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The Secret To READING In A Foreign Language | Polyglot Tips & Advice

Reading your first novel in a foreign language can be daunting and, frankly, it's difficult! But it's SO REWARDING and in today's video I share one of my best secrets to successfully reading in a new language 😄 //== Links ==// ❤️ Join my wonderful Patreon community: https://www.patreon.com/robinmacpherson ❤️ Follow me on Instagram @ _robinmacpherson ✍🏼 Try my foreign-language Journaling app, Journaly! https://www.journaly.com 📖 Check out my book, How To Maintain Languages: https://www.robinmacpherson.co/shop 💌 Join my delightful newsletter & access my free downloads: https://www.robinmacpherson.co/newsletter

Robin MacPherson

4 years ago

Reading in a foreign language is really, really hard. I am someone who has been fascinated by reading in different languages for many many years now. It all started with Japanese when I sort of became fascinated by this idea of reading novels and literature in Japanese, it was just so fascinating to sort of hold these books in my hand and seeing all of the kanji and Chinese characters all just like running, you know, vertically right-to-left down the pages. I just... I loved how small Japanese n
ovels tend to be, and holding them and I just had this fantasy of being able to read those for pleasure in my own time Now later, when I started French, this actually became kind of a fascination I can't describe how many hours I spent just like desperately trying to become able to read novels in French and the funny thing is growing up I didn't really like to read. It's not something I enjoyed and I only did it when I was forced to in school but now it's actually one of my favorite things to do
and I can't imagine my life without the joy of reading and this all happened to me in foreign languages but in particular with French because French is the first language that I actually managed to read a book all the way through from start to finish in more or less one really long sitting Which for me is really an accomplishment because I am a very slow reader in general and I had never done that even in English and so honestly some of the loveliest delightful moments of my language learning a
nd even in my life honestly have happened reading books in foreign languages so this is a topic I'm extremely passionate about and one of my favorite things to do on this channel is to try to share advice, techniques, methods, perspectives that you may not have heard before. As always if you like this video and if you want to see more of my advice and tips and adventures then please do subscribe leave me a comment and a like Jumping in! So, going back a few years I had always you know approache
d reading in foreign languages with kind of a brute-force method In French it's funny, one of the ways that I found most effective to learn to read in a foreign language was by essentially reading the first five or ten pages of a lot of novels and it wasn't like a crafted beautiful method that I had it was just that I was so determined to finally just get through a novel that I would read first 10 pages and it would just be maddeningly difficult I would write down all the words and phrases it wa
s a very intensive approach to reading but then I would sort of switch I would say okay you know what this one is too difficult maybe I can actually try this one over here that one that seems really nice it would be inviting me with it's beautiful cover design and it seemed so nice and friendly until I read the first 10 pages of that one and I just did this process over and over again. I kept changing books and just reading the first 10 or 15 or 20 pages and that's what happened is that 10 becam
e 20 and the next thing you know, I was reading 30 pages of 40 pages until finally I managed to sort of scratch my way all the way through my very first novel in French And so what happened is that every time I was sort of starting a new novel in French I was actually accumulating lots of words and phrases and it worked! But this is very much a brute-force method and I think that to succeed with those kinds of methodologies you have to really be somebody who has an iron willpower Now a couple of
years ago I started a new series on this channel about reading my very first novel in Spanish and I have to say it was one of my favorite series I really enjoyed it. It's a couple years old now but I do recommend checking it out if you're curious. Now in that series I made one of the biggest discoveries of my own language learning career regarding reading, real time, and I want to share that with you now So I developed a 3-step process now the process itself is not super important you don't hav
e to follow the process but I want to share what I learned from doing it what I would do is I would read the first chapter of a book all the way through without really stopping or pausing for a dictionary and I just wanted to see how much could I understand just off of reading it all the way through now you may be familiar with this kind of approach when people sort of say you know you do this sort of extensive reading approach where you just read without a dictionary and you try to guess the me
