What is the secret to reaching fluency in a language?
There are no absolute answers, just as there is no absolute
definition of fluency. There are millions of methods and tests and
programs that attempt to guide us to this goal, and as useful as these
are in limited ways, most of them fail to reveal to us the essential
ingredients to lifelong fluency.
There are certain ingredients for fluency, such as
effective communication, grammatical competence, cultural awareness, and
confidence, but at the end of the day, the recipe for fluency is unique to each individual learner.
This article is a sequel to last week’s article, 9 Reasons Why People Fail to Get Fluent in English.
While these tips are organized into different stages of the learning
process, which correlate to beginner-intermediate-advanced fluency
levels, they could and should be applied throughout the entire process.
FINDING YOUR PATH
1. Clarify WHY You Want to Learn: Ask yourself this
important question. Do a good job clarifying this and use your answer as
your inspiration and guide for the entire process. Do you really want
to learn? Does the motivation come from you or from what others expect?
Until your WHY comes from within you, in a way that you can access and
forms part of your attitude, your path to fluency will probably be
difficult, unimaginative, and inefficient. However, if your “why” is
strong and sincere, it will inspire you and energize your entire
process. The best language learners know why they are learning, and it
isn’t because they have to.
2. Organize Your Life, Plan Your Process, and Set Goals:
Research different methods, schools, and programs for learning. Be
aware that high quality alternative options and opportunities for
learning are increasing every day. Do you want to study online, with a
school, or with a private teacher? Do you have a clear idea of what this
will demand from your life? Talk to friends who have already studied
and those who have been successful, as well as a variety of schools. Sit
in on classes to see which one you connect best with. And finally, set
goals not only with your English (the final result), but also with your
attitude and approach to the whole process.
3. Build A Support Network:
Ask for the support of your family and friends. Search for mentors,
people who have already been successful, teachers and friends in the
real world, as well as virtual language learning communities (such as
Real Life English). The more successful language learners you surround
yourself with, the more their attitudes, strategies, support, and
confidence will rub off on you. Furthermore, in times of confusion, they
can and will help you.
4. Effective Methods / Understand Your Learning Style: There are universally effective learning methods and there are personal learning styles. The
Communicative approach, for example, is a very effective method for
learning languages for any type of learner. In fact, this is how we
learn naturally. The Communicative Approach treats meaningful
communication as the vehicle for learning a language, focusing primarily
on function rather than structure (which isn´t ignored, but rather
something that plays a complementary role in the process.)
Understanding your learning style would be to recognize how you as an
individual learn. Are you more visual, auditory or kinesthetic? As a
general rule, things you usually like doing are probably more in tune
with your learning style. If you learn better visually, maybe TV shows
and movies are your best bet, while if you’re an auditory learner, podcasts and music
could be helpful. If you don’t know how you learn, pay attention as you
go along and experiment with different strategies because it’s going to
teach you a lot about yourself. This is a big reason why people who
learn a second language as an adult have a much easier time learning a
third. They are more aware of how they learn.
5. Take Responsibility For Your Learning: Just do
it. Dive in head first. Learn to enjoy it. If you aren’t engaged, don’t
quit, but rather take responsibility and find out what is going wrong.
If you aren’t learning, ask yourself why not. Maybe there are
circumstances and other people who play a role in your learning process,
but nobody can learn the language for you. You can’t blame it on a lack
circumstances, time, money or opportunities. You have to want it bad
enough to overcome the external obstacles. Worthwhile accomplishments
aren’t easy, but if you enjoy the process, it´s well worth the
payoff. But also, sometimes taking responsibility means having the
courage to change things around.
ON THE PATH TO FLUENCY
6. Have the Right Attitude (Enjoy the Journey AND the Destination):
Constantly evaluate your attitude towards learning English. Learning a
language is not like learning math or science, and if this is how you
learned English in high school, it’s time to change your perspective.
Effective learning is engaging, interesting, and a something that brings
the topic to life. Effective learning is to enjoy the process AND
strive for the result. Think back to an experience where you enjoyed
learning, where time flew by and you always looked forward to it.
Accessing this type of learning is not easy, but if you follow the above
tips/ steps and have an idea of what it should feel like, you can start
gathering the attitudes, support networks and resources to facilitate
it. This will bring you an enjoyable process as well as the achievement
of your goals.
