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Three Month Moratorium from Mandarin

  Tags: Study Plan | Mandarin
 Language Learning Forum : Specific Languages Post Reply
naomi94
Newbie
United States
thepolyglotexperienc
Joined 4660 days ago

17 posts - 15 votes
Studies: Swedish, French

 
 Message 1 of 4
19 May 2013 at 8:10pm | IP Logged 
Good Afternoon Language Learners,

This is my story: I started listening to Pimsleurs Mandarin Chinese, and listened up to
ten lessons regularly. It was difficult and I had to listen to the same lesson several
times over before I could really understand everything. I have two small babies, and
have no time to take a class. I was listening to the lessons when I took them for a
walk. I did this regularly for a few months. In my blog, I documented my progress in
Mandarin Chinese.   I started with Living Language and a few other language programs
(memory escapes me).

Disaster Struck when I went to organize the content on my I-pod, and I-tunes deleted
everything.

I have not had time to put the lessons back on my I-pod. It takes a few hours, and at
night I am completely exhausted. So, it has been a few months since I listened to
anything in Mandarin Chinese.

So, here is the situation: we moved to a new apartment, and in the next few days I will
have some alone time to get everything back on my I-pod. I would like to start with a
new, fresh approach.
What advice do you have for me, as far as my “new approach” to learning Mandarin
Chinese?

Edited by newyorkeric on 20 May 2013 at 2:18am

1 person has voted this message useful



liddytime
Pentaglot
Senior Member
United States
mainlymagyar.wordpre
Joined 6230 days ago

693 posts - 1328 votes 
Speaks: English*, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Galician
Studies: Hungarian, Vietnamese, Modern Hebrew, Norwegian, Persian, Arabic (Written)

 
 Message 2 of 4
19 May 2013 at 8:51pm | IP Logged 
You should contact tanyab! She became fluent in Russian and Armenian at home. I'm pretty sure she did it with
small children as well. I found the LL course a bit overwhelming. So much is thrown at you in each lesson. I
thought Assimil was much more manageable. Contrary to the claims on the box, you will not be at a B1 when you
finish. Possibly a high A2... but then you can go back to Ulitmate CHinese and use it as a thorough review. As you
know, there is no shortcut to Chinese mastery!
1 person has voted this message useful



Paco
Senior Member
Hong Kong
Joined 4278 days ago

145 posts - 251 votes 
Speaks: Cantonese*

 
 Message 3 of 4
19 May 2013 at 9:49pm | IP Logged 
It seems you are quite experienced in learning languages. (I visited your blog; a
lovely blog!) Am I right to say Chinese is the only one you feel uncomfortable
learning?

If it is true, I think you should better first figure out why so. Is it the 4 tones? Or
are you not comfortable with the monosyllabic units?

If Pimsleur does not work for your Chinese, I suggest you drop it or return to it
later. I do not like Pimsleur mainly because a) I cannot take hold of the progress, b)
English in the audio stops me from assimilating and, most importantly, c) the pre-made
course gives too much on my strong points but too little on my weak points.

I second liddytime, that LL might be too overwhelming for someone like you, the
owner(?) of a shop and mother of two. Assimil should suit you if you like the approach.

Good things about Assimil:
User-friendly format
Short lessons (I value these two very much; still manageable when I get busy)
Vocabularies keep recurring to aid memory
Decent audio

Good things about its Mandarin course:
Progressive (might be a little bit too slow; at least better than too fast)
Romanisation included

You can turn Assimil into tailor-made lessons: if you are uncomfortable with the
sounds, listen a few more times; you can take a photo of or copy the lesson you are
doing and have a quick look occasionally during your walk while constantly listening to
the lesson; you may ignore the lines of Chinese characters for the moment and get back
to them when you feel comfortable with the spoken language.

I do not think you need a grammar overview, as English and Mandarin, I would say, are
quite similar, that word order are so important to both that English is essentially an
analytic language with not much inflectional quality inherited from its ancestors. But
if you do, perhaps you can try Hugo's Chinese in Three Months? But I have not had an
overview of the course yet.

Best of luck!

Edited by Paco on 20 May 2013 at 1:34am

2 persons have voted this message useful





newyorkeric
Diglot
Moderator
Singapore
Joined 6380 days ago

1598 posts - 2174 votes 
Speaks: English*, Italian
Studies: Mandarin, Malay
Personal Language Map

 
 Message 4 of 4
20 May 2013 at 2:17am | IP Logged 
naomi94 wrote:
I have not had time to put the lessons back on my I-pod. It takes a few hours, and at night I am completely exhausted. So, it has been a few months since I listened to anything in Mandarin Chinese.


I'm wondering why it would take so long to transfer the programs back to your Ipod.

ALSO: Please stop dropping your URL into your posts.

Edited by newyorkeric on 20 May 2013 at 2:18am



1 person has voted this message useful



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