I’m not suggesting you start a “Dear diary, today I…” kind of thing. No!
The idea is for intermediate students, who usually feel stuck and don’t know
how to proceed, make use of this amazing tool. But if you’re a beginner, don’t
leave me just yet. This is how you can use it:
1. Use a physical notebook
(although a digital version would work too)
2. It should be different to
the tool you’re going to note down all the grammatical
rules, etc
3. It is the place you
reserve for the exceptions (you should recognize the patterns of the language
and move on; save space in your brain for what is truly necessary)
4. Write on the cover
something in the lines of “Portuguese is easy, it will
bring me X, Y, Z”
5. On the first page, write
how you will feel like when fluent
6. On the last page, list
your current fears and struggles; hopefully you will laugh at them in a few
months’ time
7. Split your journal into
sections, e.g. gender, expressions, conjuntivo, [your name]’s mistakes…
8. Some ideas for content: you hear the expression “à toa” when it was bloody hot and you were waiting in line, wearing your rain jacket (don’t ask!) to get a pastel de Belém. Write down the expression, its literal meaning and equivalent in your language (if possible), and add all the references above. Impossible to forget the expression now, isn’t it?
If you have enjoyed this quick lesson and would like to learn more Portuguese outside of the box, then please contact Catarina from The Language Unschool - catarina@thelanguageunschool.com
The best and easiest way to learn Portuguese naturally is to get up early in the morning and watch children's television, go with the baby programmes first.
By Karl blore from Algarve on 08 Oct 2022, 17:27