🇰🇷 3 reasons you're STILL a beginner

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 68

  • @soniarita
    @soniarita Před 6 měsíci +81

    Oh god, the 'how to learn korean rabbit hole' is SO ME! I've just realised how much time I've wasted watching YT blogs & videos trying to plan my learning journey

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 3 měsíci +8

      Those videos are the same as buying all new school supplies before the school year starts ☠☠☠ It's so much fun and makes us excited to learn, but it's not the same as going to class LOL

  • @erikacannady1469
    @erikacannady1469 Před 6 měsíci +88

    Hey heyyy I’ve been a subscriber for a while but just wanted to tell you I finally made it to Korea !!! I’ll be here for a semester abroad but I’m def gonna take you up on these tips cuz I really don’t have a choice now 😅😅 hopefully I improve during my time here

    • @yuulfuji-js9bm
      @yuulfuji-js9bm Před 6 měsíci +6

      yoo congrats!!!

    • @tati79ana
      @tati79ana Před 6 měsíci +4

      I’m also here in Korea! Hope you have a great time 🥰

    • @thea429pJUNGWONIEE
      @thea429pJUNGWONIEE Před 2 měsíci +1

      Congrats!!I hope ican be like you🍫🍓

  • @squidaddendum
    @squidaddendum Před 6 měsíci +30

    I started using StoryLearning 2 weeks ago, after I watched a video of yours sponsored by them, and I can already say kind of (?) complex sentences like "저는 공원에서 국수를 먹었어요"!! It's actually wild how much you can improve if you focus on one resource and really dedicate time to it!!! tysm :)
    AND FOR EVERYONE SKEPTICAL ABOUT STORYLEARNING: DO IT!!!! I love the way they structure lessons around a story. It makes learning and remembering vocab and grammar so much easier, and the process is a lot more enjoyable as well. Also, I've found that I am starting to pick up and use grammar and vocab I haven't been taught and haven't studied, just from exposure through the stories. It's amazing. Worth the money; it's a very comprehensive course.

  • @cj-gunn
    @cj-gunn Před 6 měsíci +15

    I needed this!! I have been learning "how to" learn Korean way too long... I have what I need to start and do well, now I need to COMMIT to doing it... Thank you for your passion, and the kick in the pants I needed

  • @thule_zoe05
    @thule_zoe05 Před 5 měsíci +3

    i just absolutely love how passionate you are about helping us learning Korean more effectively 😂💖 no, but thank you for the practical advice

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Of course!! 😂😂🥹🫶🏻 Being realistic and practical is my specialty ahahahaha

  • @kasicomi
    @kasicomi Před 6 měsíci +8

    I struggle to find the balance between reviewing/making sure I grasp what I already learned and procrastinating on moving on. I always feel like if I don't 100% know every single grammar point or vocabulary word before moving onto the next lesson, that I just don't move on. Even though those points and words will be used regularly in the following lessons.
    I genuinely can't tell if it's helping me or holding me back. I feel like it's a little bit of both 😅

  • @sm00re2
    @sm00re2 Před 6 měsíci +8

    i love the foundation metaphor!
    some people think theyre more advanced because theyve moved on to a high intermediate/low advanced text book but they are BUTCHERING the most basic things. id send screen shots of what they say to koreans and they couldn't even understand them.
    studying advanced grammar does NOT make you advanced. building that strong foundation first is what will eventually make you advsnce
    its not a race. its a journey❤

  • @madisonmarie0613
    @madisonmarie0613 Před 6 měsíci +13

    I've been stuck in intermediate for so long and even though this is geared more for beginner levels I feel like it also applies to me as an intermediate learner 😅In some ways I feel like a total beginner but in other ways I can be advanced level and I really think it has to do with potholes and trying to just get fluent. I've finally just decided to focus on 2 books only (one for reading and one for speaking and writing) and work on improving and filling in those potholes. Always much love for your videos, I felt this was right on the nose for me🤣

