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Long term timescales for your wish list?

 Language Learning Forum : Advice Center Post Reply
20 messages over 3 pages: 1 2 3  Next >>
yantai_scot
Senior Member
United KingdomRegistered users can see my Skype Name
Joined 4596 days ago

157 posts - 214 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: German

 
 Message 1 of 20
22 February 2014 at 1:17am | IP Logged 
I'm just curious with the interesting thread on peoples' hit/ dream
lists. Have people got tentitive plans that cover the next few years
or longer? Being a newbie to actually following through I have
vague plans and wondered if anyone else had a long term view?
Do you like to have targets or prefer a more organic approach
to picking up and dropping languages

My (inexperienced) plan for now-
Currently: German to B1
From September: start working towards B2 less intensively (over 1-
2 years) then maintain.
Anytime after September: participate in a 6 week challenge for
Scots Gaelic

Sometime in 2015: participate in Dead Language Challenge
(Ancient Greek) and the TAC in Russian (zero to A2)

Hazy on the detail: restart Mandarin in next 2 years

How about everyone else?

Edited by yantai_scot on 22 February 2014 at 1:18am

1 person has voted this message useful



Stelle
Bilingual Triglot
Senior Member
Canada
tobefluent.com
Joined 3938 days ago

949 posts - 1686 votes 
Speaks: French*, English*, Spanish
Studies: Tagalog

 
 Message 2 of 20
22 February 2014 at 3:30am | IP Logged 
I'd like to bring my Spanish to a very solid B2 by the end of the 2014. I'm almost there - I just need to do a bit
more of everything: listening, speaking, grammar study, reading. Then, I'll work on maintenance and slow
improvement. I'd like to be at C1 eventually, but I'm not in a huge rush. Spanish was a big push this year, with
lots of hours of study. Long-term, I see myself spending about an hour on Spanish every day, with a mix of Skype
conversations a few times a week, watching TV series, and reading books.

I'm going to start learning Tagalog in the spring with the 6w challenge, and I'd like to go from zero to
conversational (one-on-one, not in rapid-fire group conversations) by mid-2015. Eventually I'd like to be at a
level equivalent to B1 or maybe B2 in both speaking and listening, although I expect that that will take me a long
time. I plan on spending a good chunk of time on Tagalog for the first six months or so, until I get some of the
basics down, and then I'll probably just focus on informal conversation with my husband and his family, which
will be easy to fit into my day.

After that? I'm not sure yet. I do know that five languages (including my native tongues, which I've been
neglecting this year) is probably my limit, except for brief travel-related study. So Tagalog will bring me to four,
and I'm going to wait and choose my fifth very carefully. I'm thinking either Arabic or Russian. I'm in no rush,
though. I don't expect to start until 2016 at the earliest.
3 persons have voted this message useful



tastyonions
Triglot
Senior Member
United States
goo.gl/UIdChYRegistered users can see my Skype Name
Joined 4459 days ago

1044 posts - 1823 votes 
Speaks: English*, French, Spanish
Studies: Italian

 
 Message 3 of 20
22 February 2014 at 12:08pm | IP Logged 
My Spanish has progressed faster than my French did, no doubt partly due to my French helping me out. I started studying it (Sp.) this past October and think that I will have a pretty satisfactory level (near my current level of French) by the end of the year if I keep up the pace.

I have Italian in my sights for 2015, and I imagine that it will go faster still with the help of both French and Spanish. And after that Portuguese should be a breeze...I have noticed that my comprehension of Portuguese is improving a bit already as my Spanish advances.

But I think that in terms of planning all bets will be off once I start to take up languages from other families.
2 persons have voted this message useful



Fuenf_Katzen
Diglot
Senior Member
United States
notjustajd.wordpress
Joined 4163 days ago

337 posts - 476 votes 
Speaks: English*, German
Studies: Polish, Ukrainian, Afrikaans

 
 Message 4 of 20
22 February 2014 at 6:14pm | IP Logged 
There are a few languages I've been curious about, and in looking into them, I actually found that some of them have very interesting cultures, and I know native speakers of the languages as well. Realistically, I won't seriously add another language until 2016, and I'm going to try really hard to stick to that rule (as tempting as it may be!). The whole beginner stage takes a lot of time and energy, and I think it's best to take a break from that for awhile for my own sanity--I hate having to resort to the same basic conversational topics!
2 persons have voted this message useful



Lizzern
Diglot
Senior Member
Norway
Joined 5703 days ago

791 posts - 1053 votes 
Speaks: Norwegian*, English
Studies: Japanese

 
 Message 5 of 20
22 February 2014 at 6:54pm | IP Logged 
I just started a 1-year challenge to get reasonably conversational in Japanese, so hopefully I'll be at a decent level by January next year. I'll keep going after that and just see how I feel in 2-3 years time... And I'll probably try to go there for a few weeks next summer, so it would be nice to be able to speak it well by then :-)

I'd like to revive my Italian at some point - I haven't been maintaining it at all besides listening to music and occasionally reading some blogs, but it would be nice to get that back within the next 5 years or so. But only if I feel like it.

