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  • If I could just nail the declension tables, I'd be able to speak.

  • Didn't turn out to be the case.

  • Today, I want to talk about grammar and why we shouldn't focus on

  • grammar in our language learning.

  • I've mentioned Manfred Spitzer before, a German neuroscientist.

  • I enjoy listening to him.

  • It's good for my German and he has many interesting insights.

  • I was listening to an audio book called Dein Gehirn bist du, talks about

  • the brain, how you are your brain.

  • You can't get a brain implant without becoming a different person.

  • And he says, I'm That the brain is very good at creating patterns,

  • at recognizing patterns, not very good at remembering details.

  • That's why we quickly forget the name of someone who we're just introduced to.

  • However, the bigger picture, the how things relate to each other,

  • uh, the broader Sort of sense of a network of patterns is what the

  • brain is designed to create for us so that we can get through our lives.

  • And he mentions a case of German, German verbs that have ihren, like

  • spazieren, like to go for a walk, or rasieren, you know, to shave.

  • They do not use the ge before the past participle.

  • And if you get a group of Adults or even children and present them

  • with non verbs that have even in it.

  • They will automatically not use the prefix ge, whereas most past

  • participles in German, ge gessen, ge lassen or ge lesen or whatever.

  • They take a gay as a prefix to the past participle.

  • So in other words, children have already absorbed this rule.

  • No adult knows this rule.

  • I found this very interesting video about German verbs, 19 minutes

  • long, goes into a lot of detail rules that I was not aware of.

  • But actually I use German mostly correctly.

  • No one has ever corrected me.

  • I've just accumulated enough experience through the massive exposure,

  • listening and reading in German, that I mostly use it correctly.

  • And I remember when I was working on a German ship and, uh, the German

  • crew, of course, I was trying to somehow communicate with them.

  • And then my major learning activity was studying declension tables.

  • I thought that was the key to German.

  • If I could just nail the declension tables, I'd be able to speak.

  • Didn't turn out to be the case.

  • In English, children are able to use articles, a, an, the.

  • There are some children who struggle, but overwhelmingly kids know that

  • long before they have the benefit of any grammar instruction, on the other

  • hand, speakers of languages where there are no articles, despite lots

  • of grammar instruction, struggle.

  • To use articles because it's not what they're used to.

  • They haven't enough experience with English to use the articles correctly.

  • So when I read things like, if we don't have grammar instruction,

  • we won't be able to speak.

  • I mean, all languages existed long before anyone wrote down a grammar.

  • People develop these natural rules of how to use the language by

  • some kind of a natural process.

  • They absorb these rules from people around them.

  • The brain, as I said, as Spitzer said, is very good.

  • So, we don't need specific grammar instruction or we don't need

  • very much of it in any case.

  • So, that's point number one of why we shouldn't focus on grammar.

  • Point number two is focusing on grammar takes too much time away

  • from more useful activities.

  • We should be spending our time Massively listening and reading and

  • eventually speaking, even with mistakes.

  • That's where our time should be spent.

  • But a lot of language instruction focuses on grammar.

  • Here's this rule.

  • Here are some examples.

  • Now we're going to test you on it.

  • So a lot of time is devoted to grammar and people are caught up in this

  • desire to ace these grammar rules.

  • Whereas they should simply be doing a lot of listening and reading because

  • it takes a lot of time and the more different the language is from

  • your own, the more time it takes.

  • And I'll show you my statistics from LingQ.

  • You know, a language like Romanian, even though the grammar is different

  • from other Latin or Romance languages, so much of the vocabulary is similar.

  • And of course it's written in the Latin alphabet that in a very

  • short period of time, I was able to start conversing in Romanian.

  • I was able to do a lot of listening and I moved along very quickly.

  • Whereas in Arabic or even in Persian, which is an Indo European language, and

  • it's a lot easier than Arabic, it's hard for me to get in a lot of meaningful.

  • Listening and reading in those languages where the writing system is different.

  • There's not a lot of common vocabulary.

  • The structure is very different.

  • It's not the grammar that prevents me from spending hours and hours of, you know,

  • enjoyable listening, meaningful listening.

  • It's my lack of words.

  • So the vocabulary buildup is the key obstacle, not the fact that I don't

  • know the details of Arabic grammar.

  • So we need a lot of time to listen and read and speak.

  • And we shouldn't be spending that time on grammar instruction.