  • @taeshain2026
    @taeshain2026 Před 6 měsíci +7

    Finally someone addressing how level 3 in Korean just devours you and spits you out 😅🥲 I also did language school at uni in Korea, and I swear to God if someone had warned me about Level 3, I would have probably never started it in the first place. The step from level 2 to level 3 was brutal, I still remember it to this day. For the first 2/3 weeks I just wanted to yeet myself off the window of the tallest skyscraper in Busan. And I mean it 😅 then little by little you kinda get used to feeling utterly stupid I guess? Or you just try to keep up, to study more and put more effort. Level 3 is indeed brutal to be honest, and I do understand that it can get pretty hard. But I guess you will also never be ready for it if you don't give it a try in the first place. It's gonna be hard anyway, and it does not depend on how intelligent or diligent you are. 🤗 But it's definitely an essential step in your learning journey.

  • @codyscott8687
    @codyscott8687 Před 6 měsíci +8

    I bought the beginner Korean course when it was on sale because it is a future goal of mine. I live in Alabama very close to the Hyundai plant, so Spanish and Korean are the two most prominent languages near me. I am however working on Story Learning Spanish and it’s been an incredible resource! I wish I could learn them both simultaneously but I sadly don’t have the time

  • @rafaellatorres3129
    @rafaellatorres3129 Před 25 dny +1

    This video speaks to me in an spiritual level lol, everything was so spot on 😭

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 15 dny +1

      Hopefully something I said was helpful! haha

  • @EllePlowPlow
    @EllePlowPlow Před 3 měsíci +1

    I really needed to see this video because I’m stuck at number 1. Time to just decide which of my study materials I’m going to use and stick to it.

  • @newjeansfan238
    @newjeansfan238 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Another mistake : wanting to learn too many vocabulary and didn't memorize anything, i did this mistake before

  • @TheReviewHuman
    @TheReviewHuman Před 6 měsíci +5

    Good tips, Natalia! Im trying to push from intermediate to advanced, and there's a lot of similarities haha
    I've given myself the goal of taking TOPIK II in October, so I've started studying for that to increase my vocabulary.

  • @verymick
    @verymick Před 6 měsíci

    I don't consider myself all of a beginner anymore but I still find myself coming back to these sort of videos!! Thanks for the inspiration as always, Natalia ✨

  • @bradleyhemphill6268
    @bradleyhemphill6268 Před 2 měsíci

    나도 한국어 중급 리벨에 도달했을 때 진짜 햇갈린 거 같아. 그때 나는 중급 내욕을 잘 몰라서 너무 자쯩났어. 포기하고 싶었어. 근데 얼마나 잘하는 지 걱정 말고 그냥 매일 매일 재밌게 공부해

  • @calmontes651
    @calmontes651 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Today, I needed this video! Thank you. So many things resonated with me.

  • @thea429pJUNGWONIEE
    @thea429pJUNGWONIEE Před 2 měsíci

    Ohhh,i only study korean for only how much 1 video that is 30 min so i finish for about 40+min..I WILL FOLLOW YOR TIPS!LOVE FROM PHILIPPINES!

  • @tlovesbooks
    @tlovesbooks Před 6 měsíci +2

    I needed this so much! I love your videos Natalia!

  • @newjeansfan238
    @newjeansfan238 Před 3 měsíci +1

    True for purchasing so many books, or download so many free application to learn korean, i made that mistake before, i'm intermediate level, i study in my own and i have online korean teacher.
    So many application to learn korean is for beginner level with romanization arg.
    I realize i'm intermediate level when i know all beginner level grammar, i can speak but not advanced level, i try to read news in hangul korean but i don't understand it yet.
    But i didn't learn just few vocab in beginner level and it's great to learn new vocab.
    I study with a teacher since 2 years, before that i learned in my own but not regularly and i didn't understand grammar and gave up and watch korean drama lol that's why i didn't progress before, when i didn't have korean teacher

  • @JJS-23
    @JJS-23 Před 6 měsíci +1

    This video was perfect timing !!
    Thank you!

