They have users... but the tool(app), other than being really cute and well made, is super basic...
You can't expect to be fluent enough in a language JUST with Duolingo, at most you will be able to read a few sentences and spit out a few basic sentences and words.
Is that enough? Definitely not. Not for me at least.
They basically give you the 'hello world' of a language.
I speak 5 languages (learned through school and life choices) but when I tried to learn a 6th on Duolingo I felt like the experience was not good enough for me. A tutor or a class would probably be mandatory and using Duolingo just for re-affirming some basic concepts would be a nice to have, like a companion app..but they have to be able to let teachers create their own lessons.
This is the big problem in edtech. If you want to gain tons of users in edtech then you just need to make a bunch of very basic type materials which allows users to not get frustrated (and leave) and allows the platform to create lots of easy to develop content. For anyone serious about edtech, this is a problem because only having a basic understanding of a subject is pretty much useless. At a certain point, you need high-quality (college-level equivalent) type content. For edtech companies, that content is both harder to make and thus more expensive. At the same time, the userbase interested in that level of material declines rapidly.
I concur. I'd phrase like this... at some point you transition from offering the course highlights to simply offering the course. And the highlights seeker is probably a different customer to the more ambitious student.
This is interesting, looking from the outside I've always assumed that edtech had the problem of their content becoming less valuable too fast and figured they should invest more in better presentation and delivery of user-generated/curated content than on content itself.
>I speak 5 languages (learned through school and life choices) but when I tried to learn a 6th on Duolingo I felt like the experience was not good enough for me.
Well of course it isn't, but that's like saying "I'm a fighter pilot (trained in the air force), but when I try to use Flight Simulator X, it feels like the experience isn't good enough for me." The DL experience isn't really for you at all. It's for people would a little bit like to learn a new language. Not people who want to do it so badly that they'll invest substantial time in school and "life choices" to make it happen.
No, Duolingo is just actually bad. They gamified language learning and I have “beaten the game” in a few languages and it did not make me conversational in those languages. Nor could I read a real world newspaper or Wikipedia page in the target language. That is entirely Duolingo’s fault.
The app teaches you facts, but not conversation. The sentences increase in grammar complexity, but not depth or diversity of topics. Even with their language bots, you’re still having super basic conversations about nothing.
They could easily fix this by simply improving the quality of the sentences in the later lessons. Or switch to a different testing format, which worked in the beginning but don’t scale well once you’re past the middle and comfortable with the language. Maybe include substantial reading and listening comprehension exercises (i.e., multiple sentences), instead of a single complex sentence.
Duolingo has concrete problems with concrete solutions.
Duolingo is useless on its own, especially for harder language pairs. The only reason it's popular is because of the gamification, I find that apps like Memrise or LingQ are massively more useful to actually improve your language skills. Those apps focus on specific skills (vocabulary learning through spaced repetition for Memrise, learning comprehension for LingQ) which means that you have to use other methods to work on other aspects like grammar and conversational skills but at least they attempt to do one thing and they do it mostly well.
The only added value I have from using Duolingo is getting some amount of practice actually constructing my target language but even then it's hugely limited because:
- You never have any context which makes the experience always completely artificial and makes it harder to get a feel or the language. IMO Duolingo would be 10x better if lessons followed (even very loosely) an internal story instead of just having random, often contrived sentences one after the other. Something as simple as recurring characters, simple common situations etc... It would make it a lot easier to have a mental model of the world you're talking about and it doesn't seem like it would complicate things heavily.
- The bulk of the practice involves translation exercises which is limiting and can even be counterproductive. A very important step towards fluency in any language is to stop translating and start constructing the language directly. I'm not a native English speaker but as I write these words I'm not translating a French internal monologue, I know what I want to say and I say it in English directly. It's faster and more natural that way.
- The killing blow is that those translation exercises are corrected by, as far as I can tell, some sort of complicated regexp engine. It's very common for a correct-but-unexpected solution to be rejected and when it gets reported it can lingers for years without being fixed. As such you start not to trust the correction given when you don't understand precisely why your sentence was wrong.
That last point is really frustrating. I'm a native French speaker and I tried finishing the "French for English speakers" tree using shortcuts to get an idea of the quality and I simply can't reliably unlock the checkpoints on my first try because some of my perfectly fine and idiomatic French sentences end up not fitting the regexp and be marked wrong.
I think the issue is that they want people who use it less than 10 minutes a day to still make progress and feel they are making a lot of progress. Following spaced repetition rules they can only add minimal amounts of vocabulary and they need to spend that vocabulary on intros to new themes that can be completed in 30 minutes or less.
Older versions were a little less tuned to keeping the large audience, did typing without seeing the options, and went into some areas of interest of members of each language group. Reverting any of which would be improvements for teaching the most engaged users at the cost of losing 10X as many barely engaged participants.
It is the general problem of tuning content to learner's with out an outside authority preventing tuning to learner laziness.
They aren’t promising the equivalent of a flight simulator, they’re claiming you’ll actually learn these languages. So I think the parent comment’s is a valid critique.
My parents are a good example of their target audience. They live in Alaska and planned a weeklong vacation in Panama, so they used Duolingo for 4-5 months before they left in order to learn enough spanish that they could ask and answer basic questions during their trip, but they have no desire to spend the time required to be fluent enough to have a full conversation.
The sad thing is that if they'd spent just one month on a Michel Thomas or Pimsleur course, they'd have been at a higher level and been ahead in accent, too.
Typing word and sentence translations from your L1 into a language you don't speak just isn't a good way to learn a language.
