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How to learn Chinese

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Oshirigakusai
Super Polyglot
Newbie
Syrian Arab Republic
Joined 5493 days ago

6 posts - 7 votes
Speaks: GermanC2, RussianB2, Mandarin, Korean, FinnishC2, SwedishB1, DanishB2, NorwegianB1, Icelandic, Hungarian, Lithuanian, Latvian, Estonian
Studies: English, Polish, Ukrainian, Faroese
Studies: Old English

 
 Message 1 of 9
10 October 2014 at 12:17am | IP Logged 
How to learn Chinese?!

I’d like to ask you guys how I can master Chinese at a basic fluency level (according
to HTLAL definition). More specifically, I'd like to focus on how to reach a basic
fluency in oral skills.

I have tried learning Chinese a few times, but I have never succeeded. I said few,
because I have restarted a couple of times between 2008 and 20014.

Tones are my main problem regarding Chinese. Although its grammar is quite easy for
me, I have never been at the level which I could orally express myself.

I cannot hide my frustration over my poor speaking abilities, no matter how much I
have tried to improve both listening and speaking.

Speaking is definitely my worst skill. Even in my mother tongues, people always say
that I think too much before answering them. They ask me the reasons I don’t answer
them immediately. It really pisses them off. It really pisses me off, too. What this
information has to do with learning Chinese? I don’t know. It may help you guys give
me some insight to the main question I have right now...

PS: my Chinese and Taiwanese acquaintances say that my writing is good. I don't have
problems for writing, though I "cheat" because of my previous 漢字 knowledge.
1 person has voted this message useful



robarb
Nonaglot
Senior Member
United States
languagenpluson
Joined 5049 days ago

361 posts - 921 votes 
Speaks: Portuguese, English*, German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish, Esperanto, French
Studies: Mandarin, Danish, Russian, Norwegian, Cantonese, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Greek, Latin, Nepali, Modern Hebrew

 
 Message 2 of 9
10 October 2014 at 2:38am | IP Logged 
Oshirigakusai wrote:

I’d like to ask you guys how I can master Chinese at a basic fluency level (according
to HTLAL definition). More specifically, I'd like to focus on how to reach a basic
fluency in oral skills.


This is a rather vague question, so you may benefit from searching the archive for numerous threads about
Chinese, study techniques, and oral fluency.

I don't think this site has its own official definition of basic fluency.

Oshirigakusai wrote:

I have tried learning Chinese a few times, but I have never succeeded. I said few,
because I have restarted a couple of times between 2008 and 2014.


Your chance of succeeding is greater if you don't quit and restart. Stick with it, even if you don't seem to be
progressing as well as you'd like.

Oshirigakusai wrote:

Tones are my main problem regarding Chinese. Although its grammar is quite easy for
me, I have never been at the level which I could orally express myself.


I doubt this. You probably just don't have enough fluency and mastery of the language yet. Sure, you may make
tone mistakes, but it's rare for a learner to make mostly tone mistakes and few other mistakes. When you begin
to master the language, tone recedes into the background; it becomes second nature. It's okay if you sometimes
aren't sure about the tone and have to guess. Usually, people will understand you if the word you're trying to say
is a natural one for the context. (If both your tone and your word choice are off, it gets hard to understand.

Oshirigakusai wrote:

I cannot hide my frustration over my poor speaking abilities, no matter how much I
have tried to improve both listening and speaking.


Your chance of succeeding is greater if you get over your frustration and speak more. Even if you speak poorly,
this will gradually make you improve. It's normal to have these negative feelings, but you need to learn not to let
them prevent you from speaking, because that is what you need to do to become better at speaking.

Oshirigakusai wrote:

Speaking is definitely my worst skill. Even in my mother tongues, people always say
that I think too much before answering them. They ask me the reasons I don’t answer
them immediately. It really pisses them off. It really pisses me off, too. What this
information has to do with learning Chinese? I don’t know


This is a tough problem. Have you tried saying more placeholders? (uh, huh, 那个)Or making more eye contact
and expressions? Hard to say.

If you don't have enough opportunities to chat with your Chinese-speaking acquaintances, I recommend getting
lessons on italki to improve speaking.

Good luck!

1 person has voted this message useful



rdearman
Senior Member
United Kingdom
rdearman.orgRegistered users can see my Skype Name
Joined 5226 days ago

881 posts - 1812 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Italian, French, Mandarin

 
 Message 3 of 9
10 October 2014 at 11:27am | IP Logged 
I'm also learning Mandarin, but sounds like you're further advanced than me. However I have a collection of links in my Mandarin Log which you might like to go through.

These two links might be the most helpful.

