Igloo9 Wrote:SomeCallMeChris Wrote:Benny has plenty of youtube videos and plenty to sell, but you believe what you want.
Can you be more specific?
Benny's Youtube
What he sells (minus Learning with Texts, book recommendations, and best blogs)
So basically, he sells his Learning from Day 1 video set, Language Hacking Guide, Language coaching/consultation, and one-on-one lessons. Not that I have anything against someone monetizing their time.
Also here's a quote from the author of that original fluentin3months blog. It was in the comments.
Mars Dorian Wrote:yeah, download the free flashcard system Anki http://ankisrs.net/
From there, you can download many free language decks (including those 1000-2000 Japanese words)
So yeah, he used Anki. He learned, but not based purely on immersion. It was a major factor, but not the only factor.
Side note: Benny advocates the talk from day one philosophy, but what many don't seem to consider is that he works hard every day during these three month missions. The speaking from day one is a major part of the method, but not the only part. Part of the blame lies on him, but when a newbie reads it they think "hey all I have to do is immerse myself and talk to natives, no other work necessary".
Consider this quote from a blog by Benny about how he spent his birthday while having to go to work. Imagine a regular day. And make note of the bolded and red portions.
Benny Wrote:Sadly, it wasn’t entirely a day off; I had to work in the morning, but took the afternoon off. The Internet slows down so much in this flat (I need the Internet to be able work) so when a page is slow to load, I could do what most people would; curse it and get angry and stressed out, or maybe simply do nothing and be patient (not my strongpoint
). But when a page doesn’t open immediately, I just glance at the sheet of irregular verbs on the table beside my computer and go through one new verb. The website loads and I go back to work. Next time that it is slow to load I glance over at the next word and try to apply it to memory. After an intensive morning work period I’ve actually learned over 20 of the most important irregular verb past-tenses and parts of their conjugations.
Work is done, so I join a friend for lunch. We sit down and have a nice chat (in French!) but when she goes to the toilet, I could twiddle my thumbs or glance around or play with my phone… but instead I grab the bilingual menu and study some food vocabulary. I get the tram back home and as soon as I sit down, I take a photocopied sheet of important adjective opposite pairs out of my pocket and study for the “entire” 5 minute journey.
Later in the day it’s time to go out dancing! My friends go into the club before me, so when I’m in the queue by myself, I take out my phrasebook to study the small dictionary at the back. A girl beside me keeps looking at me and my phrasebook (not something people usually read in queues to nightclubs… if people were to actually read anything in such a situation…), so I start up a conversation with her and get to practise! She found my Czech quite amusing, but listened attentively and helped me say what I wanted. I soon had 4 of her friends listening to me and giggling as I was talking. Likely laughing at my many mistakes and silly way of speaking, but all listening to me attentively and even correcting me. Once they saw me dance they laughed much more…
Afterwards, it’s a 10 minute walk back to the night tram so I turn to particularly tricky words in the phrasebook and have a quick glance and put it back in my pocket as I think of a good detailed image association for that word… while I’m walking.
At the end of the day I’ve actually learned quite a lot, even though I wasn’t actually really “studying”. I had an excellent birthday, it was so much fun – I barely even remember actually studying, but I must have done the equivalent of maybe 1-2 hours of sitting down at a desk and in that day I did indeed learn some very important parts of Czech. I even got to practise!
He's making notes, getting corrected, reading phrasebooks, studying important words.
Edited: 2013-09-08, 1:43 am