  • @limedka1904
    @limedka1904 Před 6 měsíci +2

    My two biggest obstacles in learning Korean are that firstly, I don't have language cells, so I learn everything about 1000 times slower than others and I still can't do it.
    And second - almost all the available materials are English-Korean, only English is not my native language. I'm very bad at English. Even after about 10 years of studying, my level is still A2-B1. Yes, so bad and slow I'm really learning a foreign language. So for example, I learn a Korean sentence that means "i've been well lately" in English, but I have no idea what it means in my language. Or just roughly. And with grammar, where you need to know the subtle nuances and differences, it totally sucks. Plus, I have a big problem with listening. I might be able to get a sentence out, but I can't understand when someone is talking to me. Not just in Korean, but in English as well. The Korean "o" and "e", which are pronounced about five different ways, sound the same to me, I don't hear a difference there.

    • @calmontes651
      @calmontes651 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I don’t know what’s your first language, but I would start there, studying your own language deeply and I mean really deep. I was learning Korean in English and despite being fluent in English because my first language is Spanish I kept getting confused in my Korean studies. I decided to study Spanish grammar and syntax, and everything started to make sense. I went deep like “if we have a subjunctive and English doesn’t how they express the same thing? If we have articles and Korean doesn’t what is it that we are trying to do with does articles?” If we have clitic pronouns and English doesn’t how they identify direct objects? If we have imperfective aspect and English and Korean don’t then how do they express unfinished actions?
      Same with sounds, does X sound exist in your language?, where in the mouth do you pronounce sounds like “e” “o”? Giving information to the brain, and then asking the brain to find it is way easier than blindly asking your brain to organize new information.
      I hope that helps with both your English and your Korean. I know it sounds counterintuitive but it has made all the difference in the world for me. Now I’m fascinated learning how and why things are done this way or that way in my native language compared to English or Korean. I learned more grammar than I probably need but it has helped my comprehension in all three.

    • @limedka1904
      @limedka1904 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@calmontes651 My native language is Czech. I think I understand the language well, certainly at a higher level than the general population, although I am not a linguist of course. Maybe even deeper study would help, who knows.
      It seems to me that Korean (and Japanese by the way) is paradoxically closer to Czech than English is to Czech. Though maybe that's only due to the surface touch of Korean grammar so far. In English, for example, we don't have articles (English "a" and "the"), just as there's usually no need to put a person in a sentence ("I", "you", etc.), and the meaning of a word doesn't (usually) change according to the accent on the syllable in the word (this was the biggest surprise for me when I started looking into English a bit more. So I better stoped quickly, haha) and it's quite contextual in a way. Though less so than, say, Japanese, where it's only at the end of a long paragraph that you find out who/what they were talking about, hahaha.
      Our sentence structure is usually S-V-O, but for a question, for example, you just add a question mark at the end of the sentence - just like in Korean (as opposed to English, where it changes to V - S - (V) - O?)
      As for the hearing part - that's where the problem is purely with me. I just can't hear it. I can't distinguish it. I also have this problem in English. Mainly because my level is still so low. As I wrote, I'm able to somehow spit out a sentence (even though the grammar is somewhere, haha), but I can't understand when someone is talking to me. Nothing helps. It really doesn't help. I have all the "good" advice in my little finger. They don't work. About listening - I've texted my friend a few times and sent her videos to see if she can hear any difference. Yes, she hears it, I don't. And she can't do more than say hello (literally) in Korean.

    • @calmontes651
      @calmontes651 Před 6 měsíci

      @@limedka1904 languages are very interesting. Spanish for statements is OSV and SVO, and English is only SVO for statements because it has a strict word order. We also have formality which English doesn’t, but Korean uses many English words; so learning from both Spanish/English helps. If you know your native language so well then explore phonetics, there are many English sounds I couldn’t tell apart many years ago and I took one on one classes with a teacher that helped me reproduce the sounds and listen to the sounds in context until my brain decided to hear them. Because of that experience I know my brain might choose to “not listen” to a sound until it thinks is relevant, so early on I bought this book “Korean Pronunciation Guide” from the editorial Darakwon, and it has made all the difference. It is frustrating even with the book, so sometimes I take a break from the book and then go again, and it’s surprising when I can hear the sounds, I couldn’t hear 어 but now I do, I’m working on telling apart 오 and 우. I am low intermediate and I still can’t tell some sounds apart.

