Comprehensible Input - Stephen Krashen is a Genius?

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 234

  • @amiothenes
    @amiothenes  3 года назад +22

    Comprehending comprehensible input is easy, but applying it is harder. Check this video on efficiently applying the idea: ruclips.net/video/jz-bbOVL2_E/видео.html
    Have there been any words or phrases that have caused you trouble learning your new language? Write it in the comments! I'm very interested!

    • @richardhartung1576
      @richardhartung1576 3 года назад

      🐾

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  3 года назад +2

      @@pujanpujan7134 Anywhere! Anything your interesting in search in German on RUclips or the web. I love watching Ultralativ and Karambolage

    • @screamtoasigh9984
      @screamtoasigh9984 3 года назад

      @@pujanpujan7134 also join a German language discord server. Discord language servers are really helpful. Not the generalised ones but the language specific ones.

    • @Chuugokujin
      @Chuugokujin Год назад +1

      @@amiothenes it seems like your favourite hobby is to plagiarize other people’s work

    • @rezagrans1296
      @rezagrans1296 Год назад

      @amiothenes
      I hiyly kredit an'& uhproooWv yur freyzing uv, thu owvur fOrmil skoowil, (klasroom or book chradishinil) methudz uv langwij lurning az •hed nalij• egzakly
      they teyk sumthing wich in fakd shoubbee teechd or deminsdreysid to lurnurz leydur an (sumthing much analydikıl*) doĝuDa*, an'& beegin or fors it an them frum 1sd munth lololo
      Auffiedurszheyn ; )🦉

  • @ngfortal
    @ngfortal Год назад +36

    The way to apply Stephen Krashen's method is to read easy-to-understand books and watch easy-to-understand videos. Gradually you increase the difficulty level; there's no use going straight to a podcast where you won't understand almost anything. When you start from the basics, you understand little by little, it's impossible not to learn.

    • @patfromamboy
      @patfromamboy Год назад +2

      I’ve been studying Portuguese for 9 years now and I’ve visited Brasil 18 times but I still can’t read or converse. I practice every day with my girlfriend who only speaks Portuguese and we’ve been practicing for 6 years now but I still can’t understand her. I have to translate everything into English, even basic words. I can’t learn Portuguese words like I learn English words. It’s very frustrating.

    • @rezagrans1296
      @rezagrans1296 Год назад +1

      @patfrommamboy
      Suhloowshin preceudo`s resa
      Iz •yoowz audiyo book• sEe thu texd seym tiym az u lisin it, hav uh chranzeyshin uv muhteeryil in inglish but dont fixeyd an this urly into prases; ripeet uh short sekshin syklikly--> thu akwiyring hapinz subkanshiyusly (much uv it)
      🦓🦧🦍

    • @rezagrans1296
      @rezagrans1296 Год назад +1

      @nandovascon9004
      Even padkasd kin bee helpful if u slowen thu sbeed an'& fowkis an riyding expreshinz an'& kampownd freysiz that ar mor undursdandibil -liydurLevil ; )
      🐽👀🐷

    • @patfromamboy
      @patfromamboy Год назад +1

      @@rezagrans1296 I can’t understand what you wrote. Thanks

    • @patfromamboy
      @patfromamboy Год назад +1

      I can’t find anything that I can understand, I have to translate everything into English. I’ve been studying Portuguese for 9 years now and I’ve visited Brasil 18 times but I haven’t had a conversation yet even though I practice every day with my girlfriend who only speaks Portuguese and we’ve been practicing for 6 years now. The Portuguese words don’t seem to mean anything to me until I translate them into English. It’s very frustrating.

  • @mendicius_jade
    @mendicius_jade 7 месяцев назад +16

    I learned Spanish for 10 years to no avail, then someone introduced me to comprehensible input 4 years ago and my progress skyrocketed. I am now in a level where I no longer have problems conversing with someone in Spanish.

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад

      eyyyy

    • @kota-kazuya8392
      @kota-kazuya8392 3 месяца назад

      Could I ask what you used to start your comprehensible input journey? Like what Spanish shows or media?

    • @blesseddivaangel
      @blesseddivaangel 2 месяца назад

      ​@@kota-kazuya8392most people start with Dreaming Spanish. They have a youtube channel with a few videos but their website has tonnes of videos at dudferent levels. I have been using it for a month and there's a big difference for me.

  • @FrankKimono744
    @FrankKimono744 Год назад +15

    As for communication skills I learn whole sentences saying them aloud. 5 days - 300 repetitions per day at least. Later I don't need to translate. I know the meaning of words straight away like in my native language. And also I remember the meaning longer than by learning separate words. This method is called: chunking. It was a real game changer in my learning process in English and other languages.😊

    • @JohnTravolta-du5eb
      @JohnTravolta-du5eb 9 месяцев назад +1

      Could you explain it in details - what the sentences, how many sentences, etc?

