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  Tags: French | Spanish
 Language Learning Forum : Language Learning Log Post Reply
Icaria909
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5582 days ago

201 posts - 346 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish

 
 Message 1 of 6
08 July 2011 at 5:33am | IP Logged 
I've made several logs before, but they usually fizzle out at some point because my
goals are not well formulated and I didn't consistently study. But now I'm enjoying two
more months of summer off school (I go to University by the way), and I really need a
motivational tool to keep me studying until I get back to school in late August.
Hopefully on those lazy days of mine, the thought that I didn't update this log will
shame me into studying lol.

I plan on studying French and Spanish for this summer and beyond, although this log
will mostly document my struggle to learn French over the summer. For this log, I am
going to confine the goals for each language in what I can cover from today until
September 1. I'm going to try and update this log every day or at least every couple of
days with summaries of what I've been studying, my reactions to the languages or my
studying material, and questions about French and Spanish. In accordance with custom,
here's my background with the languages, my goals, and how I'm going to learn them.

Background:

French- I've never studied French before. The strange pronunciation and writing system
always intimidated me. Most of my friends at university are studying French (and German
too strangely) . Besides that, I recently read a book about the history of French
language, but otherwise I have no prior experience with the language.

Spanish- I've studied Spanish for a couple of years now. I studied Spanish all through
high school (except Senior year) and this last year at college. I hesitate to say what
level I am in Spanish. I'm somewhere in the Intermediate or B1-B2 range. In high school
I studied Spanish like how I studied Math; I would try to cram all the material twenty
minutes before the test and promptly forget the information by the next day. I didn't
really notice the gaps in my knowledge of Spanish in the first year or two of doing
this, but by the third year I was still making basic mistakes that only an absolute
beginner would make...

About two years ago I discovered this site and the posters here helped me to understand
different studying techniques, etc. So last year I spent most of my time outside of
class studying Spanish grammar to catch up to the other students. For the most part
I've succeeded. Only now, my teachers tell me that I have an impressive grasp on
grammar, but my vocabulary is lacking. I've tried to study since then, but I feel like
I've hit my plateau and I feel like nothing I've been doing recently has improved my
Spanish in any noticeable degree.

Goals:

I'm going to separate my goals between short term and long term goals.

French:
1. Short Term- Between now and September 1, I want to advance to an A1 level or at
least get a thorough foundation in the language.
2.Long Term- I plan on being a historian, and French is one of the languages where most
great histories are written. My goal is to become fluent so that I can do research in
France and keep up to date on French scholarship in the field of history. Learning
French would give me a big advantage over other historians.

Spanish:
1. Short Term- I want to get over this plateau in my learning. I'm taking a Spanish
writing class this semester, so I want to continue to improve my knowledge of Spanish
grammar and phrases.
2. Long Term- I am particularly interested in Spanish and Latin American history, so I
need to become fluent in the language as well. It would also open doors for me as a
future teacher, so I have both a personal and a professional interest in learning the
language.

How I am going to learn:

French: I've bought several books, but I'm going to focus on using French Now!
by Kendris and Kendris. It's a large book that supposed to act like a textbook either
for school use or for individual studying. Obviously I'm using it for independent
study. Looking through the book, the authors try to incorporate a lot of vocabulary
very early on without putting nearly as much effort into explaining grammar. I don't
particularly mind that because my knowledge with Spanish grammar should help me to
infer a lot of basic French grammar and I don't plan on heavily studying French grammar
until after I'be built up a pretty good foundation.

I also look to this site: frenchmusicblog.com for news on French music. I'm not sure
where I stand on passive listening, but enjoying the music of my L2 has to at least
keep up my interest in the language, right?

Finally, French pronunciation bewilders me. I've been looking at this site
(http://www.languageguide.org/french/grammar/pronunciation/ ) for pronunciation guides
and basic grammar.I don't trust the English equivalent sounds they give with French
sound so I usually listen to their recordings several times and record what sounds come
to mind.

Spanish: I recently bought this book The Ultimate Spanish Review and Practice by
Gordon and Stillman. Just flipping through the book right now, the book seems to be of
really good quality. The book comes with a CD and has references to websites for more
listening practice. The book is mostly geared towards intermediate students but it goes
through the basics as well. Most of the book is in Spanish while the only time the
authors use English is to explain a particular grammatical concept. There are cultural
notes spread throughout the book that are all in Spanish and the book includes multiple
lists of vocabulary that every Intermediate student should know by now. Hopefully by
finishing this book by the time school starts I'll get out of this rut I'm in.


Well, that's enough for tonight. I'll post my first update tomorrow. Au Revoir and
Adiós!

Edited by Icaria909 on 08 July 2011 at 5:39am

1 person has voted this message useful



236factorial
Triglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 6531 days ago

192 posts - 213 votes 
Speaks: Mandarin, English*, French
Studies: Spanish

 
 Message 2 of 6
08 July 2011 at 6:07pm | IP Logged 
Good luck on your French studies! I actually started learning French over the summer a few years back; now I'm tackling Russian as my summer challenge.

