Tuesday, 22 September 2015

Duolingo Part 1: My story

Duolingo is one of the most popular ways of learning languages these days with millions of learners using it everyday. A few months using it is supposed to give you the equivalent knowledge of the first year of a college level course, giving you all the grammar and around 2000 words depending on the course. Norwegian is one of the smaller languages on the site with 182,000 learners, but this doesn't change the quality of the course. It takes you right from saying hello, to discussing politics, dealing with the passive and finishing with a unit called Celebration, a nice way to finish!  I will go into detail about how Duolingo works in a later post and give it a proper review, but for now I will just talk about how I used it and got on with it. I completed it a few months ago now and I found it a great way to get used to the language.


I had done a bit of Norwegian before starting, but I was finding it difficult to consolidate everything I was reading. I found myself redoing the first unit of Colloquial Norwegian over and over again, not absorbing the vocabulary as well as I wanted and just not progressing. So when I got an email saying that the Norwegian course had been released, complementing the Danish and Swedish courses already on there, I was eager to begin!

I breezed through the units, greatly aided by how similar a lot of Norwegian word are to English and the friendly grammar. The website has a lot more features than the mobile app, and I found the grammar explanations simple. They aren't enough to develop a complete understanding of the intricacies of the language, but adequate to give you at least some idea of how the language you are studying works.

For me, vocabulary is where I normally stumble in language learning. I find learning grammar rules a fairly straight forward experience, especially when it comes to endings and things like that, but for some reason vocabulary is something I have to really study to get. Duolingo helped a lot with this, the spaced repetition is a great help and the activities really allow you to see the words in use. This is a real bonus because a simple glossary doesn't reveal shades of meaning, you need to actually see the words in context.

The Norwegian course on Duolingo has a lot of personality and you can really see the dedication of the team who made it. It is full of pop culture references and a sentence that seems really odd at first suddenly clicks and you realise its a movie title or quote. This adds a lot of fun to what could easily just become repetitive translation exercises and it's fun to see what you can spot.

I finished the course in about a month and went on to more traditional, book based courses. This would be my recommendation to people who have completed Duolingo, I think when you finish you have a lot of information swirling around and a book course lets you consolidate what you've been doing and the variety means you get a wider vocabulary than if you just use one course. However, I go back to it quite often. If say, there's a topic on the arts I'll go to Duolingo and redo that unit. It's great for grammar as well; after learning the rules and doing the exercises in the book, I'll do it again on Duolingo, where I find the activities there get you to recall it a lot faster and gets it lodged in your brain.

I'll post a full review soon, but in the meantime give it a go! It makes starting out at least in a language easy. Feel free to find me on Duolingo, my username is alexwilliamson92

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