Nothing sad about it, those cost money and are not as gamified so they require consistent willpower. If duolingo didn't exist, they would not put in the work to start learning, period. Different people have different aims. I'm halfway through the Dutch course (230 day streak, so I put in at least 10 minutes every day for the last 230 days) and found it immensely valuable. It helped me build a habit magically, which is something I struggle with all my life. I would never work on something 200+ days in a row. Some days I study more than an hour, some days I do the bare minimum but I do it every day to keep my streak. I am able to form novel sentences and express my ideas with the vocabulary I have. That is all I need.
Right now I can comfortably comprehend any A1 text, and can get by with A2 text when I look up the meaning of some words. I'm only halfway through. I can speak enough to at least successfully use speech to text on my phone (I answer textual questions on my phone by speaking and letting it turn my speech to text). I can understand some children shows. I have ONLY worked with Duolingo (and I read Dutch reddit comments). If it weren't for Duolingo I would never stick to it.
That's the worst part of the app because they use synthetic voices for most courses (the only one I know that doesn't is the Latin one, probably because there aren't many off-the-shelf Latin text-to-speech).
I'm often hanging on the (absolutely terrible from a usability perspective) Duolingo forums to help people attempting to learn French and as such I often encounter people complaining that they can't figure out what the voices are saying. As a native speaker I can generally make out what it's supposed to say but it definitely sounds off and artificial. And even when the pronunciation is technically correct it's completely flat and lacks the natural emotion and emphasis a native speaker would use.
The fact that an app who's supposed to teach you languages relies on crappy text-to-speech to teach you pronunciation tells you everything you need to know about Duolingo.
My wife is using to learn Spanish, and she doing pretty good.
First she’s really dedicated to it.
And then she also has a lot of exposure to it. My kid goes to Spanish school, my parents speak Spanish, and she already understand a third latin language.
So I see duolinguo as a way to systematically increase vocabulary so that you can better understand the language your exposed to.
You can’t learn a language without making substantial investments of time. Anyone can “learn” some words and maybe a little grammar, but that’s not learning a language in the slightest.
Duo lingo is trash for learning languages, particularly Asian ones. People just get suckered in with illusions of learning a language without doing any real work, which is flat out impossible.
You’re better off using almost anything else, such as glossika.
I agree that Duolingo is not sufficient to become fluent in a language, but I’d argue that no app could be. Immersion is generally the only way to become fluent.
Having said that, I’ve found the learning experience on Duolingo varies wildly depending on the language. French, for example, has an excellent curriculum with stories and live conversations with bots. Dutch or Hindi on the other hand are extremely lacking.
But is that actually true? When I see people say Duolingo is bad, they're always comparing it to some highly optimized language learning strategy, where you weave together Anki and suchandsuch grammar resource and a strict regimen of 30 minutes of target language media every day.
I'd agree that Duolingo significantly compromises effectiveness for the sake of engagement, but to most people engagement is the hardest part of learning a language!
Yes, it's true. Using Duolingo is significantly worse than just about all your other options, including picking up a $30 Living Language textbook/workbook/CD set of whatever language you want. Living Language isn't aimed at university students or the most motivated people either. It's just one of the cheaper options.
This is not just a throwaway comment, either. I've built and run a language school for four years (with two partners), taught thousands of children, worked at a language learning startup, and have read a lot L2 acquisition papers and know this space pretty well. I also contributed to Anki long ago, but I'm not a huge fan of using SRS for learning vocabulary. Extensive reading (and listening once you can) is a far better strategy. (Anki is pretty good for memorizing discrete pieces info though, such as how to write each Chinese character or all the atomic weights and numbers on the periodic table).
As for engagement, I think Duolingo is pretty boring compared to making new friends, talking with people or even just reading a book about something I'm curious about. If you're learning any popular language (e.g. English, French, Spanish, Mandarin, Japanese, etc), you'll be able to find some pretty good graded readers aimed at beginners that let you start actually reading in your first few months of studying.
> I'm not a huge fan of using SRS for learning vocabulary. Extensive reading (and listening once you can) is a far better strategy
Can you explain your logic and how you measure success? FWIW I'm ~8 languages deep and started using SRS with my 5th language. For the last couple languages I've tracked my metrics extensively (i.e. words learned and retained per day). Also with the SRS tool I use I read sentences along side the words I'm learning so I get some context.
[1] SRS flashcard apps as an exclusive language learning system
[2] Extensive reading
While (2) is clearly better if those are your only choices, as you point out yourself SRS can easily be integrated into other curriculum or used as a supplemental tool. I'm not sure how many languages deep you are but I find getting through the first 1000-3000 words a real slog in the language and it is also quite hard to read in a language when you are at sub-3000 words unless you are reading especially prepared texts in a textbook for language learners.
My preferred method is to do the basic grammar of a language and first 2000 words as quickly as possible with a cram method and then work on speaking and transitioning from passive to active vocabulary. SRS is a nice tool, esp. if the SRS tool you are using also has included sentences in context (I mostly use learnwitholiver.com). Then usually I work to train for the state run test of the language that I'm studying at a reasonably high level.
That's odd. Your strategy of rushing through basic grammar and a small number of words quickly is actually a use case I said SRS is useful for.
In the link you're responding to, I said:
> "The second situation where spaced repetition works really well is when you're studying something more complex, but you can use spaced repetition as a scaffold to get through the initial phases a bit faster. Learning vocabulary is like this. Though there are the issues that pointed out earlier about context and collocations and word boundaries, spaced repetition can still be a huge win. And that's because you don't have to use it to learn and remember everything. You can use it to get a scaffold, to get started with whatever foreign language you're learning or medical vocabulary or whatever kind of vocabulary. And after having memorized, say, five hundred or a thousand or even five thousand words in this new area that you're studying, you can then do a lot of reading and use those words and encounter them in many different contexts and actually acquire a solid grasp of that topic."
