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Good choices

February 26, 2021 By Daniel Leave a Comment

Buondì.

Before beginning this article, I replied to an email from a former student of mine from ten or more years ago – an Italian girl, who needed to pass an exam so she could study at an American college.

She’s no longer a girl, has been back in Italy for years, and is now mom to a young child. She and her husband speak English with the kid and, so far so good, she writes that the little one is happier speaking English (the US version, presumably) than Italian.

But now she’s wondering how to proceed – the local (Italian) public school? Or an expensive bilingual alternative?

There are pros and cons to each, of course. Italian public schools aren’t renowned for the quality of their English lessons, though they’re better than they were.

And yet the private alternative is a major investment of cash. Worse, by NOT sending her child to the local schools, what might they be losing out on?

Involvement in the local community, for example. The kid having friends who live nearby. And two really important things – if the little girl doesn’t start in the Italian education system, with all its flaws, she’ll find it harder to do so at some future point, if the private school alternatives become unaffordable, or aren’t suitable. And after all, the child is Italian, so would presumably benefit from studying IN Italian, even though the system isn’t perfect. From school you get ‘cultural knowledge’, both the official sort and the unofficial…

I reassured the mother that she already made the right choice, several years back when the little girl was a newborn – to speak to her in English, to create an ADDITIONAL language community in her very own home. It’s worked out well, by all accounts. The family seems to feel good about it, and the results have been what they hoped for.

So if it isn’t broken, why fix it? Go for the obvious, and cheaper, option of the local public school, I suggested, and appreciate all the benefits that her child, any child, can derive from that. My kids have done OK, I reassured her. They’re bilingual, were successful in the Italian education system, despite its flaws, and they have a bright, post-pandemic future! Fingers crossed!

Choice 1, decide to speak English at home with your baby. Choice 2, don’t deny the kid the chance to grow up in another language community, too, the one outside the family home. Support the child with her (future) schoolwork, but provide lots of English input – so films, games, family conversations – as well.

The result? Likely it’ll work out as the parents are hoping for. Their daughter will have the priceless advantage of being bilingual, which will give her confidence, and bring opportunities that her peers may not so easily take advantage of.

Good choices can be ‘good’ in the sense they result in some additional benefit but without necessarily imposing a corresponding cost, whether in terms of money, time, or results.

Bad choices may be ‘bad’ because they don’t lead to a successful outcome, or because they impose unsustainable demands on your finances, or time, or motivation.

Some options will be ‘good’ or ‘bad’ according to the circumstances, which will, of course, differ from person to person. Studying at a college in the USA I assume worked out well for my former student, and put her in the position to pass the benefits on to her baby.

Whereas for my kids, it would have been unaffordable, perhaps offer less benefit (they were/are already bilingual), and would have cost them the chance to profit from the occasional bright spots in the Italian education system.

One of my daughters is at medical school now. Club members in the USA might be interested to hear that the tuition fees are means-tested according to the parents’ income (mine is low as I spend too much time writing articles for free), with the result that we’re paying just a few hundred euros a year for the privilege of one day having a ‘medico in famiglia’. Students at her university travel for free on public transport, and (when there’s no pandemic) eat subsidised three-course meals in the student canteen for the equivalent of just a couple of dollars.

Turning to your choices, re. learning Italian…

The ‘good’ ones, remember, will ‘cost’ you little, pay back more, and ideally, reinforce each other, so the cumulative benefit is greater.

Another feature of ‘good’ choices is that, like good investments, they’ll pay off more the longer they are maintained. It might matter little which book, or course, or app, or technique you adopt right now.

But what will certainly matter is that, whatever you do, you establish a HABIT of doing it, a habit that’s not difficult or costly to maintain, something that motivates rather than demotivates.

And that, every now and then, you review your decisions to ensure that your choices are still appropriate to the changing situation. You may, for instance, begin with Duolingo. Continuing with it after the first few months, though, without verifiying whether there might or might not be other, more valid, alternatives, would be doing yourself a disfavor.

For me, using the language, not just studying it, is the key. Like the little Italian girl who speaks English with her mom and dad. And who will, within a year or two, be chatting away like crazy in Italian with a horde of little ‘amici’.

People tell me that they’ll study Italian first (all those verb conjugations, all those tenses!), then use it later on, when they’re ‘ready’. Or they’ll do both at the same time, but with the emphasis on studying, as they have so much still to learn, and of course, they’re in a hurry to improve…

My approach in the last few years has been the opposite. Not because it’s the best way for everyone, necessarily, but because it works for me, adult male, interested in the world around me, not particularly turned on by grammar books.

