blakeus12 [they/them, he/him]@hexbear.net to Learn the Chinese language@lemmygrad.mlEnglish · 9 months ago
blakeus12 [they/them, he/him]@hexbear.net to Learn the Chinese language@lemmygrad.mlEnglish · 9 months ago
As a complete beginner that knows how to say 2-3 sentences, how do we get to the point where it’s possible to comprehend these sources?
edit: To expand on this, every advice resource i’ve seen on the internet has said: “forget textbooks, you need comprehensible input!” which I agree with, but how can you begin learning the language to the point at which this is possible?
I noticed the odd way that online language learning experts called for CI but rarely talked about how to get there with only side comments on graded content. Especially the ones that profess no formal study or flash card use is needed to gain a foothold. There being a dialectic is probably the best way to think about this. CI seems like it’s good in principle, but it would be useless if you can’t find perfectly targeted content (which is hard to do before having a strong understanding). Incredibly put together post!
I’m still in the early stages for my own journey and am working primarily on gaining the vocab and grammar (reading the hanzi because I was being overly reliant on pinyin). I really need to work more on listening. I tried a tone listening test and failed spectacularly, and I thought I was doing ok.
Anki is great, but it’s usefulness is limited. It’s great for cramming words into the brain in a way that sticks well (hanzi, basic meaning, pronunciation, tone) but it’s terrible at learning context without a lot of other work (sentence mining is apparently good, but similar to CI needs significant prior understanding of the language, and it’s not trivial to undertake the work). I’ve found some really great decks to provide variety to the study, but Ive found having too many decks becomes daunting and stressful.