Tools For Spanish Language Learning - Teach What You Want To Learn
Process Option 01 - "Write Poems and Post About Insights As They Happen"
Process Option 02 - Check Out Teaching Resources online
Process Option 03 - Write a Blog of your Language Learning Journey
Process Option 04 - Construct a Resource Section Of Your Website and Annotate it re: Helpful Language Tools.
Process Option 05 - Start Passing On Your Learning Soonest
- I learn a lot by making tools to assist others to learn faster and more efficiently than I did. I am making a spreadsheet of Europe's two (well three if you count Greek) feeder language families and their mixing to become what we know as "English". It serves to keep me focused and opens me up to the amazing resources others have contributed to humanity's language learning toolkit.
Process Option 06 -Start Teaching on Skillshare, Youtube, or Other Teaching Sites.
Process Option 07 - Start Commenting On The Language Blogs and Sites
Process Option 08 - Invent Your own language with all the best from existing languages
- Temenia an eg. site
Process Option 09 - Teach a Native Speaker Their language - Exchange
- When offered by a native language speaker to let them teach you their language in exchange for you teaching
them your native language, reverse the offer so each person teaches the native speaker what that person knows very well. There are many advantages to reversing the customary flow as outlined in the following poem:- "Count It All Joy"A reflection on the advantages of teaching a native speaker to learn his or her own language in exchange for them teaching you your native language.
The insights into language learning process and how languages work (which is of interest to me) can be passed on immediately to new language learners as well as more polished speakers, and makes great table talk material.
There is a freshness of excitement in discovering something new about language as it is something we all use and usually take for granted. When related to the listener's language directly or indirectly, it catches their attention.
I find that it is great practice to have to put into words something I just learned, and to do it in a genuine communication session with another person, rather than a contrived "practice session". It is a challenge to have to explain something, and sharpens my thought, and helps me to remember items I explain to others (concisely...lest their eyes glaze over...grin)
Process Option 10 - Check out "home Schooling" resources re: teaching a language at home to children
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