A realistic plan
How to learn Mandarin
2 persons have voted this message useful



Oshirigakusai
Super Polyglot
Newbie
Syrian Arab Republic
Joined 5493 days ago

6 posts - 7 votes
Speaks: GermanC2, RussianB2, Mandarin, Korean, FinnishC2, SwedishB1, DanishB2, NorwegianB1, Icelandic, Hungarian, Lithuanian, Latvian, Estonian
Studies: English, Polish, Ukrainian, Faroese
Studies: Old English

 
 Message 4 of 9
10 October 2014 at 1:37pm | IP Logged 
@robard,

Thank you for posting your opinion.


I am using this time to reflect about what I did wrong and what I should keep
restarting from the scratch. Perhaps the question is not about restarting from the
scratch. I can still continue doing what has worked with me.



My chances of succeeding are greater than failing since I have won a battle against
cancer (even though I haven’t reached my 30’s yet…). Now that I don’t need to study
while commuting to the health care center or hospitals and the fact that I am not in a
wheelchair anymore, I can finally use my time in a way I used to study. It is not the
same as studying at hospitals, clinics, physiotherapy rooms etc. My last checkup
showed us (me and the doctors) that I am finally 100% healed! All I need is to recover
my right hand (I am right handed) movements. I like to write sentences in hanzi in
order to memorize the tones in a context. I think there is a difference between
handwriting and typing when I learn Chinese.



I don’t know what your definition of fluency is, but just as a matter of curiosity, I
have taken the HSK 4 in 2011. By that time, I chose to take both listening and
reading. My listening skills aren’t good, so I took the minimum points to pass at that
section. As for reading, it was pretty easy. I was doing mock tests of HSK 6 for
reading.

The “new” HSK 6 level is probably around B2 or B2+ level. I don’t think it is C2
level. It cannot be at all… so, yes, I am not fluent yet, but in terms of speaking
only. I can write (handwriting), type and read. I have studied both Modern and
Classical texts with a monk. He relied on in a L2 language because of other people who
couldn’t understand spoken Chinese as well.

I know that proficiency tests don’t show anyone’s fluency necessarily, but what I want
to show you is that there is a huge gap between my skills, even though I have focused
more than 75% of my time in listening and watching videos (some of them were designed
for HSK 1, 2, 3, 4 levels or TOCFL). If I can’t listen with high accuracy, I will
probably never be able to speak with decent commands.



I have studied with the following materials:
NCPR 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6.
Teach Yourself
Hanyu Series 1 to 11
Gloss
Boya Chinese1, 2, 3, 4
Chinese class 101
Chinesepod.com
Imandarinpod
Integrated Chinese
Making out in Chinese
PAVC 1,2,3,4,5

Some of the main references I have used:
Modern Mandarin Chinese Grammar - A practical guide and Workbook
Basic Chinese - A Grammar and Workbook
Routledge Comprehensive Chinese Basic Grammar
Routledge Comprehensive Chinese Intermediate Grammar
Schaum's Outline of Chinese Grammar
The Phonology of Standard Chinese
The Morphology of Chinese A Linguistic and Cognitive Approach
The handbook of Chinese Linguistics
Wen-Hua Teng- YUFA! A Practical Guide to Mandarin Chinese Grammar - Oxford University
Press, USA (2011)
C.-T. James Huang, Y.-H. Audrey Li, Yafei Li The Syntax of Chinese Cambridge Syntax
Guides 2009
Chinese - A linguistic introduction – Chaofen Sun
Chinese - An Essential Grammar – Yip Po-Ching and Don Rimmington
Intermediate Chinese A Grammar and Workbook Grammar - Yip Po-Ching and Don Rimmington
Numeral Classifiers in Chinese – Xup Ying Li
Chinese grammar without tears
Charles N. Li, Sandra A. Thompson Mandarin Chinese A Functional Reference Grammar
1989
Baxter, William H. A Handbook of Old Chinese Phonology 1992
A Grammar to Teaching Chinese as a Foreign Language - 復旦大學出版社 (2005)
The roots of Old Chinese
Zheng Lijie Prepare for HSK Grammar Test in 21 Days Advanced Chinese Edition 2007

So, if I couldn't reach a decent level (for reading) despite all my effort during
these years, I think I must be someone who don't know how to learn Chinese at all.
Indeed, I don't know how to study Chinese yet since my overall skills aren't that
great, but still, I do believe I have good vocabulary knowledge and grammar (writing).



Recently I have purchased about 14 books designed for Japanese speakers. Some of them
contain audio and I will start listening to the CD before I read the texts or
sentences; otherwise, I will make the same "mistake" by "cheating" or relying on
ideograms first.   



