Combination of methods based on what has worked for me in the past with other languages! I’ve used Rosetta Stone before, for French & Spanish, and while it’s definitely got advantages, I (personally—I also know people who love it!) also found it very time-consuming for very little actual learning, and it’s also expensive for what it is.
Basically:
a) I have enough friends who are either native or fluent speakers of Mandarin that once I’m a little more confident with the basics, I will draft them to help me practice conversation skills :)
b) My university offers inexpensive part-time courses to current students.
c) Lots of reading, textbook exercises, watching films, listening to music, translating/reading newspapers, etc. in the language.
d) I’m planning to go to China to teach English in the not-too-distant future, so while I’d like to have basic communication skills down before I go, immersion will definitely help!
Impressive! How do you plan to learn Mandarin? Immersion? Rosetta Stone?
Combination of methods based on what has worked for me in the past with other languages! I’ve used Rosetta Stone before, for French & Spanish, and while it’s definitely got advantages, I (personally—I also know people who love it!) also found it very time-consuming for very little actual learning, and it’s also expensive for what it is.
Basically:
a) I have enough friends who are either native or fluent speakers of Mandarin that once I’m a little more confident with the basics, I will draft them to help me practice conversation skills :)
b) My university offers inexpensive part-time courses to current students.
c) Lots of reading, textbook exercises, watching films, listening to music, translating/reading newspapers, etc. in the language.
d) I’m planning to go to China to teach English in the not-too-distant future, so while I’d like to have basic communication skills down before I go, immersion will definitely help!