    • @FrankKimono744
      @FrankKimono744 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​​​​@@JohnTravolta-du5eb Correctly built sentences according to grammar or parts of them. Pairs of words, 3 words together etc. Repetition aloud to practice pronounciation. Example: one sentence (or part of it) 300 times a day for 5 days minimum. General rule: never learn single, separate words without a context as they are difficult to remember and later there is a problem with putting them together into a sentence during a conversation. Best are short sentences or pieces of text like 4-5 words. You need to choose which sentences are the most useful for you and which to learn. May be some sentences from each part of grammar. For example 5 sentences from conditionals, 5 from present perfect etc. You can also use tongue twisters. Another idea: learn titles of youtube videos. A sentence is connected with image and situation. When you learn a new word find a simple sentence in a dictionary. Try to associate words and sentences with situations like in real life. The whole idea of repetiton is to create automatic responses to avoid situation that you think for half an hour how to build a sentence during a conversation and people just walk away because you are to slow in responding. I took that idea from practicing martial arts when they repeat one technique for example 100-1000 times at one go to develop automatic responses and reactions. Similar happens in language or any other type of learning. The more you repeat the better you are.

  • @英語わかりません
    @英語わかりません 3 года назад +85

    The largest reason I became fluent in english was that I watched tons of movies and tv-series with subtitles in my native language and then compared what was said to the subtitle. Only works if you are able to have the discipline to listen first and then try to read the text and not go straight for the subtitle and not paying attention to what is said.

    • @somethingfromthere9777
      @somethingfromthere9777 3 года назад +2

      Could please answer my question
      Does your way of learning helps you speaking without repeating phrases again and again?
      Thank you

    • @英語わかりません
      @英語わかりません 3 года назад +19

      @@somethingfromthere9777 If you can write, you can speak for the most part. What people struggle with the most during speak is coming up with words on the fly and pronunciation. By writing in your target language you'll get over most of the hurdle. Pronunciation will come in due time. Peoples obsession with speaking is weird, they are so eager to talk even when they have nothing of importance to say. Imagine someone knowing zero english came up to you and started talking english with only a few english phrases, you'd probably appreciate the effort at first, but it gets old and boring really fast. If you can't make up sentences on the fly, it's too damn early to speak, nobody cares about your baby talk. Chances are that speaking early will only create bad habits that are near to impossible to iron out later on.

    • @nicoleraheem1195
      @nicoleraheem1195 Год назад +6

      @@英語わかりません I agree with you.
      People are eager to talk.
      I've met foreigners who felt they were fluent in English and didn't need correction with their pronunciation just because they had learned English in four years and had an English degree.
      They were quicker to respond than listen and often missed the point.
      They didn't understand nuances, pop culture jokes from comedians, or internet slang.
      I vowed to not speak more than I listen in every language that I learned because I don't want to be this ignorant.

    • @iuofsdg848t5jgf
      @iuofsdg848t5jgf Год назад +2

      I have learned English the same way, but without actually trying. I never wanted to learn, but once I realized I knew English and could actually speak. It's been at least 12-14 years since I speak English fluently. English is the main language of the company I work for now, and it's not unusual for me to get complimented for my pronunciation. I repeat - I have never tried to learn English. Once I realized it, I knew it. It was the same with my brother; we acquired English through subtitles, music, and such.

    • @iuofsdg848t5jgf
      @iuofsdg848t5jgf Год назад

      Btw, when I said "I never wanted to learn" it's not as if I was against it. It was that I never planned to. It just happened.

  • @CeraziPRO
    @CeraziPRO Год назад +7

    I've started to learn English back in 2009 in a self-taught way, the first thing I did was to listen and sing my favorite english songs with them lyrics, that gave me comprehension to sing these songs in a correct way instead of guessing the words or just doing the proper mouth position.
    Back at this time, I've had many friends studying the language for years in a traditional way (paying tons of money to a language school), then a year later I realized I was doing better than them in all the aspects of the language itself.
    I also noted I've always followed almost all of these explained alternative methods of studying even before they became "methods" LOL

    • @Tamara-ju3lh
      @Tamara-ju3lh 11 месяцев назад +1

      This method has been used for centuries. You didn't discover it in 2009 lol

  • @Elizabeth-sd7bz
    @Elizabeth-sd7bz 11 месяцев назад +3

    makes sense, you learn your native language as a baby because people around you are constantly using the language and naturally you have to pick up on it to join them. so listening to language you want to learn you will start to naturally pick up on tone and body language and meaning behind words as you did as a child. but as a child in order to develop stronger definitions and structure of the sentences you need to go to school and study them AFTER you get basic understanding of said words. but through it all it helps tremendously to hear it constantly from your surroundings.

