Friday, 26 September 2014

Reviewing hello talk

This amazing app is great. The translation is a bit spotty but it is a pretty safe way to do language exchanges. You can search for online partners to talk to and speak or text or take pictures . it's like a language learning lab crossed with Facebook messenger. I was really impressed with this app and think it will be one that falls into regular use for me. I found it's the perfect supplement to the pimsleur course I'm doing (the review of which is on this blog).

It's definitely worth checking out if only to see if it's your cup of tea. You can talk to people of different languages and see what time it is inn their part of the world. It is automatically set not to disturb you between 11pm-7am.

I've put a link below but you can find it on the google play apps market.

This is my #HelloTalk# screen. HelloTalk – Social Network for Language Learning & Exchange with native speakers. http://hellotalk.com/iOS.html

Monday, 22 September 2014

Reviewing Lingua.ly Android App for Japanese

While lingua.ly is an excellent app for learning French or other European languages it performs poorly for Japanese. 5/10

Lingua.ly

What is Lingua.ly

Lingua.ly is a free language learning app available on the google play store

Features

Dictionary: the app has a Japanese-English basic dictionary. You use this to add words to your learning list.

Read: This feature currently isn't supported for Japanese (thus the low rating) but in future hopes to provide reading materials in the target language for learners. You can browse foreign news papers by topic and add words to your learning list but like I say this has not made it to Japanese yet.

Practice: a test where the Japanese word is shown and you are asked 'Do you know this word?' assuming you say yes you are given a multiple choice answer for the English meaning.

Scoreboard: keep track on progress including your score from the past seven days, how many words you've added, how many times you've practiced and articles read.

Positive Aspects

  • It has an easy to use and interact with interface.
  • Appealing colour scheme
  • You choose the words you want to learn
  • Everything is stored in the cloud leaving space on your device
  • It allows multiple languages to be learnt at once (with a little configuration).

Where it Needs to Improve

  • Everything is kept on the cloud meaning internet is required to use.
  • It doesn't say the words in the dictionary or give you the hiragana/katakana/romanji for you to learn pronunciation.
  • No support for reading Japanese articles

After notes

This app is good for French and other European languages but has yet to impress me with Japanese

Saturday, 13 September 2014

Reviewing Pimsleur

I've just finished my first week of 'Pimsleur's Japanese' a very expensive Japanese course that people speak highly of and here is my review.

Positive
Confidence Boost
It does give you an immediate confidence boost as you quickly learn words and at the end of each half hour lesson are able to understand the conversation from the start. Each lesson makes you use words you learnt in a previous lesson which helps cement them in your memory.
Listening Comprehension
It really helps understanding actual conversation at normal talking speed, they don't slow it for you so you are forced to focus.
Fun Repetition
It's very much all about repetition. However, it is delivered ina manner that makes it fun.
Quick
You progress very quickly.

Negative

Not Quite Portable
It advertises itself as something you can take anywhere and do while doing anything but I say no absolutely not. Every lesson has you speaking allowed which isn't something you can do unless you're alone without looking like you've gone cookoo. Secondly, each lesson requires focus. I couldn't even draw and do the course at the same time because it divided my attention and made words harder to learn. I made a habit of going to bed half an hour early and doing the lesson there.
No Written Work
With a language like Japanese that has three alphabets, I'm sure you can understand why not having any lessons on writing hurts.
Limited
It doesn't really cover every situation and I know it can't but I really wish I'd learnt how to ask where the bathroom is in the first lesson. Also, I'm not American but it is assumed you are in the course.

Verdict?
It would be entirely possible to rig this up yourself using smiletalk but for the sake of ease having it all preplanned is nice. I recommend practicing this in bed as part of a learning japanese diet. Crunch a few kanji before, learn your alphabets and experiment writing the sentences you learnt in pimsleur.

Saturday, 6 September 2014

Narendra Modi Calls For Japanese to be Taught Online

English: Image of Narendra Modi at the World E...
English: Image of Narendra Modi at the World Economic Forum in India (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Prime minister Narendra Modi (the 15th Prime minister of India) wants Japan to take the time to create Japanese language courses online so that more people can learn the language. He said that Indian languages could also be introduced to Japan, but what prompted this?

In India they had introduced Japanese as a language to be learnt in schools. However, there was a shortage of Japanese teachers to teach the subject. If Japanese was more readily available to learn this could be prevented. Narendra Modi believes that mutual language learning support would help their countries.

Modi arrived in Kyoto on Saturday and was received by Shinzo Abe and is scheduled to hold a talk with him.

I certainly would not object to more Japanese language learning material becoming available, especially if it was free and open source and hopefully all in one place!

What support do you think the Japanese government should add?

Wednesday, 3 September 2014

Get 'Write' In!




Writing down notes help your brain to remember information. You will remember note longer if you handwrite them rather than type or download the notes to read through.

The psychology of memory

The brain is divided up into different areas that deal with various tasks and problems. These may be visual or auditory stimuli or emotion or problem solving etc. These areas do communicate with eachother (for example if you hear a scream you might feel fear or if you see dog poo you might feel disgusted) but specialize in their own niche skill.

When we activate multiple areas in our learning process we are far more likely to remember the content. This is where writing comes into play, writing provides visual, kinetic and if you read out loud while you write; verbal and auditory. By activating multiple areas of the brain at once you create connections more easily which helps you remember it clearly. Listeing to your own voice is especially good for memory.

So what are you waiting for? Go write up a storm!