Making time for languages in a busy day

We need to change at the way we think about learning a language.

We all have the same amount of hours in a day. What you do within those hours, minutes and seconds is what counts towards progress. Yet, why do we find it so difficult to make time for language learning? Do we not see the value that speaking a new language can have on our lives? We hustle away at our job, go home to work on our side projects, always trying to make more money, mindless scrolling away on social media and dating apps, and before we know it, the day is over and learning a new language hasn’t even crossed your mind.

It starts with a mindset change.

Many people have the mindset that language learning goes something like this: Taking some classes at a boring corporate academy, doing your weekly homework, and maybe practicing now and then when you can. But it’s much more than that.

Try these small things

You can start by doing small habits every day that will help you get immersed in a new language.

  • Learn a few words each day. Even just learning 5, and try to remind yourself of them throughout the day. You can record yourself saying them (in the context of a full sentence, of course) and listen to the recording, or you can try make a story out of the words. Some people like to learn words before going in the shower and repeat those words throughout the shower. Here’s a post I wrote about tips for learning vocabulary which might be useful.
  • Up your listening intake. Listen to a podcast, the news in, or a language-teaching YouTube channel when you’ve got dead time. Dead time includes doing the dishes, cleaning your house, commuting, groceries, or even taking a bath or doing your makeup!
  • Change your interface languages. Change your YouTube account, Twitter timeline or even phone interface into your TL. If this is too difficult, you can wait until you’re more fluent — but the point is to be seeing the language as much as possible.
  • Go crazy with the post-its. Labelling your furniture and stuff around the house in your TL is a great way to see the language every day. Bonus points if you can talk to yourself when you’re doing stuff, like “I am now going to make coffee” “I am going to wear this red shirt”. If you get stuck and don’t know how to say something, immediately look up the word and use it. You learn best when you need a word and remember it later because of the situation.
  • Short diary entries. Write one sentence or one paragraph in your TL, just 10 minutes at the end of the day, about your day. You can upload the sentence to a website like italki for corrections, too.

Sometimes you just need to be stricter.

Do you really need to watch that series episode now? Can you survive without swiping on a dating app for 20 minutes? I’m sure you can resist opening the Instagram app for the 27th time today. 

If you’re serious about language learning and making faster progress, you might need to cut down on some activities. Don’t worry, you can still do them if you schedule them in. Try to set time aside each day or week to do certain activities so that you don’t get distracted throughout the day. 

It might also mean waking up a bit earlier each day. A friend of mine is learning English. He’s the manager of a company and of course has a very busy job. However, he makes sure to get up half an hour earlier each day to listen to the news in English and transcribe what he hears. He’s training his listening and comprehension skills and he learns lots of vocabulary relevant to daily topics as he does that. 

The point is to do something, anything!

Don’t waste time worrying about how much you aren’t doing or how much there is left to do. Just do what you can each day. This looks different for every person. If all you can manage is 3 new words a day, that’s 21 new words a week and 90 new words a month. 90 words is a lot better than 0!

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10 responses to “Making time for languages in a busy day”

  1. Eloïse Avatar
    Eloïse

    I tried to turn my phone in Korean but I ended up panicking because I couldn’t understand anything 😅😅 but I think I’ll be stricter with myself listening to more podcast, thanks for the advice.
    감사합니다

    1. Karl Bryan Avatar

      The dating app was funny 😂😂😂. But yeah honestly there are so much distraction on your commitment to learn every day.

  2. Sin Hyug Kang Avatar
    Sin Hyug Kang

    You said about “focus” as one of mindsets.
    I would start to listen to news in english.
    However, over time I do not focus it and lost its contents at the end.
    It is hard for me to focus all the way to the end.

  3. Neha Mahadik Avatar
    Neha Mahadik

    First of all I love you website! ❤ It is so well organized, the content is apt! Along with related videos and resources, i just feel like I hit the jackpot. It is so helpful and meaningful. You make it possible to learn a language on your own.
    The points you mentioned here are really precise. I just changed my phone’s language to Korean and got to learn 2 words. 😀

    1. Neha Mahadik Avatar
      Neha Mahadik

      *your

  4. ShiraDest Avatar

    I always start a new language by writing a sentence (even if very short) in my diary each day in that language. It forces me to keep my study up on the vocabulary and grammar, usually.
    Best,
    Shira

  5. anapatyadmon Avatar

    You are inspiring me! Thank you! I’m gonna do my best! ありがとう!Saludos desde México!

  6. […] Finally, set language-specific goals. Your goals can (and should) differ from language to language. This helps you prioritize the time you spend on each. Here’s a video I made about my language goals for my 12 languages in 2020, and here’s my follow up a few months later. You can see that each language has a different level of priority.If you feel like you’re too busy to learn a language, there are always things you can do to fit language learning into your schedule! […]

  7. […] target languages at once, just as long as you know your progress will be slower, that’s fine too. Here’s a blog post that summarizes everything on making time for languages in a busy […]

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