  • @nicoleraheem1195
    @nicoleraheem1195 Год назад +47

    When you said, "German for four years and still not fluent", it resonated with me. I've been learning Chinese for 3 years and still haven't reached Advanced level (Hsk 5-9). I feel this pain.

    • @TheRedFoxMcCloud
      @TheRedFoxMcCloud Год назад +4

      making me feel better because i've been learning japanese for 5 years and im still stuck at the intermediate level because i did what pretty much everyone always do when they study

    • @jefersonbrenes7405
      @jefersonbrenes7405 Год назад +1

      Me too hahaha

    • @nicoleraheem1195
      @nicoleraheem1195 Год назад +2

      @@TheRedFoxMcCloud 🥂💕 Cheers to the slow learners!

    • @nicoleraheem1195
      @nicoleraheem1195 Год назад

      @@jefersonbrenes7405 😂😂😂😂

    • @nicoleraheem1195
      @nicoleraheem1195 Год назад

      @@jefersonbrenes7405 🥂

  • @happinesswins
    @happinesswins 2 года назад +13

    I'm a language teacher and this was spot on.

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  2 года назад +2

      I'm me and I apprechiate yur message

  • @davidbrisbane7206
    @davidbrisbane7206 Год назад +20

    I learnt French at school for seven year, but because I was forced to learn it, clearly, I'd want to forget it as fast as I could. I can say, I managed that task with honours.

    • @dontthrow6064
      @dontthrow6064 Год назад +3

      my theory is that you can't force your brain to memorize something for a longer period than you are convinced it is necessary.

  • @anonymousnoname3022
    @anonymousnoname3022 3 месяца назад

    Im an English as a Second Language teacher here, I have learned a lot in my training. Basically you need comprehensive input, and immerse yourself as much as possible. You need listen, speak, read, then write your second language. Each of these four are assessed on their own. So you must use the language as much as possible, take risks to go beyond your comfort level, and keep growing. If there is something you dont get well, practice that and let what you do know flow.

  • @kk4764
    @kk4764 3 года назад +15

    Awesome Vid!! As immersion learners we have to save those on the wrong path..keep up the good work Amiothenes

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  3 года назад +2

      Thank you for your support Kaiser! We're glad to hear that my video content is helping the immersion learner community.

    • @richardhartung1576
      @richardhartung1576 3 года назад +1

      🐾

  • @sarahnichols4253
    @sarahnichols4253 Год назад +4

    I've been studying German for years...Thank you for this video!

    • @jennytkpt8439
      @jennytkpt8439 11 месяцев назад

      me too, i studied A2 but still stuck there

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад

      you got this!

  • @RhillEnglish
    @RhillEnglish Год назад +7

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:00 🧠 Comprehensible input is essential for effective language learning, encompassing listening and reading to reach fluency.
    02:10 🤔 Dr. Stephen Krashen emphasizes that language acquisition occurs through understanding messages, emphasizing the importance of comprehensible input.
    04:27 📖 Not all input is equal; it's crucial to focus on comprehensible input, which is information that is both understandable and engaging.
    07:10 ⏳ Striking a balance between extensive and intensive input is key; lean toward extensive input to maximize language learning.
    09:26 💡 Comprehensible input is superior to early output in language learning, allowing for greater accuracy and depth of understanding.

  • @drewcudiamat9078
    @drewcudiamat9078 3 года назад +13

    Your content is so high quality! I hope more language learning youtubers will be like this

  • @iancardenas-spanishbutcomp4074
    @iancardenas-spanishbutcomp4074 3 года назад +6

    This channel is going to be dedicated to Spanish comprehensible input lessons :D
    See you there!

  • @ejt321
    @ejt321 Год назад +83

    You will learn even faster if you DO study the language also. So many people are excited about the idea of 'acquiring' a language by 'not studying' because they don't want to put in the effort. It's laziness and avoidance. You WILL learn a lot with study of grammar and vocabulary. Just don't go in with the idea that it's a grind, boring or hard or a waste. If you didn't become fluent in school 'studying' a language it's because they were not teaching it right. I'm learning Dutch and make big leaps studying grammar and vocab. So, don't be lazy or negative about study!