I would definitely start with training my ear to the sounds in a language at the very beginning, but flashcards can also be a useful supplement early on. It's funny you mention Oliver! I was in contact with him when he first launched his site (just for Chinese, initially). For what it does, it's made well. LingQ is probably my favorite for getting the initial base down, though.
FWIW, I don't think I've every encountered anyone who saw SRS as an exclusive language learning system, except maybe a few hopeful app developers who have realized how easy it is to make a flashcard app.
The real question is how much of your study time do you want
to spend on decontextualized sentences or words vs time spent on sustained reading, listening or conversation?
I track my time via 22 minute segments and typically do ~3 per day of vocab vs 9 per day of structured language learning and another 6 per day of reading and writing. So of the structured time I spent language learning it is a bit less than 20% of the time I spend. My target is about 100 words per day but my actual best time over an extended period is about 58 words per day on tracked words. Oliver is good but there are a bunch of features I'd add if I could. Will check out LingQ as well.
One of your criticisms of spaced repetition is the difficulty of representing associations between words on flashcards. I agree that that's difficult (though you can mitigate it by including example sentences in your deck). However, I think that that criticism expects too much of spaced repetition. It's a very powerful technique for learning and holding onto new vocabulary, but it doesn't replace reading, listening and speaking. You really can't learn nuances of word meaning with flashcards alone, but you can build up and retain a large vocabulary. You can deepen your understanding of the subtleties of the language in other ways.
I would say that Duolingo does the distinctly American thing of optimizing for making you “feel good” about your progress, even if that progress has no correlation with actual language ability. It’s more of a self-esteem simulator by way of language-learning than it is a useful tool for foreign language instruction.
The point is that if you want to learn a language, you either follow an intensive regimen like the one you've described, or you don't and you make essentially no progress. Learning languages is not rocket science. It's mostly just work and dedication.
What do you mean by worse? I’ve spent a lot of time on Duolingo as well as in face-to-face language classes, in high school and university. I’ve also spent a smaller amount of time self-studying from books, CDs and software that predated Duolingo. I’m not fluent in any of the languages I’ve studied because of a lack of immersion, but I learned a lot more from Duolingo than any other source because it was so easy to establish a daily habit and stick with it without having to pay anything. I’ve had basic conversations as a tourist in France after learning French exclusively from Duolingo. I’m sure I would have learned more if I spent that time in class instead, but I didn’t because it’s very expensive and inconvenient compared to spending 30 minutes a day on Duolingo while I’m commuting.
It is inefficient. The vocabulary lessons on Spotify run through words a lot faster. You don't have free reign of what category to study things in. It teaches vocabulary when you should be learning grammar. It teaches pronunciation just by having you repeat words, which is inadequate - the specifics of pronunciation (including emphasis of syllables) must be explained.
I don’t doubt that it’s less efficient than learning from a human teacher, if you just look at the time spent by the student and ignore the “efficiency” of software that interacts with millions of students at the same time. I’ve never heard of anyone learning a language by passively listening to Spotify, so I have a hard time seeing it as a Duolingo alternative, but I’m sure just like Duolingo and other language tapes, it would be a valuable complement to any other language-learning tool. None of them will make you fluent without immersion.
What makes you say that explicit instruction in grammar (which does exist in Duolingo, although you’re right that the emphasis is on vocabulary) and pronunciation is necessary? That’s not how people learn their native languages. Considering that anyone can learn any language with enough exposure, and most people fail to achieve their language learning goals due to giving up after less than a thousand hours, I’m skeptical of this kind of pedagogical criticism.
Language acquisition after the developmental window is fundamentally different. Native language learning is not a good model for second language learning.
The evidence for that “is limited, and support stems largely from theoretical arguments and analogies to other critical periods in biology such as visual development”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_period_hypothesis
I think it's not so much that second-language acquisition is harder than first-language acquisition, but that first-language acquisition is horribly slow. After five years of full-time study, do you want to reach the level of a five-year old or do you want to be able to handle any communication you could handle in your first language? Not to mention that you probably don't have the time to study a language full-time anymore.
Babies spend a lot of time babbling, basically brute-forcing their way to a correct pronunciation. But what if you could make use of phonological research and resources like https://www.seeingspeech.ac.uk/ipa-charts/ to help you get there faster?
Parents spend a lot of time playing "look at the X" games to help them learn vocabulary from examples. But what if you just look up unknown words in a dictionary and use spaced repetition to efficiently retain them?
Second-language learners have already bootstrapped their way to being able to communicate with other humans. So why not just make use of that, rather than repeating the same slow process of trial and error for another language?
>do you want to reach the level of a five-year old or do you want to be able to handle any communication you could handle in your first language
In terms of grammar and vocabulary, five year olds have a much higher level than all but the best L2 speakers. I would regard the ability to speak as well as a 5 year old native speaker as an excellent outcome for five years of full time study of a language. Very few people achieve such a high level within that time.
> In terms of grammar and vocabulary, five year olds have a much higher level than all but the best L2 speakers.
I don't know about grammar, but I found a study [0] that estimates children in kindergarten (age 6) to have a mean vocabulary size of about 3000 root words. If you wanted to beat that in 5 years using spaced repetition, you'd only need to add less than 2 new flashcards per day. In my experience, 10+ new flashcards per day is doable. (When I was adding that many, I spent an hour a day on reviewing flashcards, which eventually made me scale back because I was only studying for fun in my free time.)
