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Subtitles questions

  Tags: Subtitles | Movies | TV
 Language Learning Forum : Music, Movies, TV & Radio Post Reply
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jeff_lindqvist
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 Message 9 of 24
17 August 2012 at 9:40am | IP Logged 
Oops, of course I MEANT Native language subtitles. And, of course you're right about everything else. I'm not arguing against TL subtitles, but the learner must have some (a lot of?) knowledge of the language to find them beneficial.

(Same thing with Listening-Reading - most beginners will have a difficult time using it only with the TL)
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daegga
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 Message 10 of 24
17 August 2012 at 1:11pm | IP Logged 
here is a study I was referring to: http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjourna l.pone.0007785

you have to delete the blanks in the link

Obviously, you have to be critical with the method used and if you are in a similar scenario as the participants of the study. It seems like it is about learning in the advanced stage.

Edited by daegga on 17 August 2012 at 1:25pm

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montmorency
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 Message 11 of 24
17 August 2012 at 1:19pm | IP Logged 
tractor wrote:
jeff_lindqvist wrote:
For what it's worth, Scandinavians (who are
constantly described as having a good command
of English) probably watch more movies in English than in their native language, and
that's with TL subtitles.

They are NL subtitles; TL is English and NL is Danish/Swedish/Norwegian. Because they
want to keep the subtitles
as short as possible, they are often not the most accurate translation possible.
Watching TV or movies in your TL is
a good thing (as long as it is comprehensible input) because it gives you exposure to
your TL. It is possible that TL
subtitles are more effective than NL subtitles as a study tool, but if NL subtitles
were damaging, there wouldn't be
any Scandinavians here at HTLAL...



Were you and Jeff Lindqvist referring to Scandinavians watching films at the
cinema|movie theater, or on DVD?


If the latter, I'm wondering how you know whether people have the subtitles switched on
or off :-) although you have your own experience to go on, of course.

(I imagine that English-language films shown on TV will usually display NL subtitles
though).




Probably a hostage to fortune here, but my guess is that Scandinavians don't actually
learn much English from imported films, DVDs and TV programmes. Rather, it reinforces
the knowledge they already have (especially listening ability, and maybe speaking).




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tractor
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 Message 12 of 24
17 August 2012 at 1:54pm | IP Logged 
montmorency wrote:
Were you and Jeff Lindqvist referring to Scandinavians watching films at the
cinema|movie theater, or on DVD?


If the latter, I'm wondering how you know whether people have the subtitles switched on
or off :-) although you have your own experience to go on, of course.

(I imagine that English-language films shown on TV will usually display NL subtitles
though).

We are referring to all of them: cinemas, TV and DVD.

I believe most people prefer to switch NL subtitles on when they watch movies on DVD. (Since i can't really know
what people do behind closed doors, my impression is based on what I have observed when I've watched movies
together with friends and family.)

montmorency wrote:
Probably a hostage to fortune here, but my guess is that Scandinavians don't actually
learn much English from imported films, DVDs and TV programmes. Rather, it reinforces
the knowledge they already have (especially listening ability, and maybe speaking).

Most people watch DVDs and TV programmes for other reasons than language learning, obviously. However,
saying that NL subtitles are harmful or damaging is nonsense. If they were, Jeff Lindqvist, Iversen, Solfrid Cristin,
I and all other Scandinavians on this forum would have lost our ability to say or write anything meaningful in
English years ago.

Edited by tractor on 17 August 2012 at 2:34pm

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LaughingChimp
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 Message 13 of 24
17 August 2012 at 2:27pm | IP Logged 
daegga wrote:
studies (sorry, don't remember which) suggest that watching movies with either TL subtitles or without any is very beneficial, but using NL subtitles is bad


Why? Are you sure you mean that NL subtitles are bad and not that TL subtitles are bad?
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LaughingChimp
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 Message 14 of 24
17 August 2012 at 2:41pm | IP Logged 
daegga wrote:
here is a study I was referring to: http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjourna l.pone.0007785