    • @gabrielgallardo5824
      @gabrielgallardo5824 Год назад +26

      You don't learn your native language studying, right? And no, learn with grammar it's the hardest things, because it's not "real" I mean all the time that someone teach you grammar use the standard and that isn't real lang, I've been studying English for eleven years with grammar and I only get A1 level and that is the case for almost all of people, most people don't learn with grammar, specifically the 90% because it's not natural, only with 3 months watching movies with subtitles and I get a B2 and using Anki now I'm a B2 and I have a lot of friends and acquaintances that know more than 3 languages and all of them did almost the same and when I was studying I went to a Institute, study all day, I had the betters teacher in my country and nothing, but with comprehensible imput now I know 3 languages and I'm learning other 2, you can learn with grammar in the first language, right but when you try to learn others you realize that grammar isn't efficient and your right about we can learn faster using grammar and that's right but almost nothing like it, not because it's difficult rather it's boring or simple they don't like it, nothing else

    • @praisetelesto
      @praisetelesto Год назад

      ​@@gabrielgallardo5824How exactly do you use anki to aquire a language? Are you going from scratch? I'm just looking for the best method to get fluent with

    • @ResulMurad
      @ResulMurad Год назад +18

      If traditional language learning works for you, go for it, but you may want to try this method to check its validity, as for me I have learned two languages so far without learning grammer.

    • @pattyAom
      @pattyAom Год назад +5

      Nah, man, grabbing grammar ain't about hitting the books hard. Use those grammar resources as a warm-up, then toss yourself into the mix. Some grammar clicks with just a bit of input - like 10-100 examples. Others? Well, they're a 500-1000-hour investment. Just soak it in, feel the language, and let the grammar tag along. Studying it? Silly move.

    • @InappropriateShorts
      @InappropriateShorts Год назад +2

      also learning dutch, CI is MAGIC. THE ONLY THING I’d add is when you first start out you need A LITTLE BIT of vocab. I started with numbers 1-10, the months and a few words that I use everyday in my journal.

  • @centilingual
    @centilingual Год назад +12

    This is all true, but it's not necessarily either/or. You can also learn a language using the 'learning' method, at least to a degree. A European learning, say, Cherokee, where nouns and verbs don't align with the European idea, won't get very far without a bit of 'learning'.

    • @nicfarrow
      @nicfarrow Год назад +6

      Dead true. This exposes the fallacies claimed in this video.

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад

      no ur right - it's always useful to know how the thing works theoretically but just not replace it

  • @pinkfurryhat
    @pinkfurryhat 3 года назад +6

    High school japanese taught me hiragana and most katakana and a few kanji. Reading those characters were the only reason i could get by in japan. As for sentences? Anything more than “kore wa pen desu” or “i went to the bank” was and still is beyond me. Learning italian first now hahaha

    • @deddrz2549
      @deddrz2549 Год назад

      Kore wa pen desu doesn't mean I went to the bank lol

    • @jackwilson8700
      @jackwilson8700 5 месяцев назад

      @@deddrz2549 thats not what he meant

  • @richardhartung1576
    @richardhartung1576 3 года назад +8

    Greetings from Germany ❤️
    Keep up the good work 🐺

  • @SistersTape
    @SistersTape Год назад +4

    fluent forever method, mass immersion approach

  • @maxalmonte14
    @maxalmonte14 Год назад +6

    My problem with German is that since they have such strict antipiracy laws I cannot easily download my comprehensible input material 😞

  • @pedrojuglar
    @pedrojuglar Год назад +4

    I can do this for French, Spanish, Russian. I actually did. I learned the alphabet, pronunciation, and reading rules, and I just went through pages of text. Now, I want to learn Mandarin Chinese. But there's no way I can read anything without first learning. I can only listen to something. ☹️

  • @screamtoasigh9984
    @screamtoasigh9984 3 года назад +5

    Fluent Forever book is a really really good read

    • @tohaason
      @tohaason Год назад

      I only glanced at Fluent Forever once, a long time ago, but isn't that book all about something like using Anki and rote memorization? That's the complete opposite of Krashen's recommended method. Or is this a different book?

  • @pedroph123
    @pedroph123 6 месяцев назад +1

    In letzer Zeit habe ich mit dieser Methode Deustch gelernt. Es ist sehr effektiv, aber ich würde eine Mischung mit anderen Methoden empfehlen. Ein bisschen Grammatik wird dir bei den Details hilfen!

  • @ricardofilgueira
    @ricardofilgueira Год назад +1

    Great explanation!!

  • @gooner4a814
    @gooner4a814 11 месяцев назад +1

    a very useful video. thank you :)

  • @albert4666
    @albert4666 3 года назад +10

    Input is very important but unfortunately not enough to be able to speak a language well. I had been living in the UK for 16 years and I think my comprehension of english is very good but when it comes to speaking or writing in this language I'm miles away from a decent level. In my opinion repetitive listening to limited material is also needed

    • @brendon2462
      @brendon2462 3 года назад +2

      I find i can say more the more i understand. So why can't you speak very well. If your comprehension is good? You're basically just copying natives.

