by John Fotheringham
There is an immense and highly under-appreciated difference between being “efficient” and being “effective.” This is perhaps more true in foreign language learning than any other endeavor!
Timothy Ferriss, author of the best-selling (and life changing!) book The 4-Hour Workweek (himself a very accomplished language learner), illustrates the point best:
“Effectiveness is doing the things that get you closer to your goals. Efficiency is performing a given task (whether important or not) in the most economical manner possible. Being efficient without regard to effectiveness is the default mode of the universe.”
~ Timothy Ferriss
Obviously it is preferable to be both efficient and effective in language learning. But what is the current situation in language classrooms and materials? A quick look around reveals that despite a fair amount of efficiency, only a very small percentage of learners, teachers or materials could be called effective. Consider the performance of 1,500 French language students in New Brunswick. After 12 years of daily French instruction, only 0.68 percent (that’s not a typo) could meet the province’s intermediate proficiency requirements! (Thanks go to Steve Kaufmann of LingQ.com for turning me onto this revealing study). I have seen the same results among nearly all English learners in Japan, Korea, China and Taiwan, and foreign language students in the states.
Yet despite all the evidence, people continue to pump time, effort and money into foreign language programs, cram schools, textbooks, and now, online programs that just repackage old methods in new media. It is time that people face up to the facts: traditional, formal language instruction is not effective for the vast majority of learners no matter how efficient or hard-working they may be.
The good news is that there are effective (and simple!) language learning methods, it’s just that very few people actually use them.
Here’s the tried and trued formula that is reiterated again and again by the vast majority of successful language learners:
Get as much meaningful and interesting input as possible. “Meaningful” here means that is just an itsy-bitsy bit above your level of comprehension. And the more interesting the material, the more likely you are to continue listening or reading (and repeating the process again and again and again…)
“Narrow” here means that you listen to or read a variety of articles on the same topic. This allows for sufficient repetition without boring yourself to tears. If you have access to native speakers of the language, you can conduct a simple interview with a few different people. Chances are they will all use a similar set of vocabulary again and again since the context is constrained by the questions you ask.
Once you have gotten enough meaningful exposure to the language through listening and reading, it’s time to start talking. The good news is that it no longer matters where you live in the world. Services such as LingQ provide excellent one-on-one tutoring services as do many other sites (see my recommendations in Learning Tools & Materials). Also, most cities have volunteer English tutoring programs in which you can make potential conversation partners in your target language. If you are a university student, volunteer to tutor foreign exchange students learning English.
You’ll notice that nowhere in this formula does it require sitting in a classroom or forcing oneself through a bland textbook. All you need is quality language input, which is now widely available for free (or at least very cheaply) online and can be carried around using a portable media player.
But one last thing. To make this formula effective, the adult learner must put aside a few counter-productive tendencies:
Copyright © 2010 by John Fotheringham. For more tips, tools, and tech for Mastering ANY Language, go to LanguageMastery.com
Thanks for the article. I've eventualyy understood what is the difference between 'efficiency' and 'effectiveness'. I really enjoued reading it.
Joanna
Thanks for your comment, Joanna. Both efficiency and efficacy are key in language learning, as they are in the development of any skill, but far too many learners focus on being efficient (doing things well) regardless of whether those things work) as opposed to being effective (doing what actually works.)