7. Dedicate Yourself Every Day/ Create Routines: Be
consistent, dedicated, and diligent with your efforts. Excellence is a
daily habit, not a twice a week class. You should insert English in your
life every single day, or at least 5 or 6 days a week, because nobody
reaches excellence in anything without daily application. You probably
don’t need to “study” every day, but find convenient moments in your
life where you can create routines that allow you to play around with
English, enjoy it, and learn in a relaxed way. Some recommendations are Lifestyle English (covered in #10), which would include learning with music, TV shows, podcasts, in addition to online communities and resources.
8. Don’t Accept Mediocrity: Don’t accept mediocrity
from yourself or from the people you depend on for learning. To
reiterate the above point about excellence, mediocrity is treating
English like a twice a week hobby. Accept that you’re not going to be
100% perfect on your path to fluency, but you don’t have to ever settle
into an attitude of mediocrity. It’s easy to sleepwalk through life with
mediocre attitude, a mediocre plan, a mediocre goal, a mediocre
purpose, a mediocre school or teacher, or mediocrity on any of these 15
tips, but you get what you give, and fluency is not for the mediocre
mindset. When you start expecting the best from yourself and others,
some really awesome stuff starts to happen.
9. Relax, Have Fun, and Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself: Try
to make it as fun and interesting as possible. Imagine your English as a
baby learning to walk. You need to give the baby a lot of space,
cushioning, support and patience so that it can fall as it needs to,
enjoy itself, and learn how to do it without being judged. One of the
things that makes children such awesome learners is that they naturally
do these things. As Dan Millman illustrates in his book Body Mind Mastery, “If
babies held the same tendency toward self-criticism as adults, they
might never learn to walk or talk. Can you imagine infants stomping,
“Aarggh! Screwed up again!” Fortunately, babies are free of
self-criticism. They just keep practicing.” Your English is your baby
and it needs your patience and love to develop.
10. Make English into a Lifestyle: Connect English to what you already do and like to do. This is called Lifestyle English.
Even if you have a hard time understanding what they are saying, just
having contact with something you like will help you little by little
start to make sense of it. If you like listening to English language
music, start trying to understand the lyrics. If you like watching TV
shows, make a routine out of watching them. Listen to online radio, music and podcasts,
and other native speaking sources when you’re cooking at home.
Configure your Facebook, cell phone, e-mail and other programs and
devices into English. Use your imagination.
LIFELONG FLUENCY
11. Understand that Fluency is Not Perfection: People
that don’t speak English look at English speakers and think they speak
perfectly. The truth is that very very few non-native speakers speak
perfectly (and even native speakers make mistakes). Even if they don´t
admit it to you or themselves, most fluent speakers make mistakes, have a
significant accent, and struggle with their own problems. The point is
that fluency is not about perfection, which for non-native speakers is
pretty much impossible. Fluency is about meaningful communication, and
all the rich world of cultural and professional opportunity that comes
with it.
12. Constantly Review and Renew Your Process: While
patience is surely advantageous to language learning, you can’t be
afraid of making changes and renewing your process from time to time.
What worked for you at an earlier stage of the process may not be
working for you now, and it’s important to keep every step of your path
fresh and spontaneous. This could mean changing resources, trying
different learning strategies, or even switching schools or teachers.
My recommendation: Assess your progress every 4 to 6 months. Ask
yourself how things are going. This demands a high degree of
self-awareness and sometimes courage, but it’s essential. You might ask
yourself: Are you enjoying it? Are you learning? Are you still inspired?
If not, what’s the problem? Take charge of your process
13. Be Proactive, Create Opportunities & Use Technology To Your Advantage: In line with Lifestyle English
(covered in #10), to really get to a level where lifelong fluency is a
real possibility, you need to be extremely proactive. English needs to
be a part of your day to day life. You need to constantly be creating
opportunities where you can use English. This may include a lifestyle
that promotes travel to English speaking countries, but it should
definitely include an intimate understanding and use of certain
strategies that give you contact with the language anywhere in the
world, such as podcasts, online radio, TV & movies, and local communities that organize in person English speaking gathering.
Source : http://reallifebh.com/13-tips-for-english-fluency
No comments:
Post a Comment