  • @go-dory
    @go-dory Před 4 měsíci

    미쳤어~~~!! You’re doing great! Keep up the good work

  • @alicestoneheart5945
    @alicestoneheart5945 Před 6 měsíci

    I am (re)learning my native language but these tips apply to me too!! Thank you for sharing ❤

  • @Re-yh6kr
    @Re-yh6kr Před 13 dny

    This is me rn ㅠㅠ I keep redoing beginner classes after taking long breaks 😢I really need to do better if I want to become better in Korean :\

  • @ag-dn1vl
    @ag-dn1vl Před 3 měsíci

    ive been learning since last october but ive been losing motivation 😭😭 i wanna try to get back my will to study during the summer when im done with school and can focus on korean a bit better since i plan on studying abroad for university

  • @Rascilon25
    @Rascilon25 Před 4 měsíci

    So my personal story is I started learning Korean 50 days ago. I have Rocket Korean online which I use at this point to just repeat repeat repeat the alphabet until I have it memorized. I practice for 3 hours a day minimum, with a goal of reaching 6 hours a day eventually. I also have a weekly private tutor who helps me with new vocabulary and pronunciation. Lastly, I try to do immersion by attending a Korean church and being put on the spot to listen and respond the best I can, as well as listening to the music and sermon fully in Korean. The music in particular is useful because it often has repetition of phrases that I can understand from the context. For example that is how I learned the word for Jesus, just by listening to the music. Lastly, for immersion I try to watch as much K-drama as possible. I am not at the point I can turn off the English subtitles, but I am finding I am able to at least read and pronounce written Korean I see on the shows, albeit extremely slowly. Do you think this is a good strategy to learn the language? My goal is fluency in 7 years.

  • @RisingStarOfKorea
    @RisingStarOfKorea Před 5 měsíci

    It is two years ago that l last checked your channel, ( the ukraine war news distracted me ) now l am back on your channel and good to see that You are as beautiful, as smart and as humorous as before :-) keep on making lovely contents , Hunny

  • @kikids.34
    @kikids.34 Před 6 měsíci

    Spot on!! Thank you😢

  • @MsKeelyKat13
    @MsKeelyKat13 Před 6 měsíci

    my issue is mainly doubling up on languages. my job requires me to maintain fluency in a specific language but i want to pick up Korean again. i started in my teen years and im nearing my mid 20s. i know there are people who study multiple different languages at once but its hard😅

  • @desireevl
    @desireevl Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you for this 🩷✨✨

  • @cradicalcompassion
    @cradicalcompassion Před 6 měsíci

    Is there even such thing as too passionate in this context? Thanks for this video 😊

  • @bothmarioANDluigi
    @bothmarioANDluigi Před 6 měsíci

    500th like! thanks for helping me get through this frustrating process of learning The Language™

  • @gro8018
    @gro8018 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Any tips for getting OUT of book study mode and actually remembering words for conversations?

    • @mika4453
      @mika4453 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Hi! I've noticed I'm better at remembering things if I use an image and/or sound based approach to learning them (using Memrise with images rather than written translations, saying them out loud every time the word comes up, describing what I'm doing or my surroundings in the moment rather than focusing writing about them afterwards in a journal, all while trying to use the new vocab that I learned...) It's a bit closer to what you'd need for a real face to face conversation, and you can actually check afterwards which words you remembered easier and which ones just didn't make it as smoothly into your brain and need more practice (+ which words you actually need for your life but just didn't appear on you textbook.
      Sample sentences are great too!! Not only the normal kind (as in, a sentence demonstrating each words/grammar point) but just patters, phrases or words that could be used as fillers or that you might need, like "Because of X I want to X", "Since X happened, unfortunately X won't happen", "Dear X... Regards, Name", "please do X as soon as X", "I'm sorry for your loss", "I hope you get better!", "Good luck on X"!, "Thankfully,..."
      "Hope that helps!!"

    • @gro8018
      @gro8018 Před 6 měsíci

      Wow! This is so helpful. Thanks!