If you know full-time language students who don't have as large a vocabulary, I wonder how full their time actually was.
That's an estimate of expressive vocabulary (i.e. the range of words typically used). It's very obviously not the case that a typical five year old knows only 3000 words of English.
The methods section of the study I linked begins as follows:
Testing reported herein was conducted in Mayand June of 1999. Testing
was done individually for children in kindergarten through Grade 2. The
investigator introduced herself and said
I’m going to ask you what some words mean. Later, I'll ask you to
read the same words and some others. Some of these words are
common and some aren’t. If you want to stop at any time, you can.
I’m going to read you a sentence and then ask you what a word means
in that sentence. You can use words, pointing, or acting to explain the
meaning of that word.
We then gave three examples, including, “ ‘I bought a new car.’ In this
sentence, what does car mean?” We continued with “ ‘Johnny fell and
broke his arm.’ What does arm mean?” If the child had difficulty with these
examples, we would go over them and explain how to answer. (In the arm
example, pointing to one’s arm would do.) A final example involved a hard
word: “ ‘The material was translucent.’ In this sentence, what does translucent mean?” This example was given so that we could explain that there
would be words children did not know, and that it was alright to say, “I
don’t know.” (No children actually knew translucent.)
This seems to me like a test of which words children know, not the range of words typically used.
I can't find the term "expressive vocabulary" anywhere in the paper. Did you assume that's what they were estimating because the number seems low? Actually, 3000 words is quite a lot. The Simple English Wikipedia tries to use only the most common 1500 or so words, for example. Most concepts can probably be expressed in words a five-year old is familiar with. It's just that not everyone takes care to express themselves that clearly, so having a larger vocabulary is still beneficial.
This is a good point. I did take a class on phonetics at uni, and it helps a lot with learning the basics of a new language. Maybe Duolingo should do a phonetics course which teaches IPA using examples from a range of different languages!
I'll plug our own mostly free-to-use project here, I think many will find it useful: http://languagelearningwithnetflix.com
(bilingual subs for Netflix and more)
I find a very good way to learn languages by Netflix is to watch content in foreign language plus foreign subs. This is really good for English, because virtually all content is subbed with closed captions. French on the other hand is nearly impossible since virtually all content has mismatches between the audio and the caption (i.e. they always have subtitles, never closed captions). I've yet to find way to search for closed captions (vs subtitles) on Netflix.
-- No, currently TTS always plays on opening dict. It would be simple to put an option, just maybe don't want to overload the user with options. If the issue is that the voice isn't very pleasent, maybe it's better to address that.
-- Just Netflix for now. We'll release a beta version for Youtube in about two weeks. Most of our users are in East Asia (75k in Korea), so, we'd look which services are popular there.
-- Hosting costs, well, not too bad. We use firebase.. outgoing data is 10c per Gb, but, we might add a few nginx catches on a digital ocean VM (in different regions) for some endpoints to get this down, and reduce latency for dictionary. Machine translations are the main cost (it's actually a paid feature already).
How many people go through these other better methods for learning a language? In that sense, it’s a great way to learn a language if you wouldn’t otherwise be learning a language.
I think most go through a bunch of them. I have, and I've used DuoLingo, and it helped some. I might not be giving it enough credit, as it did help me get started, but since exploring other methods I've stopped using it.
Using an ineffective language learning tool to maybe memorize a handful of terms is not in real terms more useful than never getting to or dropping other methods. If anything, it’s worse because it instills people with a false sense of their progress at a real goal (language acquisition) by simulating it with a fake one (accomplishing tasks on Duolingo).
Interesting. I speak 2 foreign languages fluently (French and German) learned through formal training and immersion.
I go to the Netherlands at least once a year for work and can understand a little. So 2 weeks ago I started The DL Dutch lessons. I think they’re great! Certainly not a substitute for immersion, but I totally think that in 5 mins/day, I’ll be ready to converse a bit in a month or two.
Not to say that DL couldn’t be better, but for what I’m paying, Dutch lessons from DL seem to be worth my time.
Dutch is so similar to German though that you're not having to learn any of the "hard parts".
English speakers have a really hard time with German and Dutch piling up verbs at the end of giant clauses. You've already learned that when you became fluent in German.
I would probably piss a lot of people off if I were to call Dutch a "dialect" of German, but Dutch is definitely the closest language to German.
If you wanted to know whether Duolingo worked for language learning you'd be better off trying a language family that you're not already familiar with, but not one that's renowned for being particularly difficult like Japanese. Maybe Russian?
You’re preaching the truth here. I’m an English speaker who learned Russian and then taught russian for a decade or so. Duolingo is not going to help almost anyone significantly. What I mean by that is if you were a casual learner (nothing wrong with that) dedicating 5 to 30 minutes to duolingo a day, you will never be able to do anything other than say a few phrases or maybe pick out a few words of spoken russian here or there. Unless you are a language genius you will never be anything close to functional much less fluent without living in a 100% or close russian-speaking environment for a couple years at least. This is not me calling anyone dumb, russian is just really hard for almost all english speakers and requires an extreme amount of time and dedication. I don’t know if it’s true for other languages but I have a suspicion is that it is.
Russian is an Indo-European language, like English, and therefore has fundamentally similar grammar. Arabic, Chinese, and Korean are much more different (from English) than that.