As far as possible, I try to read and listen to the language (newspaper apps, live radio), and practice speaking it with native speakers.

I’m aware that, given the passing of a certain quantity of time, reading an article in a newspaper, getting the gist of a news broadcast, or moaning about taxes to my teacher, will get easier, more familiar, less intimidating, more profitable, and more fun!

I chose and choose the back-to-front way, knowing that, when the benefits come, they will amplify each other. The reading helps with the listening, which helps with the speaking, which is motivating. And the cycle begins again, the wheel turns.

I read this morning that the Spanish former-king has just had to pay a ton of back taxes, so expect to hear it mentioned on the lunchtime news, but won’t be discussing it in this afternoon’s conversation lesson because my Mexican teacher won’t be interested and because, in any case, I’ll be busy flirting and making jokes.

Only lessons, especially if the focus was grammar, would have predictable, and not necessarily very positive, results. But spending my time reading, listening, and chatting, even if it retards my progress with grammar structures? These three decisions to do things (read, listen, speak), and one decision not to do something, will, in the medium-to-long term, complement each other and propel me towards the point at which I’m comfortably doing what matters, at least to me.

A year or so after starting Spanish, my grammar is not that much better than when I began. But I can get the gist of many articles in El Pais; I’m familiar with the anchors on the lunchtime radio news program, their names and voices, and can understand at least some of what they’re saying; and my weekly thirty-minute conversation lessons are something I look forward to, rather than dread.

Want to be bilingual, but can’t afford (in money, in time, in lost opportunities) a bilingual school, or to immerse yourself entirely in the new language?

Like the mom deciding for her daughter: choose the affordable, sustainable, motivating options.

A lunedì.

Last chance!

A final reminder about this week’s HALF PRICE ‘easy reader’ ebook, the C1 (advanced) -level ‘La commediante‘.

Lucrezia is a young prostitute, whose real passion is show business! And because a troupe of players is in town, the local priest is going to have to wait a little longer to see her. Instead of working this afternoon, she’ll get dressed and go down to the piazza to see the show (for the third time!)

Buy the full version, just £3.99 this week! | FREE Sample Chapter (.pdf) | Catalog

P.S.

Thursday’s FREE bulletin of ‘easy’ Italian news is ready for you to read/listen to.

I haven’t yet, but I’m definitely going to.

Today!

The tide’s in

February 24, 2021 By Daniel Leave a Comment

Buondì.

The company that is bulk-emailing you this article, runs the website, commissions and sells the many ebooks for learning Italian, and organises one-to-one online lessons for a lot of you, too, has its registered office in a small British seaside town.

Not its HQ, though. There isn’t one. Like a lot of companies these days, we’re online, working from wherever we may find ourselves.

EasyItalianNews.com for example, another of the company’s projects, is written by Italian freelancers, some of whom are in Italy and some not, formatted in Scotland, and read/listened to wherever its nearly nine thousand subscribers find themselves, mostly in the English-speaking world, so Britian, the USA, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and so on.

If you’d like to berate the editor, or gift the team a nice bottle of malt whisky for having done so much to help you with your Italian, don’t bother knocking at the door of the company’s registered office. All you’ll find there are the various files and folders that companies registered in England are obliged to make available (share registers, etc.)

Moreover, Perranporth, England is a hell of a long way from just about everywhere. So it’s probably not worth a five-hour drive from the London airports just to shake our hands, even if we happened to be there, which we mostly don’t.

Nevertheless, Cornwall is a famously beautiful part of the Britain, and our obligatory company red tape bits and pieces are deposited for the world’s inspection in a small seaside town, in a former tin-mining area, on a rugged coast, looking out over the wild and windy Atlantic Ocean.

Surf out far enough from the beach, heading north-west, and you’ll hit the Republic of Ireland. Or follow the sun, due west, and with a lot of luck you’ll wash up on the coast of the Canadian Province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

Talking of beaches (Italians cannot say that word…), as a small child I got lost on Perranporth’s. It’s a long story so… But oh well, if you insist.

So that summer’s day, sometime in the early nineteen-seventies, the tide was out a very, very long way. But that didn’t put us off. I followed my two older cousins for what felt like miles, across the golden sands, to where the distant waves were. What excitement!

