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Currently viewing the tag: "Immersion"
You don’t have to go abroad to learn Chinese. The main difference between staying at home and going abroad is that it requires less effort to learn once you’re there (although it still requires quite a lot of effort). This means that you can learn Chinese at home, provided that you are determined enough and create an immersion environment yourself. This article gives suggestions and advice on how to achieve that.
14 extra songs to learn Chinese and expand your horizons
By Olle Linge On March 13, 2013 · 5 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Listening
This is the fourth and possibly final article about Chinese music. As before, the goal this time is to expand your horizons a bit and help you find music you like. Music is useful because it’s fun and is a relaxed way of learning. We need learning of all kinds if we want to learn fast, so music fulfils a really important function.
12 songs to learn Chinese and expand your horizons
By Olle Linge On September 18, 2012 · 25 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Listening
This is my second article about Chinese music. The goal this time is to expand your horizons a bit and help you find music you like. You will probably not like all songs presented here, but it’s fairly likely that you will find at least a few!
Learning Chinese with StarCraft 2
By Olle Linge On September 10, 2012 · 7 Comments · In Advanced, Immersion and integration, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Listening
If you enjoy playing computer games, why don’t enjoy them in Chinese? I’ve played a lot of StarCraft 2 in Chinese and even if I don’t play any longer, I still watch several matches online each week, with live commentary in Chinese. I have learnt and still learn tons of Chinese from this and enjoy every minute. As the title implies, this article is about playing or watching StarCraft in Chinese and improve your Chinese at the same time.
Why learning Chinese through music is underrated
By Olle Linge On August 7, 2012 · 19 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Immersion and integration, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Listening, Vocabulary
Learning Chinese through music is underrated. Music is a very efficiently way of improving your Chinese in an enjoyable way that won’t interfere much with other things you’re doing (simply decrease your exposure to music in English and replace it with Chinese). This article contains five songs I like, but there will be much more in future articles.
Listening strategies: Improving listening speed
By Olle Linge On June 14, 2012 · 12 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Listening
A lack of listening speed is what stops you from understanding spoken Chinese even though you know most of the words and sentence patterns being used. I think the problem is generally overlooked and in this article I explain what listening speed is, why you need it to understand Chinese. I also talk about how to practise listening speed.
Listening strategies: Passive listening
By Olle Linge On May 13, 2012 · 4 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Listening
After having looked at background listening in previous articles, the time has now come to discuss passive listening in more detail. In this article, I provide some thoughts on how to adjust passive listening to your current situation, making it less or more active.
Background listening is not a substitute for more active forms of listening practice, but it’s still very useful. Think of it as a way of filling your days with learning opportunities without requiring much extra time.
When solving a problem, the first step should always be to figure out what the problem is. Simply knowing that we don’t understand spoken Chinese at a certain level isn’t good enough, we need to know more than that if we want to improve. In this article, I discuss various ways of identifying and analysing problems with listening ability.
Triggering quantum leaps in listening ability
By Olle Linge On November 13, 2011 · 10 Comments · In Advanced, Immersion and integration, Intermediate, Learning in class, Listening, Science and research
Listening ability is mostly a matter of practise, but the level of difficulty of the input also matters. My theory is that most people listen to Chinese that is too easy for them and would benefit from challenging themselves more, even if they spend the same amount of time practising listening ability.
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Beginner
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Advanced
Vocabulary
Listening
Speaking
Reading
Writing
Attitude and mentality
Organising and planning
Key study hacks
Learning in class
Learning outside class
Immersion and integration
Distinctively Chinese
Recommended resources
Science and research
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