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Mwila's avatar

Thanks. I've learned the hard way that group classes are less than ideal. I'm improving my Finnish and my strategy it to learn structure on my own using videos and books (no apps) and to participate in informal conversation cafes.

Robin Nash's avatar

Thanks for sharing! I'll be using this as a starting point to pick German back up.

If I can add a specific recommendation, as someone who speaks 4 languages, it's using social media algorithms to our advantage. This unfortunately only works once you're already B1 or B2, but is how I became C2 in English (it’s my 3rd language, my native being Spanish) while paying essentially nothing and without being near any native speakers. Platforms like YouTube have useful channels dedicated to getting you to those levels. But once you're already comfortably conversational, you can drop educational content altogether and watch real media in that language, right? Well, what's nice about YouTube and platforms like it is that they're designed to automatically find something that will hook you. Not hook you for learning, but genuinely interest you. Unfortunately, I've found it's much harder to retrain your algorithm to another language now than it was when I did it. But having played around with it recently, I think you can get the same functionality out of making a new account and only ever clicking videos in your target language. This is imo the easiest way to get lots of fluent input from any language that has a large enough online presence.

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