After a while getting rather cold spashing in the Atlantic, I abandoned my companions, who were still having a wild time in the crashing waves, and turned around to retrace my steps back up the beach, hoping for a warm towel, and maybe an icecream…

Only to be horrified to see that the beach was six miles long and had a million people on it! This distant but colorful mass of humanity was, on closer inspection, made up of innumerable families not much different from mine, all sheltering behind windbreaks or under towels. And there were no recognisable landmarks whatsoever! Just pink-skinned happy people in bathing costumes, as far as the eye could see.

In my memory, I wandered tearfully, later rather hysterically, through that beach-ball throwing, cricket playing mass of people for hours, possibly even days. Until eventually, without realising it, I stumbled, quite by accident, on my kin, long after having given up hope of ever doing so.

Amazingly, my mother and father seemed quite unaware that I’d even been lost to them, then recovered again only by pure chance.

To get to the point, though: Perranporth beach is ENORMOUS when the tide’s out. But when the tide has come all the way in, which happens every twelve hours and twenty-five minutes apparently, there’s basically no beach left at all. Just cliffs, stretching for miles on both sides, and a car park full of chilly but happy tourists, busy eating chips from styrofoam trays, watched by hungry-looking gulls readying themselves to swoop on the unwary.

Oh, was that the point, you’re asking? One moment, please. It’s coming. The tide is a metaphor, obviously.

It’s a force of nature, inexplicable to many of us, that changes everything. The regular rhythm (finally learnt to spell that word after 53 years!) of the lunar day. Beach, no beach (son of a…). Windbreak-sheltered masses strung out for kilometres, then nothing but a carpark full of chip-eaters.

And the metaphor is for? Well, website traffic, evidently.

It ebbs and flows like the ocean, coming in, almost enough to drown us, then going away leaving nothing but golden sand. It’s driven by the immense but distant force of  search engines, particularly Google, which isn’t 384,400 km away, but might as well be. See?

All this to say that, right now, the tide is IN and the club website stats show we are wading up to our thighs in beginners or near-beginners, chip wrappers and lost beach shoes.

Where are they all coming from, you might ask?

And I would explain that it probably isn’t that there are more beginners than usual (though who knows, perhaps the pandemic…), but that the influence of the search engine, even though it’s orbiting at such an incredible distance, sort of ‘bulges up’ the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, and then ‘lets it go’ again,  every six hours and twelve point five minutes, the effect of which is to wash the drifting masses up onto our shores, then drain them all away again not long after.

So quickly, then: welcome beginners (assuming you happen to be reading this, before scratching your heads and hitting the unsubscribe link.)

We see there are loads and loads of you right now, and that you’re all looking at this page. So I did too, just to see what was attracting attention like gulls around a fastfood joint.

And wow, I’d almost forgotten doing the printable .pdf checklist, primitive though it is. Now that I come to think of it, I did one for each of the six levels. Long-time club members will have seen them, I expect.

And what, pray, will newcomers think of this odd article?

Well… I’m not sure that matters very much. Beginners come, beginners go, like swooshing seawater.

Whereas texts like this one are written for the human floatsam and jetsam (not the Arizona thrash metal band) that washed up on our beach but remained when the tide went out out.

Welcome beginners, but be aware: beginning a foreign language is the easy part.

Our club is about the part that comes afterwards, the sticking with it, the maintaining motivation, the gradual building of experience and competences.

The tide may be in or out, but around here we follow our own cycles: articles from me on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays (not always as weird as this one); ‘easy’ news bulletins on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays.

Which means there’ll always be something to keep you company on your language-learning journey, six days a week, every week, throughout the year.

For however long it takes.

A venerdì.

P.S.

Don’t forget this week’s HALF PRICE ‘easy reader’ ebook, Francesca Colombo’s original C1 (advanced) -level ‘La commediante‘.

Lucrezia is a young prostitute, whose real passion is show business! And because a troupe of players is in town, the local priest is going to have to wait a little longer to see her. Instead of working this afternoon, she’ll get dressed and go down to the piazza to see the show (for the third time!)

FREE Sample Chapter (.pdf) | Buy the full version, just £3.99 this week!

N.b. On our catalog page, you’ll find all of our ebooks listed by type and in level order, from beginner to advanced.

P.P.S.

Tuesday’s FREE bulletin of ‘easy’ Italian news is ready for you to read/listen to.

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