...At The Way I Speak French, Despite Years of Lessons
“On a vu souvent
Rejaillir le feu
D'un ancien volcan
Qu'on croyait trop vieux.” *
Ne Me Quitte Pas, Jacques Brel
I love learning. This was demonstrated
by my choice of a 'weird' range of subjects for A-level. Physics,
maths and French. The language was a struggle. I didn't too well at
the Irish equivalent, Junior Cert., and really I was way off the
standard required.
To shore up the chasm, I hired a tutor.
We did all the usual, but really it was just school again. I had
imagined that learning would be fun. It wasn't. It was painful,
scary, boring, time seemed to slow down and worst of all, it was
boring. Despite tuition, I got a D
at A-level, and my 6 week working holiday (before university), in France
revealed how little I knew.
"There is no such thing as a bad student, only a bad teacher."
I thirsted for an exciting way to
learn. One day, I happened to catch a documentary on BBC2. It was
about a 'Language Master', Michel Thomas, who claimed to be able to
teach a foreign language, such as French, German or Spanish, in its
entirety and, produce fluency and confidence in just 3 days' tuition.
Not only that, he had taught film-stars and royalty, and even Woody
Allen was interviewed explaining how brilliant it all was.
The documentary maker put this to the
test by inviting Michel to teach a bunch of post-16 GCSE failures.
He was given a week. The result? By the end of the week, not only
had their confidence soared to new levels, they were excited at their
experience, and they were gushing in their praise for this guru of
teaching.
Michel very briefly outlined his method
– as he was paranoid about losing it. And in those two minutes, I
learnt more grammar than I had in 2 years. So I was amazed by this,
but saddened to discover that his fee was a little more than I could
cover, age 19. It was $25,000.
Fortunately for me, and many others,
Michel released his course in 2001 for a more affordable £60. I did
the French course in a week myself. It consisted of 8 CDs and you
were effectively a student in the group he was teaching. You just
had to pause the recording after every question. That was it! No
memorising, mental review, notes, tests or pressure.
There were many 'penny-drop' moments,
but mainly I remember laughing out loud at the joy of understanding
and producing French. That year at uni, I enrolled for a French
course. My tutor was hesitant, as “you've not done French since
A-level, and your grade...”. So I offered a compromise – I'll
try it for 2 weeks, if I'm not keeping up, I'll do something less
taxing. I mentioned I had done some revision...but kept it quiet
about what it was!
2 weeks in, my French tutor asked “How
many years again has it been since you did French?” and that was
that. Her face showed disbelief it had been four years before.
A few months later, I visited France to
meet a friend. I found myself playing football in Perpignan, and it
was terrific to be able to understand the other players, and receive
compliments like "bien-joué".
While there, I popped to Barcelona. I
discovered, belatedly, I didn't know a word of Spanish. So I went
back home, took Michel's Spanish course, and a month later this time,
I spoke Spanish. I went back, and I was greeted as if I was a
native. I could ask for what I wanted and say whatever I liked
really! It was great.
What Michel did was make me believe
that anything was possible. I had seen it for myself. I practically
failed at traditional learning, but with a different approach, I
could achieve amazing progress. Anyone could.
"In the space of two days, I learnt more than in six years at O-Level."
BBC journalist on a radio documentary
At the same time as this was going on,
I was enduring a hard time trying to understand my maths lecturers.
I had finally just figured out maths for myself, and I discovered
that I actually liked it. I had discovered another source of
subversion, a teacher called Sylvanus P. Thompson, who wrote an
excellent maths book. It was from that, and being inspired by
Michel, that I thought of tutoring myself, and of course, doing it in
a revolutionary way.
Michel believed that the teacher should
make himself redundant. The responsibility for the learning was with
the teacher, not with the student. How much anxiety does that
remove? However, learning would become so enjoyable and easy, that
after several hours, confidence and understanding was such that it
becomes clear that a teacher is no longer required. Quite the
opposite of traditional teaching!
One criticism I had of the course was
that the languages he had chosen, were, with retrospect, now he had
explained them, very easy. What about exotic languages, like
Chinese, or Arabic? How would he teach those? Unfortunately, we
never found out, as he died in 2005. However, his publishers
approached professional acquaintances of Michel, such as Harold
Goodman, and asked them about this. Could Harold do Mandarin?
In 2008, I stumbled on Harold's publication. I was so excited. My personal criticism of Michel had
been rebuked. I decided to set myself a ludicrous challenge. Could
I learn a language that was totally alien to me, in a month, without
notes, and in fact, without being still? I decided I would only
listen to it in the car. I had a couple of trips coming up...it would
give me time.
To test it worked, I met up with some
Chinese friends and asked them how long it would take me to learn
Mandarin from scratch. They replied, “Six months, for four hours a
day, then you may be able to speak it.”
Knowing the acceleration of Michel's
courses, I invited them round for tea in a month, and started the
next day.
Within a few weeks, I had done the
'Foundation' course, and was halfway through the 'Advanced'. In one
of those moments of serendipity, I bumped into another Chinese
friend. We got chatting, she asking me questions in English
(naturally), and me replying in Chinese. She knew something was up
after she asked 'Wow, why have you decided to learn Chinese?” and I
replied “Because I have Chinese friends, and I want to speak to
them” in Chinese! I'll never forget her face after I answered her next question. She nearly fell over when she asked - “How long have you been learning Chinese for?”. Three
weeks.
My friends came around. By the end of
the evening, I had scared my partner to death and discovered that I
had a Beijing accent.
I approach everything in the same way
now. I started learning the piano in 2005. After a year or so of
'traditional' teaching, I, of course, thought there must be an inside
track. I wondered how a friend of mine could play any instrument by
ear... couldn't I do that? The traditional technique seems to be all
about being robotic. Slavishly following sheet music, and being
unable to improvise. I noticed that pop and rock stars don't seem to
have sheet music in front of them. What was going on?
I took the same approach and tried to
find a teacher who could expain it á la Michel. There isn't one.
But I figured it out as best I could myself. And, without any formal
lessons since 2006, I have been described as a 'musician', with 'natural talent'. That has given me the
confidence to upload my first video to YouTube... ahem, cough.
"What you know, you don't forget."
So, the next challenge is the marathon.
I only have one language qualification. The aforementioned A-level in French fifteen years ago. So...I'm going to prove that Michel's method works. I'm going to enter nine, yes nine, 9(!) International GCSEs over the next eighteen, or so, months. I'm going to be taking:
I only have one language qualification. The aforementioned A-level in French fifteen years ago. So...I'm going to prove that Michel's method works. I'm going to enter nine, yes nine, 9(!) International GCSEs over the next eighteen, or so, months. I'm going to be taking:
IGCSE
French
Spanish
Italian
German
Portuguese
Arabic
Mandarin Chinese
Japanese
Russian
between now and June 2014.
Hence the quote from Jacques Brel. I may be 34, but...
Anything Is Possible.
*One has often seen
Flames light anew
From a dormant volcano
Thought too old
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