    • @albert4666
      @albert4666 3 года назад +2

      @@brendon2462 I'd love to know the answer to your question trust me , the fact is that after I reached a certain level my speaking ability stopped improving despite of the fact that my comprehension got better over time why is that I have no idea but repetitive listening helped me a lot and that's why I think it is also important.

    • @brendon2462
      @brendon2462 3 года назад

      @@albert4666 Ok because many people like Matt got good with immersion. He explained how it only took a short time to speak fluently. He already had an intuition for it. Heard the patterns of speech thousands of times. But he put in 6-8 hours a day everyday. I think he mentioned after 3 years he had reached a basic level of fluency. Katz did it in only 18 months. Japanese is very difficult for native english speakers. That's why i don't get how you're not good after so long why i asked.

    • @bofbob1
      @bofbob1 3 года назад +4

      ​@@albert4666 You might benefit from more intensive exercises or fluency development exercises. For instance, an intensive reading session could include things like summarizing the text at the end or trying to rephrase everything in as many ways as possible (synonyms, switching up word order, etc.). Fluency development could include things like repeating listening/reading (which you're already doing), but also repeating writing. Another one using output could be 4/3/2, in which you prepare a short presentation on some topic you care about, deliver it in 4 minutes (using a timer), then do it again but do it in 3 minutes, and then again but in 2. Of course the idea isn't to say the exact same words faster. It's about summarizing, learning how to condense ideas, etc.
      As someone who has worked in linguistics research, I can tell you that nobody knows how language acquisition works (if they did, they'd have won a Nobel prize by now). Those who say we only learn X way or Y way, and Z is provenly superior are pretty much just talking out of their asses. As a language learner all you really have to rely on is your intuition and trial and error. Hence why I'm suggesting a few activities to try, and maybe find out they don't work for you, or maybe that they do. Anyway, got nothing against people who get good mileage out of Krashen's stuff. More power to 'em. I'm just saying to not listen to any theory over your own intuition when it comes to language acquisition, because on the science side of things we really have no idea how it works. You just gotta try things out and see what sticks.

    • @albert4666
      @albert4666 3 года назад +1

      @@bofbob1 thank you very much for very interesting information . I will definitely give it a go .

  • @Sir_Austin_T_Gee
    @Sir_Austin_T_Gee 10 месяцев назад +2

    How did people all over the world learn each others languages for thousands of years? We need to figure that out and then do that.

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  10 месяцев назад

      i m m e r s i o n

  • @NewLife2028
    @NewLife2028 Год назад +2

    This was recorded 2 years ago. If you haven’t failed completely with this method yet, it’s just a matter of time.

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  10 месяцев назад +1

      mr trump 2024, going strong as of yet

    • @NewLife2028
      @NewLife2028 10 месяцев назад

      @@amiothenes better everyday. It helps when dems lie harder. Nothing like going after your political opponent by weaponizing justice. At least now that Biden is defending the Jewish Left, we know who installed Biden.

    • @NewLife2028
      @NewLife2028 9 месяцев назад

      @@amiothenes quite. Thanks for asking.

  • @yishihara55527
    @yishihara55527 2 года назад +8

    For someone that has been trying to follow the comprehensible input approach for years, honestly it's easy in theory but very hard in practice.

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  2 года назад

      ur right, it starts very hard at the beginning but when you get to understand the language more, you enjoy the content more as well . this is coming from my journey

    • @yishihara55527
      @yishihara55527 2 года назад +4

      @@amiothenes But the problem is finding content that is precisely i + 1. It's like trying to find a needle in a haystack. The amount of work that takes almost justifies straightforward language learning. LOL

    • @victorstroganov8135
      @victorstroganov8135 2 года назад

      @@yishihara55527 i thought that was straightforward language learning, besides it doesn't have to be precisely i + 1

    • @yishihara55527
      @yishihara55527 2 года назад

      @@victorstroganov8135 It does have to be, but it will just take much longer as it isn't efficient.

    • @alpacawithouthat987
      @alpacawithouthat987 Год назад

      I find it to be very easy if you find dubs of tv shows and movies that you have already seen, but enjoy. In this way, it is easy to immerse for hours, and when you hear certain words over and over again in specific situations, you gain an intuitive meaning of the word without ever having to look it up. This takes longer, but I believe it is worth it because it makes your understanding of the language closer to that of a native.

  • @vipku1203
    @vipku1203 3 года назад +6

    I didn’t know you’ve been learning German for 4 years. Although I live in Germany already for 3 years I’m still not satisfied at all for having a B2- lower C1 level because I know I could have reached much more if I was immersing since day 1. On the other hand, did immersion change your daily routine? Did you sacrifice and stop doing some things you use to do just to immerse more ?