That said, the State Department's estimation of the difficulty of Chinese is inflated by the difficulty of the writing system, which has nothing to do with the language itself. When people try to rank languages more-or-less objectively by how difficult they are to learn -- without reference to which other languages the student might already know -- Chinese and English are both common examples of the simplest class of languages. There is a theory in linguistics that seeks to explain this finding by reference to the history of "simple" languages -- they tend to be spoken across wide regions and learned by adults for pragmatic reasons. The theory goes that the influx of struggling adult learners changes the language to accommodate them.
Chinese would definitely be easier without the writing system (and I wish my two years of studying it had been verbal and pinyin only). But it's also tonal, which speakers of non-tonal languages generally have a really hard time with.
> which speakers of non-tonal languages generally have a really hard time with.
Is this actually true? I only did some basic Mandarin, but its tonal system is so simple (and plainly transliterated) that it seemed like a non-issue to me. Done & dusted in a couple of hours or so, compared to the hundreds of hours needed for vocabulary, idioms etc. Not to mention the terrifying writing system. And I have no natural advantages, carrying a common disability (native monolingual English), and having only learned German previously.
But English is a tonal language; that hypothetical problem can't be a source of extreme difficulty for English-speaking learners.
(I do have problems with English tones interfering with my attempts to speak Chinese, but that's really not the same problem as "My language doesn't use tones, so I don't know how to produce them". I do know how; I just don't have good control over them.)
English doesn't have falling-rising contours like the Mandarin third tone, so there's at least the difficulty of having to learn a new category of pitch change. I do wonder whether e.g. Mandarin speakers have similar difficulty acquiring the different contours of e.g. Cantonese. Intuitively, I'd expect it to get easier the more different categories one can already distinguish.
I won’t argue with you there, I’m not qualified to compare anything but russian and english (and maybe Ukrainian). I’ve heard others say the same thing you are and my research agrees with that assessment. A friend of mine is fluent in both Russian and Arabic and English and would agree that Arabic was harder. When living in Ukraine I knew a lot of people from the Middle East studying medicine in Kharkov and they mostly all learned Russian very well, I can’t say the same for my english speaking students learning russian in East Ukraine.
I am biased so I personally think Russian is a fantastic language both to speak and read. In addition to the literature and people, russian seems to be the most common non-English language after chinese on the internet which lets me see some corners of the web I would not otherwise.
Oh I agree with you that Dutch is very similar to German. So far it seems like a “simplified German with mostly English word order and a funny accent”. I agree that’s an advantage for a Germans speaker.
But my point was that Duolingo is offering me value. Yes there are other tools. Yes I think language learning can’t be achieved with our interactions. But at the same time I think that duolingo Has been a good use of my time so far. I don’t have 20 minutes at a time to take a class but I do have 3 minutes 6-7 times a day when I can pull out my phone and practice.
I’ve studied French (easy for an English speaker), Japanese (hard but I already knew the basics from school) and Russian (hard and I didn’t know the alphabet when I started) on Duolingo. I assure you I have learned some things about those languages, even if I would have learned more if I spent the same amount of time in class. Of course, some of the courses are better than others, and languages that are less like your own are harder to learn, but that doesn’t mean you can dismiss the experiences of those who have used the app to build their knowledge of easy languages.
Considering the amount of funding and market share they have, I am surprised they don't have anything more for users who want to really really learn a new language. Not even a meetup strategy (for example, I am thinking of various usergroups for diff tech stacks around the world that are mostly on meetupdotcom) or so..
There are 'official' meetups [0] but whenever I've looked there's been nothing local to me. It seems to be very dependent on where you live, although that's to be expected.
I had this same thought, but my fear would be that it could be confusing/misleading. GPT-2 is really impressive but sometimes it produces phrases that look like a natural language at first glance but don't make any sense when you really try to parse them, or statements that do make sense on their own but are directly contradicted by the next statement it makes. I'd hate to be learning a language and pick up nonsensical language use from an AI. My guess is that we're not quite there, and an attempt at this would end up being really confusing/misleading for the learner, but I fundamentally agree that an app could give you fluency via AI conversations and I suspect it will be done in the nearish future.
"extremely lacking" is an understatement for the neglected courses. My experience is that questions where the expected answer is ungrammatical aren't fixed for months/years.
I wish they opened this up to community curation a bit for the less lucrative languages.
Teaching a billion people ten words makes a lot more money than teaching 100k people 100k words. The stated goal is to teach _you_ a language but the actual goal is to be lightly used by as many people as possible.
I saw Luis von Ahn speak at the at the LAB in Miami circa 2013. His goal has always been to crowd source translating text like the New York Times everyday into several languages. Professional translators probably translate text better than Duolingo, but not at the price point they offer. One thing he brought up in that talk is that they hired a bunch of respected academics in the field of language learning. He asked them which parts of speech should be taught first which the consultants didn't have an answer so they implemented A/B testing to see which order of words and concepts people learned fastest with. Several years later the thing that surprises me is that with data backed learning they haven't got further. Working through he courses isn't such a bad waste of time for most of the users even though there might be better more expensive ways to learn a language.
> He asked them which parts of speech should be taught first which the consultants didn't have an answer so they implemented A/B testing to see which order of words and concepts people learned fastest with.
Here's a crazy thought: People are different, and different people will have different best ways of learning a foreign language, depending on what they know beforehand, and how they like to learn.
Some people are having great success with duolingo, good for them. I'm not one of them, I think its structure sucks for me, I need way more grammar and structure rules, not an endless string of random sentences.
And the thing is, duolingo could add what I wanted to their lessons. They could absolutely add lists of pronouns or prepositions, or several sentences with small variations to their repertoire.
Yeah, Duolingo is definitely enough of a tool if you want to start to use the language in the foreign country, but it’ll be very obvious that you’re a beginner. I’d say that’s probably the best way to learn, but you have to be prepared to be very confused.