  • The third thing that I don't like about a focus on grammar is that

  • inevitably grammar instruction is connected with tests.

  • So it's an opportunity for the teacher to teach something over

  • the book and then test you on it.

  • So immediately.

  • You have these tests, these quizzes, you may get them right.

  • You may remember what you were just taught and you might then forget

  • it again a little bit later on.

  • It's not contributing to a gradual development of connections

  • and patterns in your brain.

  • But on the other hand, it's creating a lot of tension.

  • around tests, it's introducing the sense of failure.

  • It's introducing this idea that you've got to try to nail things

  • down, which I don't believe is very helpful in language learning.

  • Uh, you have to let the process take its course, take the time

  • necessary to learn and not worry about trying to nail down a grammar test.

  • So, that's the third thing.

  • The fourth thing, the reason why I'm not a big fan of a focus on grammar

  • and getting people, you know, worried about grammar is that it introduces what

  • Crashing calls the effective filter.

  • In other words, when you go to use the language, now you're

  • trying to think of rules.

  • And in the case of German, I can assure you that the rules for the formation

  • of the past participle of German verbs is not the only thing in the language.

  • There are lots of rules.

  • And if every time you go to speak, you got to try to think, is this

  • correct or is that correct, you have to have the confidence that with

  • enough listening and reading, you will get most of the things right.

  • And if you have most of the things right, and if you have enough

  • vocabulary to do a lot of listening.

  • You will gradually develop better and better habits.

  • And it's far better in my view to rely on your habits and your instincts rather

  • than trying to remember specific rules.

  • The next reason why I'm not a big fan of grammar instruction is inevitably grammar

  • instruction focuses on a limited range of content, a limited variety of content.

  • We focus in on this rule and we have examples of this rule, but every time you

  • look at the same information, the same.

  • example or the same rule, the brain is working less and less hard.

  • This has been demonstrated through magnetic imaging.

  • So you are actually learning less and less.

  • You're far better off to be encountering examples of usage patterns.

  • In a variety of different contexts, in different books, in different audio

  • books, in different podcasts, in different texts, you've got to spread that around.

  • You can't just focus in on limited number of rules and examples and

  • expect that that is going to create the necessary language competence.

  • It was interesting.

  • I was listening to a podcast this morning, comparing artificial intelligence, like

  • chat GPT, to what happens in the brain.

  • And one of the major differences, and I don't fully understand all this stuff,

  • but it seems to be that whereas, uh, an AI model through massive millions

  • of hours of content or text will be able to predict the next word.

  • Whereas the brain, because it's engaged with a lot of, a variety of

  • different contexts, ends up being able to predict beyond the next word,

  • seven or eight words further on.

  • The brain is engaged with meaning, not just A word that has

  • appeared in different contexts.

  • So the greater the variety of context, the broader our scope of ingesting the

  • language, the firmer we're going to be.

  • Grammar tends not to do that.

  • It tends to focus in on specific rules and specific examples.

  • And finally.

  • I'm not saying you shouldn't look at grammar.

  • I found that, uh, this 20 minute video, and I would suggest you go, if you're

  • doing German, and there are videos on everything for every language, different

  • aspects of grammar, it's interesting.

  • I'm not sure that the next time I go to speak German, I want to

  • be thinking of these rules, but it is a, some form of exposure.

  • It is interesting.

  • It's particularly beneficial if you already have a lot of

  • experience with the language.

  • You've been exposed to a variety of contexts through listening and

  • reading, and now you see a rule which hopefully confirms something that you're

  • vaguely familiar with, or maybe have been doing, or maybe it contributes

  • to you noticing certain things when you listen and read, and gradually

  • improving your accuracy in the language.

  • We all want to be accurate in the language.

  • It's not that we ignore correct usage.

  • It's just that in order to get to correct usage, you actually need to spend a

  • lot of time listening, reading and speaking and less time trying to focus

  • in on nailing down points of grammar.

  • And I'll leave you with a couple of videos that I've done in the past on

  • this issue of vocabulary versus grammar.

  • And I very much believe that the key to language learning success

  • is to have a large vocabulary and therefore the ability to do lots of

  • listening and reading, enjoyable, meaningful listening and reading.

  • And that will improve your accuracy in speaking in the language.

  • Thank you for listening.

If I could just nail the declension tables, I'd be able to speak.

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