French Now! seems like a good book. I remember seeing it in the bookstore and thought it was quite comprehensive. I don't know whether there are many speaking exercises, but if spoken fluency is one of your goals (rather than just reading/writing), you will need tapes that make you talk back.

Also, there isn't a French Now! Level 2, at least none that I've come across.

If you're looking for some additional pronunciation practice, the FSI has published a complete course on that, available for free here. It's boring, but works if you survive it. The FSI also created the French Basic Course, which I used to great success (also tedious, but effective). These are used to train government officials, so you can trust that they work.
1 person has voted this message useful



Icaria909
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5582 days ago

201 posts - 346 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish

 
 Message 3 of 6
09 July 2011 at 5:35am | IP Logged 
Well French Now! was a bust. I sat down with the book after spending an hour updating
my iPod with the CDs that came with the book all ready to learn, only to find out that
the CDs are only used for the few exercises at the end of the book. So there's no audio
for the first couple hundred pages. Maybe I can salvage some value from the book by
using it as an exercise book later, but still....

After fuming at having spent $30 on French Now! I rummaged through stacks of language
books and found an old course I haven't looked at in a while. It's called Complete
French and it's from the Teach Yourself series. The book has three CDs as well but at
least the audio can be found throughout all the lessons.

The book is split into 12 units with each unit containing around 5 smaller sections to
study. Today I went through the first three sections of Unit 1. It wasn't all that difficult, but I was a little surprised that one of the sections was devoted toward
teaching French toasts (like à la tienne Françoise!). Unless the French enjoy making
toasts at every meal, I'm a bit surprised to have encountered a lesson like this so
early in the book. Oh well, at least they do focus on the basics.

Thanks 236factorial for the idea to look at FSI for more practice. I'm definitely going
to be using those in the future, especially the pronunciation course. More often than
not, I spend a lot of time working on pronunciation before I advance very far with
grammar and its great getting more Audio courses to work with. Good luck with Russian!
I tried tackling it last year but I ended up walking away after it proved too difficult
to beat...

I was at work for the rest of the day so I didn't get to explore my Spanish book as
much as I would have liked beyond just speed reading through the first chapter, but
tomorrow I'll have more time to give it the attention it deserves.

Until tomorrow.
1 person has voted this message useful



Icaria909
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5582 days ago

201 posts - 346 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish

 
 Message 4 of 6
11 July 2011 at 5:40am | IP Logged 
French:
I went over another section of in Complete French. I'm almost done with the first unit
and I now know maybe two dozen French words. That's so great because now I know 24
times more French words than last week lol. Although I can recognize all the words, I'm
still having trouble pronouncing everything. Even now, I look at "bien" in French and I
want to say it like bien in Spanish. So remembering all the various
pronunciation differences hasn't been easy. I'm considering putting down Complete
French for a week to plough through that FSI pronunciation course so I don't have to
constantly re listen to my audio to remember how to say the word correctly.

Spanish:
I continued to work through the first chapter. The first chapter is just devoted to the
present indicative tense; so pretty basic stuff. Going over all the irregular verbs was
a blast (sarcasm alert). I think most people would disagree with me on this, but I much
prefer studying grammar over vocabulary. Oh well... Tomorrow, I'm going to spend more
time plugging words into Anki.
1 person has voted this message useful



Icaria909
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5582 days ago

201 posts - 346 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish

 
 Message 5 of 6
13 July 2011 at 5:34am | IP Logged 
French: I finished the last two sections from the first unit of Ultimate French and I
feel as if the program is going to slow for my taste. So, I'm planning on running
through the FSI Pronunciation course. I made my through the introduction and parts of
unit 1 today. The course says a full time/active student should finish the course in 3-
6 weeks.That's perfect because I should be able to finish the course then by the end of
summer!

Spanish: I reviewed chapter 1 again from The Ultimate Spanish Review. I'm really
enjoying going over everything, except I am weary of memorizing all the lists of verbs
they say I should know. The list itself is great because it gives me a pretty good idea
of what I should be studying, however, there are no examples given with each word and
I'm afraid I'm going to not understand how to properly use these words in a sentence.
They try to include these verbs in the exercises that follow the lesson, but they only
cover a few dozen of the words they list. I'm still memorizing them though. So far
though, I've spent more time plugging the words into Anki then studying them... I'll
have to fix that tomorrow!

Edited by Icaria909 on 13 July 2011 at 5:36am

1 person has voted this message useful



Kerrie
Senior Member
United States
justpaste.it/Kerrie2
Joined 5386 days ago

1232 posts - 1740 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish

 
 Message 6 of 6
18 July 2011 at 3:58am | IP Logged 
Icaria, the Ultimate French from the Living Language series is pretty solid. The first few units are a little slow, but then it picks up and gives you a pretty solid foundation. A lot of libraries have the series, so it might be worth checking out if the Teach Yourself book isn't turning out to be your style. =)


1 person has voted this message useful



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