CaucusWolf Senior Member United States Joined 5271 days ago 191 posts - 234 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Arabic (Written), Japanese
| Message 1 of 9 03 April 2011 at 5:18am | IP Logged |
Total immersion usually involves actually going to the country, but what if you didn't have to? the idea of created immersion is the idea that fluency could be attained through self study and the use of skype, facebook and other social networks. Practicing with live speakers who correct your writing and speaking is like having a teacher after all.
Perhaps, when the native speakers are busy you could be immersing yourself in television programs and websites. If we had a daily regiment of 3 hours a day with our language learning materials and 3 hours with a native speaker much could be achieved. However, realisitcally you probably couldn't get 3 hours with a native speaker/speakers because of time zones, work etc.
If you did find a native speaker to help you for 30 minutes a day and then blended this with 3 hours of television and website immersion, could you reach your fluency goal? Could anything more than a high intermediate level be achieved this way? Or does the final goal require total immersion in country to achieve fluency?
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Arthaey Groupie United States arthaey.com Joined 5045 days ago 97 posts - 155 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Spanish
| Message 2 of 9 03 April 2011 at 5:52am | IP Logged |
I'm stuck at high-intermediate or low-advanced in my Spanish right now, so I'll definitely be watching this thread
for others' comments!
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Splog Diglot Senior Member Czech Republic anthonylauder.c Joined 5668 days ago 1062 posts - 3263 votes Speaks: English*, Czech Studies: Mandarin
| Message 3 of 9 03 April 2011 at 11:21am | IP Logged |
CaucusWolf wrote:
If you did find a native speaker to help you for 30 minutes a day and then
blended this with 3 hours of television and website immersion, could you reach your
fluency goal? Could anything more than a high intermediate level be achieved this way?
Or does the final goal require total immersion in country to achieve fluency? |
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Being "in country" only helps if you take advantage of it. I have lived in several
countries, before settling in Prague, and in all of them I met communities of expats
who lived in an expat bubble and never learned the local language. Contrast this with
the many speakers of English around the world who have never left their own country.
Kato Lomb explained that your micro-environment (the bubble in which you live) is more
important than your macro-environment (the country in which you live). In other words,
what matters most is the things that you deliberately expose yourself to all the time
rather than those that you come across by accident.
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jazzboy.bebop Senior Member Norway norwegianthroughnove Joined 5417 days ago 439 posts - 800 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Norwegian
| Message 4 of 9 03 April 2011 at 7:53pm | IP Logged |
If you want some idea about creating an immersion environment and finding out about someone who immersed themselves to a very high degree in a foreign language, you should definitely check out All Japanese All The Time.
I've linked the contents page. Scroll down a bit and you will find numerous pages about the immersion environment.
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CaucusWolf Senior Member United States Joined 5271 days ago 191 posts - 234 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Arabic (Written), Japanese
| Message 5 of 9 04 April 2011 at 2:28am | IP Logged |
jazzboy.bebop wrote:
If you want some idea about creating an immersion environment and finding out about someone who immersed themselves to a very high degree in a foreign language, you should definitely check out ...
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I found the articles that talk about totally taking yourself away from English to be interesting.
Splog wrote:
Kato Lomb explained that your micro-environment (the bubble in which you live) is more important than your macro-environment (the country in which you live). In other words, what matters most is the things that you deliberately expose yourself to all the time rather than those that you come across by accident. |
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Expecting the language to just come to you is no way of approaching language learning. I think the problem is people feel a sort of bond with native speakers of the same language. (Either that or they're just lazy.) Its unfortunate that some feel living in country is all it takes to gain fluency.
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Cainntear Pentaglot Senior Member Scotland linguafrankly.blogsp Joined 6010 days ago 4399 posts - 7687 votes Speaks: Lowland Scots, English*, French, Spanish, Scottish Gaelic Studies: Catalan, Italian, German, Irish, Welsh
| Message 6 of 9 04 April 2011 at 9:37am | IP Logged |
Splog wrote:
In other words,
what matters most is the things that you deliberately expose yourself to all the time
rather than those that you come across by accident. |
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Note the word (my emphasis) expose.
Exposure and immersion are very different things. I'm not going to argue on the effectiveness of exposure vs immersion, but it doesn't help anyone to discuss one as though it's the other.
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slucido Bilingual Diglot Senior Member Spain https://goo.gl/126Yv Joined 6674 days ago 1296 posts - 1781 votes 4 sounds Speaks: Spanish*, Catalan* Studies: English
| Message 7 of 9 04 April 2011 at 4:15pm | IP Logged |
Cainntear wrote:
Splog wrote:
In other words,
what matters most is the things that you deliberately expose yourself to all the time
rather than those that you come across by accident. |
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Note the word (my emphasis) expose.
Exposure and immersion are very different things. I'm not going to argue on the effectiveness of exposure vs immersion, but it doesn't help anyone to discuss one as though it's the other. |
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I don't understand what do you mean. What's the difference?
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