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  3 года назад +3

      In the video, I mentioned that I haven't really learned anything at all in 4 years. This is because I was using inefficient routines. Basically, this is my first year of learning German, before that I few words like Apfel, Frau, Mann etc.
      The only way that immersion changed my daily routine is that instead of watching English stuff, I watch it in German, and I'm very happy about that. For the 70 hours challenge, yeah I sacrificed a lot of things for my time, but on a regular week, nah, everything is normal.

    • @rezagrans1296
      @rezagrans1296 Год назад +1

      @vipku1203
      O. o😶😯👽🛸
      Wer yur frum urjinly an' y yu go to Almag`ne
      👀👁️🇸🇾🇮🇳🇹🇷

  • @acwhfamily
    @acwhfamily 9 месяцев назад

    Speaking any language is simple if you live in that language environment for some time totally immersing. Speaking has two layers such as sounds and meanings. You can't learn this you have to acquire it through habit formation. Speaking comes to you just like infecting a disease when you living in the infected.

  • @saltierthanyou69
    @saltierthanyou69 9 месяцев назад

    Look at the Birkenbihl method for learning languages.

  • @Naszeim
    @Naszeim Год назад

    How do you make input comprehensible

  • @yaserhu
    @yaserhu Год назад +1

    Thank you man on this video. I am living in Germany and working and my level is somewhere between B1 and B2. Although I got B2 certificate. But I am not happy with my level. But I have a problem with the method, shall I write even More sentences and conjugate more verbs? On the other hand if we go through your method means I won't be remembering and saying the correct grammar?
    One more point what about writing notes and becoming good in writing? Your method suggests no note taking?

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад

      take notes - output as much as you want - just make sure you also take in German on the daily - vast amounts of it!

  • @HalfAmerican1999
    @HalfAmerican1999 2 месяца назад +1

    Comprehensive input is a very interesting way to learn , but unfortunately I have to say that, we have to give up, we can't learn like kids learn, we have to translate and despite you understand what people is telling you , you can't speak and interact wit them.

  • @EvoGoody
    @EvoGoody Год назад +1

    Of course you have to study. Comprehensible input is also necessary.

  • @shedrackjassen913
    @shedrackjassen913 10 месяцев назад

    My language learning journey has been turned upside down🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад

      get back at it - you got this

  • @bymaem2441
    @bymaem2441 3 года назад +4

    Can i start learning chinese just listening even if i can't recognize characters?

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  3 года назад +1

      Depends if you don't want to learn to read in Chinese

    • @nicoleraheem1195
      @nicoleraheem1195 Год назад +3

      I've subconsciously learned words that way. But because of subtitles, I was able to put two and two together, however I couldn't rewrite it or repeat, but I could understand.
      I think Chinese needs a little more effort though

    • @nicfarrow
      @nicfarrow Год назад +1

      Nope. This claim is largely b.s.

  • @patfromamboy
    @patfromamboy Год назад +1

    I can’t comprehend anything in Portuguese without translating everything into English so I still can’t read or converse after studying Portuguese for 9 years now and visiting Brasil 18 times. I practice every day with my girlfriend who only speaks Portuguese and we’ve been practicing for 6 years now but I still can’t understand what she says. I have to translate everything including basic words that I’ve heard thousands of times.

    • @FrankKimono744
      @FrankKimono744 10 месяцев назад +2

      Start learning longer expressions like whole sentences, pairs of words etc. Not only single, separate words.

    • @patfromamboy
      @patfromamboy 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@FrankKimono744 how? I haven’t been able to yet. I have to translate one word at a time. I need to find a way to learn how to understand without translating like that. Bom dia and tudo bem and things like those are the longest I’ve been able to learn so far and those took years. It’s very frustrating. When I hear people speak it sounds like gibberish usually. I usually catch a word or two which I then have to translate.Thanks!

    • @rafaelcasa316
      @rafaelcasa316 10 месяцев назад

      If I were in your shoes I'd practice with REPETITION! Take a SIMPLE, utilizable, phrase and them grab two glasses. One of them empty, and the other with 100 beens.
      Than, repeat the phrase and move a been from the full glass to the empty one.
      Repeat the process till you have empty the full glass.
      With this method you gonna be able to memoralize the phrases, understand the meanings, and be able to repeat them from memory.
      It's IMPOSSIBLE to not learn if you do this!
      Sorry about my bad grammar, I'm a native portuguese speaker who is triyng to learn some english. But I'm writing everything from memory.
      Good look for you

    • @patfromamboy
      @patfromamboy 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@rafaelcasa316 I read the same Duolingo story over 5000 times but I still had to translate everything into English each time I read it. I wasn’t trying to memorize it though. Portuguese words don’t mean anything to me until I translate them for some reason. I recognize words as words that I know but they don’t create the images and ideas like English words do until I translate them. Thanks a lot for the help, I appreciate it.