Chatting has never worked with me. Even though I haven’t taken any material, I could
chat using everything I learned. Typing is pretty easy since I don’t need to think
much on the tones. I don’t rely on tones. This is one “problem” I have already
identified. It is good that native speakers can understand my writing, but they think
that I can speak everything I can read. This is a false statement.

I have just checked again and here it is what I typed: “hanzi”, but not “hànzi”. I
didn’t press anything other than “h a n z i”.

It automatically appeared “漢字” in traditional characters. Last time I used
simplified settings was in 2008 or 2009. I also typed the same thing and it came: 汉
字. So, what’s the point in here? I don’t need any tones. If needed, then, I can type
the syllable and guess by pressing the tone (1, 2, 3 or 4; sometimes 5 is quick when
the syllable it is one such as 嗎).

The problem is not with the keyboard, but the fact that when I have time to chat, even
though I notice that the tone is first, second, third or fourth), few days later I
tend to forget it.



I know this Italki website pretty well. I have practiced some of the languages I am
good at and it worked pretty well for me, except for Chinese.

I tried mostly professional lessons with Chinese language, unfortunately none of the
methodology I tried worked with me. Then, I tried 2 weeks ago, I guess, learning with
a community tutor and after 40 minutes, I started speaking without relying in other
languages. Well, for 20 minutes I could finally speak more decently in a normal speed
and without making too many tonal mistakes.

I asked her to follow this instruction: after speaking whenever I didn’t understand (I
would tell her) and she would type the sentences in hanzi. Then, I would try to think
in the tones). Perhaps the better choice for me is doing more different drills such as
writing in pinyin and trying to guess the hanzi, instead. If I see any hanzi, my brain
immediately processes the meaning first.

I am trying not to rely on typing when I take online lessons. I had a bad luck because
all my 5 teachers/tutors cannot teach me anymore either because of the schedule that
has changed at their side or because of mine. I am trying to find 3 or 4 tutors and
practice 3,4 times a week. I am also trying to record messages and send to my Chinese
acquaintances, instead of chatting only. I will ask them to record if they feel
comfortable with that, so that I will force myself to hear their accent and
understand. It will be a good exercise.

I have been following Glossika and Professor Arguelles since their first video on
Youtube. I am not sure whether the videos are still there, but I remember some of the
tips for Chinese learners’ they have commented on. Perhaps I will take a look again.

PS: If you click on your profile's name > Languages > Add a new language:

You are going to see the following:

"Basic Fluency - you understand at least 80% of a regular newspaper in your target
language and can hold regular conversations about any topic, understanding what people
say and getting your point across".

I can understand more than 80% of a regular newspaper, magazine, ads etc from Mainland
China and Taiwan. However, speaking of regular conversations, no way. I don't consider
myself at basic fluency. On the contrary, I am far away from mastering A1 right now.

PS2: My friends say that I am not a "normal person". I usually don't speak looking at
someone's eyes. I need to focus on a object, instead; otherwise, I am not able to
concentrate on what people are saying, including my mother tongues. I have tried all
my life, but it doesn't work with me. When I first meet someone, they feel that I am
weird, but I don't care about it. If I focus my eyes in any object, sky etc, I can
definitely speak. This is who I am. This is how I am. It has been 2 decades like that.
Things won't be easy to make eye contact...

Despite all the things above, yes, I use placeholders.

Anyway, I will improve little by little.



@rdearman,

Thanks for your tips. Any comment, criticism, tips, advice are always welcome. Even
though I have learned all languages by myself (except for Chinese), I always have
something to learn from other people, no matter their current level.

Since I have not been active during all these years, I will take a look on this forum
more carefully. I have already saved on my bookmarks some of the Chinese language
learners’ log, including yours! I will follow them and try to get some information
that might help me at mid and long term.

Edited by Oshirigakusai on 10 October 2014 at 1:46pm

1 person has voted this message useful



Ari
Heptaglot
Senior Member
Norway
Joined 6572 days ago

2314 posts - 5695 votes 
Speaks: Swedish*, English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Mandarin, Cantonese
Studies: Czech, Latin, German

 
 Message 5 of 9
10 October 2014 at 2:20pm | IP Logged 
My standard advice is ChinesePod. It's my favorite language learning platform (though I haven't used it for years, so I don't tknow what it's like nowadays). It can be daunting to be confronted with thousands of nonlinear lessons and it's such a smorgasbord of tool that it's hard to know how to use them. I wrote a post about the method I used, which served me quite well.
2 persons have voted this message useful



Serpent
Octoglot
Senior Member
Russian Federation
serpent-849.livejour
Joined 6587 days ago

9753 posts - 15779 votes 
4 sounds
Speaks: Russian*, English, FinnishC1, Latin, German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese
Studies: Danish, Romanian, Polish, Belarusian, Ukrainian, Croatian, Slovenian, Catalan, Czech, Galician, Dutch, Swedish

 
 Message 6 of 9
10 October 2014 at 3:02pm | IP Logged 
robarb wrote:
I don't think this site has its own official definition of basic fluency.

