Master of Memory: Accelerated learning, education, memorization - MMem 0559: Reprise: How to maintain basic knowledge of Spanish
Episode Date: April 28, 2016Reprise: How to maintain basic knowledge of Spanish What do you want to learn? Leave your question at http://MasterOfMemory.com/. Music credit: Maurice Ravel’s String Quartet, 2nd movement, perfo...rmed by the US Army Band.
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Hey guys, this is Timothy, and I'm publishing a book.
Now, this may not be new news to all of you,
but I bring it up because it's temporarily changing some things here on the show.
We're going to be running a series of reprise episodes for the next few weeks
due to my need to focus exclusively on this writing project.
The book is going to cover absolutely everything about language hacking
that I've learned from years of working directly with fluency coaching students and native speaking coaches to see what truly works and gets amazing results.
It's going to be a high-end book with the hardcover copy priced at around $40, and that's if I can keep it as short as I'd like to keep it.
But as podcast listeners, you can actually get a free digital copy of the book if you sign up early.
Just go to Spanishin1month.com, and you'll be on the early bird list to get access to the book the day that it's released.
Meanwhile, for now, enjoy this rerun of one of my favorite episodes from the last few months. Welcome to Master of Memory. I'm
Timothy, and I'm here to answer your accelerated learning questions every day and to inspire and
empower you to learn anything you want to learn faster than ever. Christine wrote in an email,
I'm going to have to start hardcore Spanish once I'm done with school in December. I'm getting
used to married life and setting up a home
and church stuff and trying to finish up school. It ended up being too much for me to start on
Spanish hardcore, but I will begin in December. I read your how to begin in Spanish link that you
included in an email, and I understand the concept well. But for me, what would you suggest I do to
start practicing a little bit more, though in my spare moments?
Maybe I should practice memorizing the tenses or the verbs?
So, Christine, this is an interesting question because the fact is that, as anybody who's studied a language knows,
the dimensions of a language are very, very complex.
You have lots of things going on, grammar, vocabulary, all kinds of idioms, and you're always learning new idioms even in English but if you've attained a
basic knowledge of Spanish depending on how that may be defined how is it that
you maintain that when you don't have a lot of time so you can pick up studying
it again in the future well the way that the accelerated Spanish course that
you've been looking at is structured, you actually have almost all of the essential vocabulary and grammar in the very first six lessons, which I
think you've already looked at. So just those first six lessons have most of Spanish grammar
and enough vocabulary to account for about 50% of spoken or written Spanish. So that's already a huge win. And if you only
focus on reviewing that stuff, you're doing yourself a big favor because you're not going
to try and go and learn obscure vocabulary instead of maintaining the essential foundations that
you've already laid. So what I would suggest is occasionally listening to a short dialogue,
a short native written dialogue that includes as
many of the concepts, these essential concepts as possible and nothing more. Of course, we have that
dialogue at masterofmemory.com slash Spanish in the free Spanish course. You can just keep reviewing
the module one dialogue and listening to that once in a while. It doesn't take much time. I would
suggest listening to it while reading it. So devote just a few minutes once in a while to make sure that you understand everything, but you're reviewing a good amount
of the language, great foundations of the language, just in that dialogue. And then also occasionally
review your memory palaces for remembering the verb tenses, as you say, and a lot of the vocabulary,
although you're restricting it to about 1 to 200 words, so you're only
focusing on the most essentials, and it won't take too much time.
And honestly, if you put even just this small amount of effort in, just let's say 10 minutes
a day to review these things from the first half of the Spanish course, you're really
ahead of most Spanish students who have studied broadly all kinds of vocabulary and grammar and things like
that, but don't really have all of the essential concepts really solid. So that's what I would
suggest for maintaining a basic knowledge of Spanish. Focus exclusively on the essentials,
on the very most frequent vocabulary and the essentials of Spanish grammar, and then just
listen to it a little bit, read it a little bit in the most essential
aspects of it with that dialogue that I've mentioned. Thanks for the question, Christine.
And for everyone listening, what do you want to learn? The world's knowledge can be yours.
Leave your learning request at masterofmemory.com slash question and I'll talk to you again soon.