I also have Hebrew and Hungarian on my hitlist, but I won't be doing any intensive study. I might start studying them slowly in a few years and just keep going until I can have not-terribly-awkward conversations. If I can't speak at least one of these reasonably well 10 years from now I'll be disappointed in myself...

But for now it's all about Japanese :-)

Liz
2 persons have voted this message useful



Expugnator
Hexaglot
Senior Member
Brazil
Joined 4960 days ago

3335 posts - 4349 votes 
Speaks: Portuguese*, Norwegian, French, English, Italian, Papiamento
Studies: Mandarin, Georgian, Russian

 
 Message 6 of 20
24 February 2014 at 9:53pm | IP Logged 
I spent my first twelve years of language learning with much wanderlust and a break of
at least six years. So, when I decided to resume studying, two years ago, I decided
things would be different. I listed all languages I was somehow interested at - that
was tenths of languages. Among those, I grouped the related ones and tried to filter to
the most important ones in each group. For example, I decided Russian would be my first
Slavic language and I'd actively study only German and Norwegian from the Germanic
ones, the others coming passively as a bonus and subject to an occasional basic
activation if I had travel intentions.

I ended with a list of about 16 languages. Again, I decided to diferentiate languages
that were close to the ones I already knew and thus could be learned with a higher
passive transparency and languages I'd just start from scratch. Currently, I'm studying
one in the former group (Geman), 3 in the latter (Russian), but, for example, my next
Slavic language will surely a higher transparent language after I've become able to
understand Russian.

All this to say that I'm eager about starting something new. Next ones in line are
Estonian, Indonesian and Turkish. All of them seem quite interesting. What makes me
eager about learning them is that I feel they'll be easier and perhaps more pleasant to
learn at the initial A1-A2 stage than Chinese, Georgian and Russian that I've been
struggling at for the past two years. Yet I will try to resist wanderlust by following
the chriterion of only starting a new language after having been through all the
necessary textbooks up to the intermediate level and starting to find them too easy for
my level. When you drop textbooks and manage to learn only from bilingual readings and
videos with subtitles, it's much more relaxing and it feels much less like studying.
That's when I know I can start a new one without getting too tired. Now I regret having
started three 'alien' languages from scratch like I did, so I'll keep it at a maximum
of two.

Surprisingly, my wish list isn't exacly growing. I feel a higher wanderlust for the
closest languages. Hindi, for example, is on my list but I don't even think about it
as I know it's something still far away.

Edited by Expugnator on 24 February 2014 at 9:54pm

5 persons have voted this message useful



yantai_scot
Senior Member
United KingdomRegistered users can see my Skype Name
Joined 4596 days ago

157 posts - 214 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: German

 
 Message 7 of 20
25 February 2014 at 12:30am | IP Logged 
I have a vague notion of learning more beyond my big 3- decent
conversational and written German, Russian and Chinese although
these are a lifetime's work on their own.

Somewhere in the ether, I'd really like to learn Serbo-Croat,
Romanian, maybe Dutch, Gujarati? But I feel fraudulent as I've not
managed one yet! So I'm on a self-imposed embargo of non-
German books until I reach that B1 goal or I'd just go back to
daydreaming about learning a language than doing the work to
make it happen.
1 person has voted this message useful



shk00design
Triglot
Senior Member
Canada
Joined 4238 days ago

747 posts - 1123 votes 
Speaks: Cantonese*, English, Mandarin
Studies: French

 
 Message 8 of 20
25 February 2014 at 1:07am | IP Logged 
The past 6 months I've spent a lot of time brushing up my Mandarin. Now I'm getting back into French...
something I haven't done for a while since high school.

The long-term goal is to become conversational in 6 months (at least learn enough words & phrases to be able to
ask for directions). What I'm finding while studying Chinese is that I had to rearrange my time schedule to allow
more exposure to the language on a daily basis. Besides learning words & phrases, I had to cut most of my TV
programs in English out to accommodate news & info in Mandarin.

Right now I'm basically learning French by phrase books & video lessons. At the same time I'm making notes along
the way in Chinese to keep the language fluency. In the short-term will be looking to get the hours of exposure
up. It is like learning to play piano. You can practice for just 1 hour /week or 3 hours /day. The difference is not
only that practicing for 1 hour /week would take you longer to become proficient, you may not make it at all. It is
like if you move to a country where a language is spoken and function mostly in that language throughout the
day, you are guarantee within 6 months you would be able to communicate at a higher level than just repeating
the same words from phrase books day after day...




2 persons have voted this message useful



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