In the end I think that the only way to really learn a language is immersion and/or daily usage. Any class, tutor, book or app can only get you so far.
Get some basics and then practice by reading, watching stuff and most importantly: talking with other people. Duolingo is pretty good to get you to the start line.
I've tried duolingo, but it's not for me. It just teaches you phrases and words, without teaching you the structure.
I need grammar rules and lists of prepositions and verb endings. I need ten examples in a row where you change out a single word, to teach you how it changes the rest of the sentence.
Duolingo is just random flashcards, claiming to be grouped into lessons. I can absolutely see it as a companion tool to a proper language course, but it's not sufficient in itself, at least not for me.
I worked as a language teacher for a while. You see products like Duolingo come along all the time. They're always accompanied by hype in how they will help you become fluent. It's simply not the case.
The products are not necessarily useless, but they only help some people make some progress some of the time. They never live up to the hype around them.
Language acquisition is a multifaceted endeavor which takes time and effort. Anyone who tells you otherwise is either misinformed or lying. (There are some outliers who can learn/acquire languages with great speed, but they're very rare.)
> Anyone who tells you otherwise is either misinformed or lying.
Duolingo's "Goal" settings:
> Basic 1XP | Casual 10XP | Regular 20XP | Serious 30XP | Insane 50XP per day
50XP requires no more than 25 minutes of work.
So, according to Duolingo, it is "Insane" to devote 25 minutes per day on learning a language. To learn a language typically requires 50,000 minutes. And that's just to reach a basic level.
I wonder if Duolingo's "Casual" learners realize that that setting implies a 30 year commitment.
Just an anecdote. My son was taking an extra language at school and wasn't doing too well. Duolingo every day for 6 months with one rest day and he went from a C to an A.
I believe it gives people basic, basic competency like you would get if you were a Chinese person who never learned English formally but watched English movies all the time.
> My son was taking an extra language at school and wasn't doing too well. Duolingo every day for 6 months with one rest day and he went from a C to an A.
School language classes are notorious for leaving their students unable to function in the language that was supposedly "taught". I don't think that's the fault of the school or the classes, but I also don't think an improved grade in such a class is evidence of much additional competency.
> I believe it gives people basic, basic competency like you would get if you were a Chinese person who never learned English formally but watched English movies all the time.
Without some instruction at some point, the level of English competency you'll get by watching English movies all the time is zero, exactly the same as if you never watch anything.
Nothing is useless when learning a language. Any consistent exposure is useful.
To get any good at a language, you need more than one magic bullet, anyways.
I don't really understand these posts from people who have allegedly learned a language yet lambast Duolingo for not making them fluent. There is literally no magic bullet for fluency. You need to be running the whole gamut (books, shows, interaction, podcast, whatever) every day to get good. So it's hard for me to take the critique seriously.
"Duolingo won't make you fluent" sounds like the critique of a beginner who is just now, after a month, discovering that there isn't a magic app that can take you from 0 to 100. But Duolingo is a great tool for daily exposure as part of your repertoire.
Duolingo got me up to about B1 German; I’ve been continuing with it (for practice), Clozemaster (for vocabulary and a much broader range of example sentences), and German language news podcasts specifically aimed at language learners (to get a broader range of voices with easy content).
I’m also using Duolingo for Esperanto and Greek, and I don’t feel like it’s teaching me either of those languages to the same standard it taught me German.
Nevertheless, it’s good enough for me to subscribe.
I didn't know about Clozemaster, seems really useful to learn complex sentences!
Would you mind sharing the podcasts you're listening to? I'm watching "Arte journal" in German but it sometimes goes too fast and news for kids like "ZDFtivi logo!" do not teach you a lot of vocabulary after a while.
Not at my skill level. The closest I’ve encountered are occasional German language YouTube adverts that sometimes run before tech videos — but I wouldn’t call those interesting.
I think it's too hopeful to learn the ins and outs of a language through an app alone. As you mentioned, Duolingo is a tool and very rarely does one tool fit all use cases.
I see Duolingo as more of an interactive digital textbook, but as always there is a gap between completing exercises and applying your knowledge to the real world.
Grammar is one specific area I found Duolingo is lacking. Their method mainly focuses on vocabulary learning while completely ignoring grammar, at least that is the case in Spanish language.
Grammar is so fundamental as it is the spinal core of any language. Without comprehension of grammar, we effectively cannot construct full sentences that make sense. We would be limited to just knowing random words and phrases.
There are many different ways to express the same idea in Spanish and so without understanding why a sentence was written in such a specific order, it is almost impossible to formulate a long-term pattern for that sentence structure in our brain. This is why grammar acts as a spinal core that holds all vocabulary together.
For Duolingo to improve its effectiveness beyond its current capability, its development team needs to add additional modules/lessons that focus more into this area.
>>You can't expect to be fluent enough in a language JUST with Duolingo
This is true, but I don't think it's damming. It's also true of exercise books, flash cards and such that they replace.
Duolingo teaches a basic vocab grammar, "spoken" in one-liners. Within that scope, it is, imo, a nice app. The core theme is "no pain," and it is enjoyable.
"Not good as a tutor" is a high bar. Not sure it's fair.
OTOH, "as good as a tutor" is the right bar. It would be awesome if they (or anyone) had software that teaches through to working fluency.
In any case, I think we should avoid thinking of good outcomes in tech monolith/monopoly terms.
We don't need Duolingo to "eat the world" of language learning. Say we have 20 or 30 duolingos^ that add up to online language learning.
