Look it up in a book, please to confirm what I'll say here.
Children play. Why? Because that's how they grow and learn. Naturally, no schooling needed. It's the best way, the most effective way, and the way that's most fun.
Many adults stop playing. They stop growing and learning. That's their own doing and their own choice.
You do what you choose to do, and become who you train yourself to be.
Playing allows you to experiment, try on different roles, make mistakes, try things again, in new slightly different ways, from different angles and to get used to the moves all in a safe environment (because, whether you win or lose it's just a game).
You need to be in that energized-but-relaxed state in order to perform well. It's a fine balance, and sometimes you get carried away by passion and excitement, in which case there may be tears . . . or hooliganism.
So be playful as you engage with language.
At the age of fifteen I gave up French and Latin. Oh, to go back in time and dissuade myself from doing that!
Showing posts with label games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label games. Show all posts
Sunday, 23 October 2016
Play is the way
Monday, 18 January 2016
Have fun with random words
Introduce a bit of frivolity into your
life! Use a collection of vocabulary items and access them at random. Play games
with them, as for Scrabble. Combine
the words. Connect them in some way. Create faux-sentences (and accurate ones
if you like).
That way, they lose their power over you. Your awe of them diminishes. They intimidate less.
That way, they lose their power over you. Your awe of them diminishes. They intimidate less.
Really, playing games is good for you—gets you into a state of flow. The outcome of games isn’t a matter of life and death. In a game, you can afford to get really into it without ultimate risk. Your skill improves by playing games. In games, you can do a lot of useful work without it feeling like work.
To sum up, turn language learning into a ‘mind
game’.
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