    • @patfromamboy
      @patfromamboy 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@rafaelcasa316 onde você mora? Minha ex namorada mora em Santos e minha namorada mora em Fortaleza.

  • @colinlyne7399
    @colinlyne7399 Год назад +1

    We didn’t study grammar and vocabulary when we learned to speak our native language. Indeed, we didn’t know anything about the language until we went to school, by which time, we used our speech and hearing to learn about grammar and vocabulary! Not at all needed!

  • @YatinVadehra
    @YatinVadehra Год назад +1

    Good video

    • @Chuugokujin
      @Chuugokujin Год назад

      He literally copied word for word what another RUclipsr said

    • @YatinVadehra
      @YatinVadehra Год назад

      @@Chuugokujin who?

  • @stevencarr4002
    @stevencarr4002 7 месяцев назад +1

    Stephen Krashen has a famous video , using teaching the German language to introduce the concept of 'comprehensible input' to an expectant world.
    He draws a circle, and then draws a nose on it, and says 'die Nase'.
    He points to his head and says 'Kopf'.
    He writes the symbol '2' and then says 'Zwei'.
    Allegedly, this is 'comprehensible input'.... I beg to differ.
    How in the world is that not the very definition of explicit instruction, when Duolingo showing you a picture of an apple with the words 'La manzana' underneath is held up as an exemplar of explicit instruction?

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад

      it is though an example of explicit instruction - double it too when you hear it spoken at the same time

  • @Giacomo-py4wj
    @Giacomo-py4wj 6 месяцев назад

    Where do you find comprehensible input for arab and japanese?

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад

      I'm not sure - but there are many docs to help you. They list off a bunch of materials, try looking at language-specific refold docs

  • @laurabernay
    @laurabernay Год назад

    How does this method DIRECTLY help with writing in the language you are learning??

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  10 месяцев назад

      output will eventually get sorted out

  • @nicedog1
    @nicedog1 8 месяцев назад +14

    Don't learn vocabulary, don't learn grammar, don't look words up! In the end it will just be don't do anything, in fact don't bother at all.

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад +3

      it'll be easier than starting, wouldn't it

    • @doow-nict-port
      @doow-nict-port 3 месяца назад +1

      Yeah, with comprehensible input after thousands of hours, we will acquire language

    • @nicedog1
      @nicedog1 3 месяца назад +1

      @@doow-nict-port Comprehensible input is vital but not at the expense of everything else.

  • @lucccar
    @lucccar 11 месяцев назад

    the video content actually starts at 4:15

  • @vincentlashley9449
    @vincentlashley9449 Год назад

    Jt321 I totally agree

  • @DEUTSCH-kurzundknackig
    @DEUTSCH-kurzundknackig 6 месяцев назад

    Wie sieht's heute mit deinem Deutsch aus? Hat alles geklappt!

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад +1

      hoffentlich zeige ich euch das in naher Zeit

  • @dylanv1994use
    @dylanv1994use Год назад +1

    I am teaching Spanish. How can I apply comprenhensible input to my lessons? I want my students to read in Spanish after we master the pronunciation, but I would like to know more ideas about how to add comprehensible input to my lessons. I teach one to one lessons (online).
    Thank you so much in advance!

  • @davidbrisbane7206
    @davidbrisbane7206 Год назад +2

    Don't study a language. Let it study you!

  • @GOODDANY007
    @GOODDANY007 Год назад +5

    Input works 100%. It allows you to master a language in a year with ease.

    • @nicfarrow
      @nicfarrow Год назад +3

      Present some documentation, definitions and examples or withdraw this claim. It is utterly without merit.

  • @md88kg
    @md88kg 3 месяца назад

    Besides native speakers, no-one can really lörn görman, unless your name be Genius.
    This is a polyglot and native German speaker talking to U.

  • @nkazmi8203
    @nkazmi8203 Год назад +1

    a nice summary of Stephen Krashen's video, but there is nothing new or original here

    • @Danpungip
      @Danpungip 21 день назад

      He plagiarized another youtuber

  • @davidbrisbane7206
    @davidbrisbane7206 Год назад +2

    Well known does not mean right!

  • @davidbrisbane7206
    @davidbrisbane7206 Год назад +5

    Maybe we should just replace all language with graphic novels 😂🤣😂🤣.