aning of things and you just hope that through lots of exposure and lots of repetition of key vocabulary you'll eventually sort of acquire lots and lots of words now in my experience this actually often doesn't work people very often end up getting overwhelmed by the content it's extremely difficult and people end up saying things like you need to understand 90 or 95 percent of the words for that approach to be really effective. So here's the key that is not where I stopped. I read the first cha
pter all the way through and in this case with the Spanish novel I was reading I remember it was very very hard I felt like I understood maybe 50% at best and in the video you can see that I'm kind of just exhausted after trying it out so then came step two where I went back and I actually did an intensive approach on that first chapter so I started with kind of an extensive reading approach where I just read it all the way through but then I went back and I did a really intensive study of that
first chapter so what happened is after I did that really intensive study of chapter one and you could argue that yes it's time-consuming and this is why people don't often do intensive reading but I ended up with a really solid understanding of the context! I knew who the characters were I knew sort of what was going on the first chapter is typically where the author is setting up the story, the context, the environments. It's a really key chapter for you to understand so then I read chapter tw
o and that is where the magic really happened I found that when I did my first step in Chapter two where I sort of read it all the way through and start to finish without stopping, I understood like 80 to 85 percent it was absolutely incredible I went from like 50 percent the first time to like 85 or maybe even 90% the second time I remember that I was just mind blown this is not something I expected and the more I thought about it I realized that when you're reading a book so much of what's goi
ng on it's like keeping track of who is who which characters are what or who and what they're doing what their backstories are what is the general storyline and so much of that context is built up and explained in that first chapter. Now what I have found through trying this out many many many times is that very often when you're struggling through a book and you just read it from start to finish or that's the goal without ever stopping for any sort of intensive study then yes unless you're able
to understand a really high percentage of what's going on you just end up lost and you don't really know exactly who is who what the main story is you sort of forget or you never really knew what the main plot even was and so you end up spending so much time just trying to figure out the fundamentals of this book but it turns out that most of that core information is actually set up in some way shape or form in that first chapter and so essentially my big tip here is whatever you do whether it'
s an intensive or extensive approach or some kind of combination, whatever you do at least take the time to take an intensive study approach to the first chapter because this means that you will know like who the main characters are what their sort of setup is or maybe their backstory what the general plot is what is the general scene where is the story taking place you'll know all these important things so that when you proceed to chapter 2 and onwards you don't have to wonder about those thing
s you have this sort of anchor that you can grab onto and it's amazing how much that frees you up to just focus on enjoying the story and trying to keep track and so that's basically it I think that one of the most important things you can do to set yourself up for success with reading a book or a novel or even an article in a foreign language is take that first unit and in a book that's often a chapter and really take the time to study that one chapter in lots of detail I would even take notes
even if you take them in English or your native language take some notes on who are the main characters what are their backstories that you know so far where did they come from where does the story take place just take some notes that will help sort of be a map you can refer back to all the way throughout the story and I think that this will just really relieve your cognitive load from constantly just trying to figure out what the heck is going on and you can focus on trying to keep up and perso
nally I really recommend this approach of sort of like reading it one time all the way through without stopping going back and trying to sort of intensively study the chapter and then move on and sort of every now and again come back and maybe review those notes what I would do is I actually used to use a highlighter and I would highlight words that repeated so I could actually see over time all the words that had come up again and again and again anyway I could talk a lot about different method
s and techniques for reading in foreign languages but I wanted this video to really focus on just one absolutely crucial thing you could do that I think will make all the difference in actually finishing books in foreign language and not just starting them

