja -- so insightful about how and where East and West perceive the world...)

 

21 grudnia 2015
I started learning 7 languages at the same time all from a beginners level except for French which was only slightly more than beginners. I was working on French, Russian, Swedish, Japanese, German, Spanish and Italian. I added Chinese recently to make it 8 languages. It was going great in the beginning and for some strange reason, I found that leaning all these at the same time was somewhat synergistic. I found that memorizing was happening without effort. The only two that were confusing, like you mentioned, were Spanish and Italian because they are so much a like. BUT.....once I got more deeply into grammar, conjugating verbs, online courses and trying to speak with people....I slowed down quite a bit. There just were not enough hours in the day especially when working on multiple musical instruments, song writing, playing in a band, trying to write stories, working on new computer programming languages and more.... :) I must be either a frustrated genius or I'm just totally nuts.... Although sometimes those two seem to be the same... :) As of today I can read and write in these languages way, way better than I can speak and understand the spoken words. The latter is harder to put a lot of time into since it requires another person for natural conversation....as opposed to an mp3 dialog or equivalent. I've been at this for an accumulated time of about 1 year.
1 kwietnia 2017

Well, we also have to remember this is the guy who said that politics never has any place in language learning.  Completely ridiculous, so let's consider the source.

2 grudnia 2015