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A
New Year's Resolution to Learn a New Language |
by:
Emma
Rath |
Danny
Glover, the famous American actor, once
said that his new year's resolution was
to learn French, because everyone he wants
to speak with in West Africa speaks French.
If you would like your fun new year's resolution
to be to learn a new language, then there
are quite a few different ways you can go
about it.
Perhaps you've been wanting to learn the
language of your Grandmother. Perhaps you
would benefit from learning an official
language or unofficial second language of
your country, such as French in Canada or
Spanish in USA. Or Greek in Melbourne Australia!
Apparently the second largest Greek-speaking
city in the world after Athens, in terms
of number of people who speak Greek, is
Melbourne Australia! Or perhaps you feel
like learning something that feels exotic
like Japanese or Swahili. One Saturday in
November 2004, the national Canadian newspaper
the "The Globe and Mail" put its entire
front page in Chinese, explaining that with
the globalization of jobs, Chinese will
probably be a necessary business language
of the future.
A fun way to start learning a new language,
especially if you're not a disciplined type
of student, is to enrol in a language course.
You meet other people in your class who
have the same language interest as you which
is fun in itself, you're being taught by
a real teacher, and the once a week schedule
of the classes means that you are practising
your new language regularly and steadily.
Local community centers offer these courses.
Colleges, private language institutes and
continuing education programs at university
offer them. You may be lucky enough to have
cultural organizations nearby that offer
language courses. For instance, a local
immigrant organization in my town offers
courses in Swahili, a language spoken in
many east African countries. Downtown, a
cultural organization funded by France called
Alliance Française, offers French courses.
A nearby Saturday Chinese school offers
courses in Mandarin Chinese for both adults
and children, and it's quite encouraging
to see Cantonese-speaking adults there having
as much trouble pronouncing Mandarin as
the non-Chinese adults!
If you can't get away to a class, then there
are lots of language courses you can study
at home: books, audio cassettes, video cassettes,
DVDs, music, interactive computer software,
and online courses on the Internet. Your
local library probably has language learning
resources that you can borrow, if you don't
want to start off the year with the expense
of buying these materials. When studying
on your own in this way, try to devote 10
minutes every day to a bit of study or revision,
instead of doing 1 hour one day but then
not finding the time to look at it again
for a couple of months. With 10 minutes
of study each day, you probably won't feel
like you are making progress because the
progress is so gradual. However, the progress
will also be steady, and in 3 months time
when you look back on how much you have
learned, you'll probably impress yourself.
To get you started learning your new language
in the next 5 minutes, here are some links
to free online courses
http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages - On the
BBC website, you will find free online courses
for French, Spanish, German, Italian, Greek,
Portuguese and Mandarin Chinese. And also
for Scottish Gaelic, Welsh, Irish and English,
and links to British Sign Language.
http://www.word2word.com/course.html - The
Word2Word website contains links to free
language courses all over the Internet.
As of January 2005, it has links for 114
languages, from Abenaki, Albanian and Arabic,
to Urdu, Vietnamese and Xhosa. In all, there
are 288 links to online courses. So whether
you want to learn Cree, Croatian or Korean,
hopefully you'll find a free course for
the language you want here.
A great way to learn and practise another
language is "language immersion" - being
surrounded by people who speak that language
and you having to get things done in that
language environment. A holiday in a foreign
country is a very interesting and fun "language
immersion" opportunity. People amaze themselves,
speaking words in a foreign tongue that
they didn't realize they knew, when they
have to function in a foreign language environment.
Closer to home, local immigrant community
events may be able to provide you with a
language immersion environment without the
expense of travel.
My Japanese teacher told us that if you
understand more than 5% of what is being
said in a foreign language, then you are
not at the optimum level for learning the
maximum amount possible of that foreign
language. If you understand more than 5%
of what is going on in your class, go up
a level he said! If 95% seems gooblety-gook
to you, then that's perfect he said! Take
heart. It means you are soaking up as much
of that foreign language as is humanly possible!
According to Ellen Bialystok and Kenji Hakuta
in the book "In Other Words", adults are
more capable of learning a second language
than most people assume. In the book "What's
Going On In There", Lise Eliot explains
how Noam Chomsky discovered in the late
1950s that all of the world's languages
share the same fundamental structure. He
called it "Universal Grammar". The language
you already speak and the language you want
to learn both have sentences, grammar, nouns,
verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions
and conjunctions. You may not be able to
label those parts of your speech, but your
brain is applying those concepts to your
speech every day, and has been doing so
ever since you were a baby. Experts believe
that our brains have specific language circuits,
like a computer has specific circuitry to
do certain tasks. If you can communicate
in one language (and if you are reading
this, then obviously you can!), then you
have the necessary brain circuitry to communicate
in any language.
Which brings us to the subject of babies,
kids and language. My father observed that
French children must be very clever. While
English-speaking teenagers are struggling
with French in high school, apparently French
children are fluently speaking French right
from toddlerhood! (!!!)
Language courses for children exist in our
communities, particularly in communities
that have vibrant ethnic members. Fun but
academically serious Saturday language classes
for children are very popular among immigrant
families. They are created so that children
can learn the language and culture of the
old country that their ancestors came from,
and they usually embrace the participation
of other children from outside their culture.
So if you want your child to get a head
start in a foreign language, to reap the
IQ benefits of being multilingual, and to
share and practise with you while you also
learn a foreign language, enrol them in
Saturday school for Chinese, Italian, Greek,
Croatian or whatever language school you
find available for kids.
As with adults, lots of multimedia resources
are available for teaching foreign languages
to children. The latest craze is language
videos for babies! Small children find these
videos very entertaining and love to watch
them. Some well-known titles include Bilingual
Baby and Lyric Language. On the Internet,
http://www.kiddiesgames.com offers fun free
games for babies and preschoolers to learn
Spanish and French.
Have you ever thought of learning Sign Language?
American Sign Language (or ASL) is the first
language of half a million people in the
United States and Canada, and is probably
the third most used language in USA. Dr
Bill Vicars at the ASL University at http://lifeprint.com/asl101
tells us that many deaf people cherish and
enjoy their language and deaf culture so
much that given the chance to hear, they'd
rather remain deaf so as to remain part
of their culture. On that website you can
find a free online ASL course and visual
dictionary.
The benefits of hearing babies and toddlers
learning sign language are very exciting.
The research of the past decade has shown
that hearing infants that learn sign language
learn to speak verbally earlier, have higher
IQs, have less tantrums during the terrible
twos because they can communicate their
needs, and are generally happier! There
is now quite a choice of entertaining videos
for small children that are very effective
at teaching kids signs, such as the Signing
Time videos at http://www.signingtime.com
and the We Sign videos that you can preview
at http://www.production-associates.com/wesign.html.
In some areas, it's possible for children
to take signing classes such as those of
http://www.kindersigns.com or to join reverse
integration kindergarten at deaf organizations
or signing playgroups.
Have fun carrying out your new year's resolution
of learning a new language. Find some music
in your target language that is in a music
style that you enjoy and has the words to
the songs. Robert Fisher in the book "Head
Start" explains that there is a link between
music and remembering language. He reports
that the Ancient Greeks would listen to
the whole of the Iliad chanted to soft lyre
music, and this allowed many people to be
able to remember long passages from the
Iliad.
Have fun! ¡Diviértase! Amusez-vous bien!
About the author:
The author of this article, Emma Rath, produces
free online and purchasable download baby
and preschooler computer games, including
games for learning English, French and Spanish,
http://www.kiddiesgames.com
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