  • @janolszewski5068
    @janolszewski5068 11 месяцев назад +1

    I think that you don't understand. Input is terrible to memorize but excellent to retrieve. Combine them two wisely

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  10 месяцев назад

      huuuhhhh whaa

    • @janolszewski5068
      @janolszewski5068 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@amiothenes yeah. It's basic knowledge of how the memory work. Haven't you heard that when you learn actively you need to revise a word in different context 5-6 times to transfer it to the LTM and passively you have to encounter it 20-50 times. Btw good luck learning a language from b2 to C1 level using Krashen method. When you surpass 4000 most common words, the word's frequency is 14 times in 1 milion word. And at about 7k words we talk about the frequency of 7 times in 1 milion words. Let's add more facts for you to understand it forever. The average book has 400 000 words. So in order to revise a word from c1 level 7 times you need to read 2,5 book. But it's only 7 revisions, where are the 25-50? Yeah you need to read 4-7 book to learn a word. That's hillarous. Don't follow mindlessly krashen's method, because when you dive into the memory field, you will find out that this method is bullshit.

    • @JapanischErfahren
      @JapanischErfahren Месяц назад

      ​@@janolszewski5068Very true.

  • @diamondkingdiamond6289
    @diamondkingdiamond6289 3 года назад +6

    3:54 this is simply not true especially if you are using an immersion method such as ajjat or refold. The reason these methods work so well is that they include active study (learning) with the combination of immersion (acquisition). Furthermore, in my experience and as with with Matts, you do not need comprehensible input. At the beginning I listened to content with 10% comprehensibility but due to me doing anki and getting a lot of listening practice, this percentage gradually rose until I could understand most of the stuff being said.

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  3 года назад +4

      Right, at the beginning there is little of anything that is comprehensible. Building one's repertoire of words through Anki is a good way to give oneself a little boost through the first few stages, and even until fluency. I agree that active study also needs to be implemented.

  • @anshupandey3582
    @anshupandey3582 2 месяца назад

    Can you learn Russian with this?

  • @OxysLokiMoros
    @OxysLokiMoros Год назад +1

    You don't want to read Goethe... believe me, I am German and that's not funny... It's old German and contains a lot of "fillers"... You could try Faust but stay away from Die Leiden des jungen Werthers...😅

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  10 месяцев назад +1

      yeaaaa looks awful

  • @davidbrisbane7206
    @davidbrisbane7206 Год назад

    So you espoused an inexactitude about how long you were studying German and now we should credit you?

  • @Dan.50
    @Dan.50 11 месяцев назад

    Learn how before you learn why.

  • @peachy7776
    @peachy7776 11 месяцев назад

    unfortunately comprehensible input doesnt help for comprehensible output...

  • @smrtzttspanishenglishtutor67
    @smrtzttspanishenglishtutor67 Месяц назад

    Biased title. I was expecting to hear accurate, professional and well established literature from Stephen Krashen. This is just bla, bla, bla. Thanks though.

  • @Danpungip
    @Danpungip 21 день назад

    Please don’t plagiarize other people

  • @alanwhiplington5504
    @alanwhiplington5504 Год назад +1

    Unfortunately, the presenter makes just too many English mistakes. He could at least have checked the grammar before reading out the script.

  • @azzadazza3082
    @azzadazza3082 7 месяцев назад

    You sound like Omar Rudburg

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад

      i checked it out - you're not wrong :0

  • @nicfarrow
    @nicfarrow Год назад +3

    Yeah, yeah, yeah. Krashen, Krashen, Krashen. Zzzzz. I have yet to meet anyone who learned - Oh! ... ACQUIRED a language through input only, no matter how magically, finely tuned, the input. Lots of talk - no substance.
    Also, when the gap between language families is so very distant as say, German and Japanese, ha! Not a chance, but for a tiny section of the population with some particular learning, sorry, acquiring, super-power.
    Don't believe it.

    • @tohaason
      @tohaason Год назад +3

      I most definitely learned English that way, looking back I found retrospectively that I had unintentionally implemented Krashen's method almost to the letter. I learned English almost entirely by reading, and I never used a dictionary or stopped to look things up. But the thing is - I wasn't trying to learn English. I was trying to get at the content of what I was reading.
      Much later I learned enough of another language to be able to live in that country by, again, reading things of interest. I had previously tried a traditional course and learned absolutely zero.
      When it comes to Japanese I can't learn by that method - there's no way of reading Japanese unless you already know Japanese - so I didn't get very far for years. But now that I've found a good "input method" for audio, with Japanese transcription, I'm starting to read much better and things are finally opening up.

    • @amiothenes
      @amiothenes  4 месяца назад

      You can always bridge this by having some resemblance of Krashen's theories but also actively studying grammar as ppl say