  • @nurkamiliailyana
    @nurkamiliailyana Před 6 měsíci

    Heyy! Thank you natalia!

  • @hannasizemore8028
    @hannasizemore8028 Před 11 dny

    Serious question: How do you even tell where you are? I've been learning Korean for almost exactly three years (around my full time job, kids, etc.) I thought I was nearly intermediate mid-way through the second year. Objectively, I know a ton more now. But now I feel like I'm barely a solid beginner. By TTMIK tests I'm level 5-6, but my functional use of the language is below that in every metric that matters -- listening, reading, writing, and speaking, with speaking being the weakest by far (in typical fashion). I can't tell if my feeling of not making progress is real, because it's been a hard *life* year, when I just couldn't give the language the focus I wanted, or if I've hit the intermediate plateau and the progress just isn't obvious. Or maybe it's both. Either way, I feel like I'm flailing a bit and not progressing, despite spending time learning Korean literally every day.

  • @paulwalther5237
    @paulwalther5237 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Story learning looks like a good course but the price is a bit high. I'm going to have to wait for them to give a discount. I know they're adding some bonuses but I'm just not ready to drop $300 on a self study course.

    • @skinnyrat4277
      @skinnyrat4277 Před 6 měsíci +2

      yeah, I personally would invest that money in a class or online class and/or textbooks for sure

    • @mika4453
      @mika4453 Před 6 měsíci

      I think once in a while (maybe once a year??) they do a big sale and drop the price by almost $200 off, so like A TON You could try studying with other resources until then see if that price actually works with you, or if you're okay with the ones you already have

    • @paulwalther5237
      @paulwalther5237 Před 6 měsíci

      Yeah I know. The problem is that by the time next November comes around I may not want it anymore because I'm slowly learning intermediate grammar anyway.@@mika4453

  • @paulwalther5237
    @paulwalther5237 Před 6 měsíci +3

    I feel like the truth is going to be painful (commenting before I watch the video).

  • @bilalhafeez9188
    @bilalhafeez9188 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Just recently started watching her videos and her intro just goes over my head. What does she say?

    • @makeitshine01
      @makeitshine01 Před 6 měsíci +3

      It's written in the description. She says, " Annyeong hase you, Annyeong haseyo."

  • @cz5981
    @cz5981 Před 6 měsíci

    happy march natalia !

  • @maddisonleigh3396
    @maddisonleigh3396 Před 6 měsíci

    Hi Nat! If you see this what exactly was the very first steps you took when learning ? I mean, if you remember, what were the first basics you were learning and how were you studying ?

    • @mika4453
      @mika4453 Před 6 měsíci

      She has a video showing her routine on how she got to a lower-intermediate in a few months! I don't remember if it has exactly the topics and orden in which she was learning, but I think ahe showed the books she was following, which is pretty much that^^

  • @maquilleMOI
    @maquilleMOI Před 6 měsíci

    I know it seems silly, But I see that you use your iPad a lot to take notes and study. Can you show us what you use and how you get it so organised ( I am writing everywhere )

  • @KarmaKuromi
    @KarmaKuromi Před 5 měsíci

    My issue is that I can't speak at all. Like I go blank when Im trying to say something in Korean. 😢

  • @kineiya
    @kineiya Před 6 měsíci

    Hi Natalie I was wondering if you have heard of or seen these two Korean language book sets?
    Korean from Zero 1-3 and Syudy book Maruchingu Korean Dtudies/Exercise Book Maruchingu Korean Studies/Practice Book Maruchingu Studies?
    I am able to get digital copies of these books or do you think physicsl copies would be better?
    Are they any good? I really can't find any info/reviews on them
    Thank you

  • @javeene8896
    @javeene8896 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Not Nat calling me out😭😭😭

  • @Channanabanana1
    @Channanabanana1 Před 6 měsíci

    Hii Natalie, I am 16 and I was wondering what university you graduated from? Was it in the U.S or SK?

  • @christiansanandres6096
    @christiansanandres6096 Před 6 měsíci

    is it mcbook that you are using? with pen?