I’ve been using Duolingo to improve my French language skills. As I have mentioned in my previous posts on Duolingo, I started learning French sometime in 1999 and have been learning it on and off. As for Duolingo, I started using it in March 2019, used it for three or four months, found it very addictive, but had misgivings about how effective it actually is and gave it up until November 2020, when I went back to Duolingo, more because of the absence of any other feasible option that would help me learn French during my work commute.
I still have mixed feelings about Duolingo. On the plus side, the grammar
exercises in Duolingo are very good, and though they don’t cover all tenses,
help improve one’s grammar. On the flip side, Duolingo has not improved my ability
to converse in French. If at all, I find myself hesitating more, compared to the past, when I used to rattle off with my limited French vocabulary, unconcerned about my grammatical mistakes.
These days, I constantly feel that I am not learning as much on Duolingo as I should be, considering I spend around 30 minutes on Duolingo every weekday and sometimes on weekends too. I feel that when I learnt French in a classroom, I learned a lot more. My vocabulary is composed almost entirely of words I learnt in 1999-2001 and later in 2002-2003 in a classroom where the teacher used a textbook (with pictures in it) to teach. I can easily remember a number of phrases from that learning. What I learn on Duolingo is more like water off a duck’s back. The new words I learn on Duolingo, I remember them for a few seconds afterwards and then I forget them. Vocabulary building is one of the places where Duolingo falters though Duo claims to teach so many new words every day. I feel that in a classroom, one creates associations between the newly learnt words and the surrounding environment (such as the joke cracked by a fellow student or a rebuke from the teacher), which makes it easy to remember the newly learnt words.
Ultimately, online learning cannot hold up a candle to classroom learning, I feel and Duolingo is a case in point.
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