Comments

@xxxqwertxxx

I’ve noticed that a lot of polyglots on YouTube say a whole lotta nothin’, but you actually give genuine, useful and practical advice and don’t try to come off as some kind of language wizard. I always identify with what you’re saying. It’s refreshing and helpful. Thank you!

@robynneblissett6510

I cannot tell you how happy discovering this method has made me. I've been learning Italian for 8 months and I felt like my language learning hit a brick wall. But in the last few weeks since diving into a couple of novels, I feel this method is really moving me forward! This Robynne is grateful to you, Robin!

@MrZumo4

That's some great advice! This is actually why the first book I read in every new language is almost always Harry Potter, cause I've read it so many times by now that I know a lot of it by heart. It also has a simple language and it's been translated into so many languages, so it works almost like a modern day Rosetta stone!

@michaeld7319

Hi Robin, your approach makes a lot of sense. I am working on Spanish now and I am adopting a very similar approach. I think the reason it works is that by really studying the first chapter you learn a lot of vocabulary that will be used again and again in the following chapters.

@raffcummins

I would say my biggest tip for people trying to read in another language is to read on an iPad and download that languages dictionary so you can just tap the word and see the meaning, saves so much time. On a side note I'm currently traveling around South America and buying a book from each country. Love the discussion videos robin

@MrsKoldun

3:47 the golden advice

@leekspinner

It's pain to go thoroughly through text with a dictionary and notes, but it's SO worth it! Thank you for reassuring me to continue! Reading 10 pages of each book is a nice tip as well, thoroughly processing a bunch of small texts really boosts the vocab for the future long reads.

@MisAlineR

I'm amazed by how you manage to point out your techniques in learning new languages, and it's so easy to understand. As someone who has been struggling to learn English and Spanish.your videos are always helpful

@krolowamotyli257

Your entire "reading journey" is exacly like mine! I have been struggling with the reading since ... I don´t even remember. Thank you soooo much for that advice!

@nutertor

I have seen a lot of videos about learning languages and I have to say, Robin, you are the best. Thank you for your tips, your teachings, and your energy.

@academiavillage8783

I am going to try this. Thank you for the tips, I am going to come back after a month with an update.

@solea59

I just watched your video on easy language videos Robin. I had written tons of stuff from them. Now I have three A4 notebooks of Italian full of notes . This is my arsenal. Now I'm ready to start. Thank you so much for the advice you give us. Very helpful.. Your passion for language learning is very infectious !

@mateussouza1872

Wonderful Robin. Thank you again for more a incredible advice.

@CanadaMills

I recently discovered your channel and am gobbling up all the goodies you have produced over the years. I am near fluent in French, and am at an intermediate level in Portuguese, and a beginner-intermediate level in Bulgarian. You are now my go-to YouTuber in all things 2L acquisition, as you have lots of useful tips. (P.S. I really like videos like this one that only have background music at the beginning and/or end, as otherwise it can be quite distracting, especially if it's a track that has a 10-second loop or so.) Looking forward to watching more of your videos!

@vjones5646

Totally agree with you. That first Chao you are also learning all the vocabulary around that subject or story. Once that’s done it’s so much easier to move forward.

@annettemcnabb5856

Ohhh.. I love your suggestion of highlighting words that are used frequently!! I'm going to give this a try. I have been underlying words and looking them up, but to hight light them would make the comen words really stand out!

@GypsyCurls

Very useful. I will definitely give this a try. Thank you for sharing

@daysandwords

Hey Robin, Oh man, I know I said this on your last video, but it's happened again haha - you and I are making similar videos. So I was in the library (appropriate) writing a video about how to know whether you're going to be able to get through a whole book, and I finished writing the video and checked my phone and you had uploaded this video with those first few lines as the description, I was like "Dang it, I just wrote that video!" In all seriousness, they are (going to be, when I come to film it) pretty different but yeah, it's sort of happened twice now (because the other thing I'm going to be doing a bit of is reading 'normal' development books and applying them to LL). ANYWAY - about reading, yes, that's very true about the first chapter (or two, if there's a separate set-up in the second chapter, which there sometimes is). Two months ago I finished my second novel in Swedish and I 'accidentally' followed your advice here; what I did was actually read the Swedish chapters 1 to 3, and then the English (because I had a copy in both languages) and then the Swedish again... and then I went on to chapters 4, 5, 6 and suddenly I found I was on like chapter 10 or something and had not referred to the English even once. So then I just finished the book (not in one go, took about 6 days). But yeah it was SO much easier because of having all the context, like you mentioned. I might have to try the same thing with one of the next books I want to read, by Per Anders Fogelström... that thing is tough going haha. Great advice Robin, keep it up!

@angelnokare6906

damn that is a good video. You look passionate, enthusiastic, happy to help, energetic. And the information is great. Pretty cool approach to reading, something i surely need to try as i am lost novels after first 3 sentences. Seems like this would work, makes a lot of sense, so thank you and keep up the good work

@LisaSoulLevelHealing

I like this. Im moving from short stories to novels soon and wanted advice, and this one makes the most sense.