Michael مایکل
Does anyone else use Glossika?
I reached 30,000 reps in Glossika today and I guess I'm "starting to feel the effects of fluency coming on" as their promotion material says I should, but I'm still uncertain about it's long term benefits.

I even wrote a blog post about it. <a href="https://www.legg.id.au/glossika-review-2019/" target="_blank">https://www.legg.id.au/glossika-review-2019/</a>;

Does anyone else here use Glossika and if so, do you feel it works?
11 lug 2019 03:57
Commenti · 13
2
I love Glossika and use it almost daily for learning Vietnamese. Nothing beats listen and repeat exercises - especially for tonal languages like Vietnamese. I've spoken to the folks at Glossika and they recommend no more than 20 minutes a day. The way I use Glossika is during my communte to work, I have my headphones on and get my reps in.

I just read your blog post too and wholeheartedly agree that it's not meant to be used as a standalone product but it does contribute to listen and speaking comprehension. I'm doing italki, YouTube videos (I love watching and listening to native content), vocab practice and reading.

I also agree that it does get borning and repetitive. There's only so much of "Jill likes to travel to London" that one can take before going nuts. I know that it's really helped with my pronunciation and listening because I've heard these reps and phrases so many times that I'm imitating speech patterns when I talk with italki Teachers.
11 luglio 2019
1
"arbitrary changes to pronunciation "  - I noticed:) I'm not studying it, but i have freinds in Tehran and we discuss such things. Also I often hear Tajik spoken next to my window - technically, a variant of Persian, but the accent is different. Naturally, I'm curious. 

https://books.google.ru/books?id=nSdsnqWpuh4C&pg=PA187

"There is also inconsistent classification of the langauge in terms of difficulty for English speakers. It is important to note that Persian (when taught as the modern language of Iran) is relatively easy to begin with because some of the basic vocabulary is cognate with English and the syntax is relatively similar. Beyond the initial hurdle of the strange alphabet, the student finds relatively simple sentences with familiar structures. Partly for this reason, introductory Persian classes are often relatively large. However, few students progress far into the intermediate level because of the increasing need to deal with vocabulary, syntax, and usage that are culturaly alien to English speakers as a result of the high degree of convergence with the major non-IndoEuropean languages in the region, Arabic and Turkish, as well as the importance of imported Arabic vocabulary. Enrollments in Persian (when taken for these essentially nonacademic, but now common, purposes) tend to fall off sharply after the first year, further endangering its future in the curriculum."

12 luglio 2019
1

Michael, I do not use it. I believe it must work, I can't see how it could not work technically. It also must be boring.

This is why I don't use it: I learn langauges because I like the process but I'm not sure if I have goals.

As I understand they translate the same phrases to many langauges. Of course they are going to have multiple mistakes:( If there were several similar courses developed by Iranian teachers (or Western Persian scholars) this would make more sense. And I imagine they would cost much less. And I imagine they would never become famous or be discussed by poliglotes or be advertized:( Still they would be just as boring, maybe even more boing.

At the moment, the most famous things are made this way: devise a method, apply it to 100 langauges, sell the result. Perhaps Pimsleur is better, but it costs insane money (never a problem for a Russian - but I think in English speaking you have more respect for copiright). I do not think that you will be using Persian confidently after 60000 repetitions. First I don't see why the effect of 60000 must be so much different;-) Second, Persian is famous for... It appears easier at first but when you move on to literary Persian you find that it is much more complex.



11 luglio 2019
1
Thanks Lupat. I'm glad to hear that it's working for you and that I'm not the only one who think's it's boring :)
I believe that it should work for me too, but I haven't seen any massive results yet.
11 luglio 2019
I've started a new discussion dedicated to the subject of the similarities and the differences between English and Persian. <a href="https://www.italki.com/discussion/212640" target="_blank">https://www.italki.com/discussion/212640</a>;
12 luglio 2019
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