When I tried it before, the app felt like flash cards but their actual website included grammar lessons that explained what was going on. Things like the boring old table of verb conjugations that you'd expect in a textbook, which the app tries to teach you more organically.
I dare you to come up with something better that has more traction. It's far too easy on HN to put other's work down - they've done fantastically well and made the world a slightly better place IMO.
I ain't putting them down, I am saying they have a lot of headspace to improve now that they proved their worth and valuation. Sharing ideas and feedback on startups is still the focal point of HN last time I checked.
That's really the point of the comment. It hasn't really solved a problem, and yet it has a lot of 'traction'. It does worse than say, just picking up a kids book and a dictionary.
If anything, I think it makes the world a slightly worse place. It means that someone committed to learning a language spends a lot of time on Duolingo and not something that works. They feel like they've made progress, but after weeks and months, they still can't read a label in the language.
I'm saying this as someone who has been using Duolingo heavily this week and was getting frustrated at how inefficient it is.
I had German courses in middle and high school, but forgot most of it to the point I could barely understand simple sentences.
I started re-learning it on Duolingo a year ago, and rapidly caught up at the level I had in high school (which was very low, but still), and now I'm making some progress. eg. I can read a newspaper article and have a rough idea of what it's about.
I can't say whether or not I could learn a new language from scratch with Duolingo, but at least in my case it was helpful.
Is there a better option to reach beginner-intermediate level? I am going to have to learn French from scratch in about a month and I'm finding the prospect daunting.
Well it depends how much time you have to put into it...
Buy (or pirate, but really, you should buy them if you can afford it, they’re great) the entire set of Pimsleur French tapes. There are 90, each 30 mins long. Do one tape every day. Note that this will take you longer than 90 days as you are supposed to repeat tapes when you don’t remember ~80% of the content.
Concurrently, get Anki (flashcard program) and find a French vocabulary deck ordered by frequency. Learn as many new words per day as you have time for. Do all your required reviews every day.
Concurrently, spend as much time as you can every day reading or listening to appropriate material and trying to understand it. Search for “French graded reader” for some good books to buy.
To add on to these great suggestions I'd also say speak to people. Go on Italki or HelloTalk. Caveman brute force a 5 min conversation if you have to but imo speaking asap is essential and using the resources above + a frequency list can get you through the the first 5 minutes of conversation very quickly.
I think a lot of language learns focus too much on vocabulary and grammar when starting out but they don't take the time to drill/ use the vocabulary they are learning in actual conversation. There is no point in passively knowing 1000 words if you can barely use 100 in an active conversation.
Another resource that I like but wouldn't recommend it unless it was on sale is the mimic method. Learning the phonetics and how to hear/create the unique sounds of your target language is really important but it's too expensive for what you get imo.
I also recommend Pimsleur. Unlike with Duolingo, I feel like I can actually produce new sentences with the constructions that I've practiced with Pimsleur. Of course, Duolingo covers more vocabulary, but with Pimsleur I feel like I can actually speak the words and produce new sentences, not just type/recognise them.
(I've also heard Assimil is a good alternative to Pimsleur.)
Try out the Pimsleur method. You'll quickly get the hang of "sounding" correct, even if you can't hold a conversation.
I think it's one prong of a multi-pronged approach to language learning.
I used this method to learn some basic phrases and greetings in Russian. It helped me get by as a tourist, along with earning some surprised looks from the locals.
> I am going to have to learn French from scratch in about a month and I'm finding the prospect daunting.
I'm intrigued by the fact that you can see this requirement coming up. What's imposing it on you? What defines "success" in learning French?
If you're interested in the experimental views of a random person on the internet, babies learn language in the following sequence:
1. Listen to the language with no understanding or context. By the time you're born, you will be able to tell the difference between your language(s), and a foreign language.
2. Practice producing sounds that could be part of the target language. If you're learning French, then at this stage you're pronouncing nonsense syllables, but at least they're nonsense French syllables.
3. Be exposed to many example sentences for which you already know the meaning. (This is actually an ongoing process which never terminates -- seeing an unfamiliar word used in a sentence for which you know the meaning is how you learn new words.)
4. Learn some single words. ("Mom". "Moon". "Jump".)
5. Use your words to communicate with the people around you. Look how they smile!
6. With your growing understanding of sentence structure, move on to sentences.
---
As an adult learner, you can collapse the phases (as do babies, really) and take advantage of formal instruction to learn things much faster than a baby can. I strongly recommend using formal instruction to go from "nothing" to "beginner" level. But stages 2, 3, and 6 remain crucially important for pronunciation, understanding, and production, and you should probably focus some time on each of them.
You may not need certain abilities. Foreign learners frequently never achieve native-like pronunciation, because strange pronunciation is only a minor barrier to communication. And many people learn a language to the point that they can understand it but can't really produce it themselves.
And a word of warning from personal experience -- I can converse well enough over text messages in Chinese for Chinese speakers to feel basically comfortable. All of my practice is in text -- in person, I still can't speak at all. You'll only develop skills that you use.
I would say 2. is pretty underrated; especially anglo saxon folk (and in my experience, Americans being the worst) speaking any foreign language sound absolutely like they skipped this step entirely. Funny things like Grissom in CSI supposedly being a German expert and managing to pronounce literally every word wrong to people coming to Paris with college French and have people look at them like they are aliens. The knowledge of grammar is there but the pronunciation is off by miles.
My first and last name are not sounds in English apparently and polite people try to pronounce them correctly (I do not really care how it is pronounced; I am not important) them, English and American (and Australian) cannot even hear side by side that they pronounce it really differently. They ask me to record the correct and then their way and they cannot even hear they are pronouncing it differently. How can you learn a language correctly like that? It must be practice right? I came here from another thread because I am sure this is the same as me learning Mandarin; I have been ordering green forks instead of green tea for a long time...
