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   Successful English <http://successfulenglish.com>
 
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What makes English
difficult?<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SuccessfulEnglish/~3/THlsrN6rIAY/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email>

Posted: 06 Jan 2011 08:28 PM PST

*A student recently complained to me that English is difficult. “I’ve
studied English for eight years,” she said, “and gotten good grades. Why
can’t I use it any better?” What would you say to her? Is her problem
English, or could it be something else?*

Many people seem to think that English is difficult. They talk about it.
Tweet about it. Blog about it. It seems to be an accepted fact. But is it
true? And if it is, why?
If English is difficult, why?

If English is difficult, it’s often because we make it difficult. A simple
comparison may help explain how it usually happens: Children’s toys often
need to be assembled, or put together. And parents often spend hours –
especially before Christmas – sitting on the floor or at a table surrounded
by pieces of toys. They try their best to follow the instructions for
assembling and using the toy. Parents work hard, sometimes desperately, to
“get it right” before their children get up early the next morning to play
with their new toys.

Many people try to learn English the same way. They reduce English to pieces
and instructions, or rules. For them, learning English means memorizing the
pieces and rules. And using English becomes a process of trying to remember
the pieces and using the rules to correctly assemble them, to “get it
right.”

You might ask, “What’s wrong with that?” Timothy Gallwey, well-known writer
of the *Inner Game* books helps answer your question:

Any system of instruction [and learning] should be built upon the best
possible understanding of natural learning, the learning process we were
born with. The less instruction interferes with the process of learning
built into our DNA, the more effective our progress is going to be.

In other words, we teach and learn best when we cooperate with our natural
learning processes. This is certainly true with language. If we don’t, we
may experience the kind of frustration students often
describe<http://successfulenglish.com/2010/02/frustration-to-success/>and
make English – or any language – more difficult than it needs to be.
Is there a natural way to acquire English?

Is there something better than pieces and rules for language learning? Is
there an approach to language development that takes advantage of our
natural learning processes? Happily, the answer is “yes.”

Dr. Lucy Tse describes two components, or ingredients, for developing and
maintaining language ability: (1) comprehensible input and (2) “club” or
group membership. Both of these components are active – naturally – when we
acquire our first language, and we can use them again when we want to
acquire a new language.

Comprehensible input is understandable written or spoken input in the
language you want to acquire, such as English. You acquire new language when
you receive comprehensible input that includes elements of the language that
you haven’t acquired yet.

Dr. Tse describes scientific research that shows that language learners who
read and listen more do better than those who don’t. It also shows that
written input – reading – results in more vocabulary knowledge and better
grammar, reading comprehension, writing ability, spelling, and even speaking
and listening.

The research also tells us that there is a psychological aspect to language
development. You acquire language more easily when you are not worried or
nervous about it. And when you believe that it will happen, or even better,
that it is happening.

Club or group membership means thinking of yourself as a member of the
world-wide family of English users. If you identify with other English users
and think of yourself as becoming one of them, you are more likely to
develop English ability.
Try it!

If you’ve been frustrated by the “pieces and rules” approach to language
development, I encourage you to try the natural approach Dr. Tse describes:

   - Read and listen to as much comprehensible input as possible.
   - Relax and enjoy the process; believe that you, too, can become an
   English user.
   - Join the club; when you do, we’ll gladly welcome you!

If you want to learn more about the natural way to acquire English, take a
few minutes to look at these articles:

   - *The Basics<http://successfulenglish.com/2009/10/the-basics-introduction/>
   *
   - *More pleasure, more
English<http://successfulenglish.com/2010/06/more-pleasure-more-english/>
   ***
   - *A word every language learner should
know<http://successfulenglish.com/2010/07/a-word-every-language-learner-shoul-know/>
   *

Warren Ediger

References: Chomsky (1996) *Silent Children, New Language; *Gallwey (2008) *The
Inner Game of Tennis*; Terrell & Krashen (1998) *The Natural Approach:
Language acquisition in the classroom; *Tse (1998)  *Ethnic Identify
Formation and Its Implications for Heritage Language Development*.

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