That's a horrible study.
1. The subjects already spoke the language, so of course that NL subtitles are not helpful in that case.
2. They didn't measure learning the language, they measured how well they can learn another TL accent.

daegga wrote:
Given the prior work on lexical retuning within the native language [4]–[8], and the suggestion that adaptation to foreign-accented speech is in part lexically driven [9], there may be lexical retuning also in second-language listening. That is, listeners may be able to retune speech-sound categories based on their knowledge about how foreign words ought to sound



And that is exactly the reason why you should not use TL subtitles during learning, you don't know yet how the words should sound or you know it wrong, so you don't want to shift your perception, you want to shift your idea of how the words should sound.
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daegga
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 Message 15 of 24
18 August 2012 at 12:36am | IP Logged 
LaughingChimp wrote:
daegga wrote:
studies (sorry, don't remember which) suggest that watching movies with either TL subtitles or without any is very beneficial, but using NL subtitles is bad


Why? Are you sure you mean that NL subtitles are bad and not that TL subtitles are bad?


Yes, I mean that NL subtitles are bad. If you think that the quoted study is bad or not applicable (which I actually understand, it is for a very special case and not generally about learning a language), I can give you some informal/personal reasons:
1. in my experience, subtitles draw your attention, you are focusing more on the subtitles than on the audio or moving pictures (that would also be a negative point for TL subtitles)
2. people tend to cancel all foreign language out and concentrate only on the NL subtitles (especially if they don't understand a lot of what is being said)
3. you don't think in the TL, your NL is always present
4. it is not fun having to read all the time instead of focusing on the actual movie ... why not just select appropriate material for your language level

I'm not saying that using NL subtitles is damaging your language knowledge. A lot of input with NL subtitles is certainly better than no input at all. But I think Jeff wrote it quite nicely: you need to focus on the TL and only look at the subtitles when needed. If you manage to do that, I can see that NL subtitles might be quite beneficial. I know that I can't do that for a longer period of time, say more than 15 minutes or so. The subtitles are just always there, can't escape them. Others might be able to manage, but I think it takes quite some willpower.

I would put "watching movies/TV" in the same category as "extensive reading". It seems most beneficial to me when I already have a good command of the language. Just some fine-tuning of my listening comprehension, vocabulary acquisition from context is just a bonus. I find the study to be quite relevant if you use movies this way. And yes, the study was not about learning a language in general, but about improving listening comprehension, especially for non-standard language/accents. That's what audio materials are usually used for, aren't they?

I actually don't like subtitles at all. I only use them if turning them off would impact my comprehension too much for the movie to be entertaining (and then I use TL subtitles).

Edited by daegga on 18 August 2012 at 12:52am

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Bao
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 Message 16 of 24
18 August 2012 at 1:40am | IP Logged 
daegga wrote:
1. in my experience, subtitles draw your attention, you are focusing more on the subtitles than on the audio or moving pictures (that would also be a negative point for TL subtitles)
2. people tend to cancel all foreign language out and concentrate only on the NL subtitles (especially if they don't understand a lot of what is being said)
3. you don't think in the TL, your NL is always present
4. it is not fun having to read all the time instead of focusing on the actual movie

1. matter of practice
2. I never experienced that
3. I never experienced that problem, actually the opposite
4. matter of practice

Basically, if you're not used to reading subtitles it may happen that you're too slow and so won't enjoy the movie or hear the dialogue. It helps to use shows that don't have fast delivery like action movies or fast-paced comedies.

The other problem, ignoring target language information, is easily avoided if you just watch the movie/show when tired. No matter how good your executive functions are, they will be depleted and you won't be able to focus your attention on a movie while constantly ignoring a key part of it.
It also helps to have a 'primer', for example to know the names of the characters and try to figure out whether they address each other by name or with personal pronoun, and if that matches the subtitles or not.
The only case this may not work is when you have never heard the target language before.

daegga wrote:
... why not just select appropriate material for your language level

How do you define 'appropriate'.

Edited by Bao on 18 August 2012 at 1:40am



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