Um, you see the following when you update your profile:
--
Intermediate is below 'Basic Fluency' and above 'Beginner'.
Basic Fluency - you understand at least 80% of a regular newspaper in your target language and can hold regular conversations about any topic, understanding what people say and getting your point across.
Advanced Fluency means that you can read a popular novel and not miss more than 2 words per page on average, and hold advanced conversations with minimal mistakes.
--

According to previous threads and polls, the consensus seems to be that basic fluency is active B1/passive B2.

Edited by Serpent on 10 October 2014 at 3:06pm

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day1
Groupie
Latvia
Joined 3882 days ago

93 posts - 158 votes 
Speaks: English

 
 Message 7 of 9
10 October 2014 at 5:13pm | IP Logged 
I'd try to put aside all your other textbooks and switch to Chinese Listening Comprehension books instead. When those get too easy, move to audiobooks (NOT normal books), I find that for me personally huge amounts of interesting audio input, or, when possible, chats with natives, do wonders for my pronunciation and "fluency" (as in, free flowing speech, with enough mistakes)

My favorite publisher, Cheng&Tsui, offers a good book called Across the Straits, their other title Making Connections is of a lower language level (low intermediate?). There are a lot of similar (but less good) books published in China : http://www.blcup.com/en/list_1.asp?id=155

Do your learning through ear (not eye), and see if it helps. You can run your vocabulary through quizlet, put hanzi on one side and pīnyīn on other, and see if that helps.

Here's a book for you to read: http://pinyin.info/news/2010/new-book-in-pinyin/

I used to have very good one-on-one conversation classes where we had an agreement with teacher, that we keep on chatting whatever (what i did that day, what my family is like, what ever, politics, if you wish), and just struggle to keep it going. Some of my worst grammar mistakes were corrected, absolute minimum of new vocab introduced. That got me speaking. I had had long months of random classroom teaching, and these few weeks of this sort of exercise daily got me twice as far as all the classes. It's sometimes about finding the right person with which you manage to "click" and get over the mental block.


1 person has voted this message useful



robarb
Nonaglot
Senior Member
United States
languagenpluson
Joined 5049 days ago

361 posts - 921 votes 
Speaks: Portuguese, English*, German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish, Esperanto, French
Studies: Mandarin, Danish, Russian, Norwegian, Cantonese, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Greek, Latin, Nepali, Modern Hebrew

 
 Message 8 of 9
11 October 2014 at 4:24am | IP Logged 
Oshirigakusai wrote:

Basic Fluency - you understand at least 80% of a regular newspaper in your target
language and can hold regular conversations about any topic, understanding what people
say and getting your point across

Oh right. I forgot this was in the profile section; on the forum people usually use the CEFR levels.

So, since my post above the OP has added a lot of relevant detail to the situation, and now it's really interesting. I
responded to the original post with some general tips, because the question seemed like it was from a novice
who had problems or doubts about reaching fluency. But now your profile lists a lot of languages that you
presumably haven't had the same problems with, so you must be a very experienced language learner. You
probably have a really good idea of what you're doing. It isn't a problem with unrelated languages, since you
speak Estonian and Basque.

As for the problems with "normal" communication, there seems to be a decision point. You can either accept that
you'll speak with your particular style, which sometimes leads to problems, or you could get professional help to
diagnose the problem in a more detailed way and suggest coping strategies. I don't want to play doctor but what
you describe is reminiscent of autism spectrum disorder, a.k.a. what people used to call Asperger's syndrome.
I'm not saying you have this condition, but people who do usually have problems similar to what you describe.
The professional solutions to these kinds of problems are still kind of primitive, though. Nobody understands the
root causes of them.

What could be the problem with Chinese fluency, if you are so successful in learning other languages? I suspect it
may be interference from 漢字. It sounds like you might be automatically focusing on the meaning, drawing on
your well-learned ability to process Japanese and sometimes bypassing the Mandarin word entirely. Combined
with a learning strategy that heavily relies on written text, I can see how this could lead to problems.

I wonder if the answer is to stick with the speaking--in whatever context you feel most comfortable--and, more
experimentally: try reading and composing texts fully in pinyin, without ever converting to characters. This will
force you to process the Mandarin phonetics, but using the modality you learn best in.

Edited by robarb on 11 October 2014 at 4:26am



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