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Todos nós nascemos equipados para aprender um idioma. Algumas pessoas demoram mais para aprender, mas em algum momento elas aprendem. Nós temos diferentes tipos de inteligência, um bom professor vai assegurar-se de que o método utilizado dê, a todos os tipos de aprendizes, as chances necessárias de aprender do seu jeito próprio. Algumas pessoas são do tipo visual verbal (aprendem lendo), algumas são do tipo não-verbal/pictórico (aprendem melhor a partir de diagramas e fluxogramas, imagens), algumas são auditivas (aprendem ouvindo), algumas são cinestésicas (aprendem fazendo), essas pessoas têm que fazer alguma coisa enquanto estão estudando, pode ser um desenho ou fazendo anotações. Na verdade estas pessoas são aquelas que aprendem fazendo as coisas, elas saem montando o armário, ao invés de ler as instruções antes. O método tradicional de aprendizado de idiomas privilegia um tipo em detrimento do outro. Por isso alguns alunos são rotulados como maus alunos, ou seja, aqueles “que não têm jeito pra línguas. E agora... QUAL É SEU TIPO?

Linugox
Tuesday, February 19

How to Learn a Foreign Language


1) Spend the time! By far the most important factor is how much time you are immersed in the language. The more time you spend with the language, the faster you will learn. This means listening, reading, writing, speaking, and studying words and phrases. This does not mean sitting in class looking out the window, nor listening to other students who do not speak well, nor getting explanations in your own language about how the language works. This means spending time enjoyably connected to the language you are learning. 

2) Listen and read every day! Listen wherever you are on your MP3 player. Read what you are listening to. Listen to and read things that you like, things that you can mostly understand, or even partly understand. If you keep listening and reading you will get used to the language. One hour of listening or reading is more effective than many hours of class time. 


3) Focus on words and phrases! Build up your vocabulary, you'll need lots. Start to notice words and how they come together as phrases. Learn these words and phrases through your listening and reading. Read online, using online dictionaries, and make your own vocabulary lists for review. Soon you will run into your new words and phrases elsewhere. Gradually you will be able to use them. Do not worry about how accurately you speak until you have accumulated a plenty of words through listening and reading. 


4) Take responsibility for your own learning! If you do not want to learn the language, you won't. If you do want to learn the language, take control. Choose content of interest, that you want to listen to and read. Seek out the words and phrases that you need to understand your listening and reading. Do not wait for someone else to show you the language, nor to tell you what to do. Discover the language by yourself, like a child growing up. Talk when you feel like it. Write when you feel like it. A teacher cannot teach you to become fluent, but you can learn to become fluent if you want to. 


5) Relax and enjoy yourself! Do not worry about what you cannot remember, or cannot yet understand, or cannot yet say. It does not matter. You are learning and improving. The language will gradually become clearer in your brain, but this will happen on a schedule that you cannot control. So sit back and enjoy. Just make sure you spend enough time with the language. That is the greatest guarantee of success.

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