French Learning Roadmap
#french #writing/guide
My French is entirely self-taught, which is why my learning path is rather non-linear. I don’t know if I did it efficiently but I employed a decentralised approach whereby I learn whatever material I deem relevant and make connection to my existing knowledge later. Sometimes aimless learning can be enjoyable. Anyhow, notes that I take along the way are indexed in French MOC.
In case anyone finds this useful, I will do a retrospective outline of my French learning path. Please note that this is not yet a comprehensive path. Caveat: this looks rather idealised because it is :P; prepare to bump into all sorts of trouble.
- Use Duolingo until level 2 checkpoint.
- Learn French API and get French pronunciations almost perfect. Try training on minimal pairs. The |ʁ| sound took quite a while for me.
- Use Anki to memorise 2000 most frequent French words; you can find frequency lists by googling or looking for a shared Anki deck.
- I made it halfway through Easy French Step-by-Step1 but didn’t find it useful.
- Try out audio programmes for continue learning without looking at the screen. Pimsleur is a good one that has spaced repetition built in. Coffee Break French is more fun to listen to (and it’s free).
- Set the system display language to French.
- Continue using Duolingo, but this can result in a learning plateau when used alone as Duolingo doesn’t do a good job teaching grammar and things more useful than describing how to make pureed vegetables. Therefore keep using Duolingo only as long as you find it effective and enjoyable.
- Start working through Grammaire progressive du français2. Start with the intermediate level worked for me. This book is entirely in French but it is indeed progressive.
- When anything comes up, just google it. There are tons of free French resources out there, but they are most likely discrete.
- Expand vocabulary to 5000.
- Once the point of comfortable French reading is reached, start getting inputs.
- I mainly use Learning With Text (which isn’t the easiest to use) to read and listen to French content and learn vocabulary from text.
- Possible input material can by anything in French that you find interesting. Mine (type + recommendations) includes but is not limited to (still, it is best to find material on your own):
- Poems
- Les Contemplations by Victor Hugo ( Aujourd’hui project gutenberg, Autrefois project gutenberg)
- Films
- Les Choristes
- Podcasts
- innerFrench - a great one for intermediate learners
- Duolingo French Podcast
- Musicals
- Mozart, l’opéra rock
- Le Rouge et le Noir, l’Opéra Rock
- Le Petit Prince, la comédie musicale
- Books3
- Plays
- En attendant Godot par Samuel Beckett
- Songs
- YouTube
- Anything else you can find
- Poems
- Alternatives include LingQ, FLTR, and LingL (or really just a pencil and a dictionary)
- Grammar should become increasingly intuitive as you are constantly exposed to large amount of input (this is still a theory to be tested)
- One should probably aim for accumulating 20,000 words using this approach (that’s without lemmatisation, of course)
- If bold enough, start doing everything in French. This means:
- Play video games in French - you’re more likely to learn something that’s fun
- Take MOOC courses in French - they usually have transcripts available so the text could be another resource for studying
- Join communities in French - like Discord groups or things like that where communicating in French becomes necessary
Rochester, Myrna Bell. Easy French Step-by-Step: Master High-Frequency Grammar for French Proficiency—Fast! McGraw-Hill, 2009. ↩︎
Grégoire, Maïa. Grammaire progressive du français - Nouvelle edition: Livre intermediaire. LP, 2018. ↩︎
Be careful that verbs in a novel can be very confusing if you are not familiar with all the tenses. ↩︎