This is similar question I had. I think a lot of people on HN think learning means becoming an expert, but many people just want tourist level of fluency. That means vocabulary, phrases, and basic conversation. Whether someone learns perfect pronunciation and sentence structure or not means little as a tourist trying to get by.
I found Duolingo sufficient for tourist level fluency.
I've really enjoyed the Mango app + website, which I got free access to via my library. It's conversational and has a great interface to repeat things over and over again with native speakers.
Duolingo is just a language learning simulator, gameified to make people feel like they’re accomplishing something they’re actually not. It’s ultimately a disservice to foreign language learning overall because there are legitimate self-study courses that can teach people to read various languages (speaking requires practice, back-and-forth with someone else, or lots of hours of videos).
Nonsense. One of the most important parts of learning a language is daily exposure to it. Duolingo is a great tool in that toolbox.
I learned all sorts of vocab and conjugations from Duolingo at a time in my casual learning where I certainly couldn't be fucked to open a grammar book. That didn't come until years into being able to read books in Spanish.
To me, it's like telling people that jumping into a programming project does a disservice to you vs studying programming books and source code. Instead you need to realize that the most important thing is to be doing anything. There is no magic roadmap to learning something. Do whatever you can to practice daily even if it's just in the form of Duolingo exercises. You'll outgrow them eventually, but most people don't even reach that point.
Most people dabbling in a language don't even know if it's something they want to do for the 5+ years it takes to really learn it. Duolingo excels here. Giving someone some long term serious roadmap does not. They will probably just lose interest and give up.
Same opinion. Too bad my profs don’t let me apply my idea in a more "product" way and on the languages I care about because I have a few ideas to improve the situation (one being the one I research for my PhD). So, I’m doing it on my spare time but it takes longer than I want.
I have been using Duolingo for about 7 months now and have made much more progress in it than any of the language classes I took in high school and college. I think the reason is because course based language lessons focus mostly on teaching grammar to be tested on exams. On the other hand, Duolingo focuses on repetition and practice which helps you retain what you learned and build an intuition for the language.
I used Duolingo to start learning Danish and within about 6 months had 5*'d almost down to the end of the tree. I always felt like something was missing and enrolled in actual Danish classes from the university here, taught by a native speaker.
Within 4 weeks of class I'd stopped using Duolingo, but I'm still studying and continuing with classes (lessons with a native speaker). I felt that in many places it was inaccurate, prepared me poorly for written conversations with Danes (and don't even get me started on speaking/proununciation), and didn't provide any of the cultural nuance really needed to understand the language and how Danish people construct their sentences.
I guess it's good for vocabulary, but not as good as simple flash cards.
How are you sure that the human teacher is more "right" than Duolingo ? Teachers will show you their ways of speaking Danish, which is usually very formal and a bit outdated, not necessarily how Danish people actually speak Danish (although their are still a valuable experience in your training).
I believe the idea of Duolingo is to "bootstrap" yourself enough into the language that you can read more material about it, and then start speaking with other people to improve yourself with real conversation in real situation. The teacher may be a good addition, but also costs more and may be confusing.
I get that Duolingo is "basics", but it captures a lot of your time that are better spent learning with other means. Off of this, the company has a $1B valuation. They don't charge for their service and it's not really worth paying a lot for. The users who use it the most probably won't pay.
I don't know how they're ever going to justify that valuation.
Maybe you are the exact user story of their business model : at the end of the Duolingo experience, the website would become the Uber of language teachers.
Online realtime, or face-to-face course in your town with a selection of human teachers. A Platform to match teachers and students.
The platform could simply list professionals (with a fee), or take a fee per minute of course video, or a fee per booking, etc
Same. I'm a little annoyed with some parts of the UI (it seems somehow too encouraging) but the basic utility of the app is hard to beat. The streak system is just enough of a motivator to encourage users to keep at it every day, and that consistency is shockingly effective. The UI is also laser-focused to be approachable, especially on mobile, which I think is the right choice given their broad target audience. It's not going to satisfy power users, but that's not the point.
The actual lesson content is basic, and you'll want to supplement it with broader learning materials and reading in the target language as soon as you're remotely able, but as a jump start from "never spoken a word of this language" to "able to recognize basic grammar patterns, and get the general gist of what I'm reading" it accomplishes this goal quite well, and for very low effort on the part of the user. I can finish my Duolingo rounds in about 15 minutes every day; the hardest part is just remembering to do it. There's something to be said for what they've achieved there.
I would hope they spend more money in actually teaching other languages then. The current quality of their app is just gamified vocabulary flash cards at best.
The problem is that many people see Duolingo (and Duolingo partially advertises itself this way) as the first and last step needed for learning a language. On the contrary, Duolingo is a good first step, but it's only a first step. Instead, simultaneous with Duolingo, you should be using a spaced repetition system to study vocabulary, like Mnemosyne, Anki, or Memrise. After you get significantly through the Duolingo tree (or finish it, for a smaller tree), you need to start immersing yourself in the foreign language - consuming media in the language and talking with others who speak your target language, at the very least. Another good tool after Duolingo is Clozemaster, since it helps you get exposed to lots of vocabulary and sentence structures.
It depends on your language, but widely spoken languages have "easy language" media available, which is a good place to start. But also, look on YouTube for native speakers talking, listen to podcasts, read books (keep Wiktionary or WordReference at hand), and find people online! It'll be hard at first, but you'll quickly get a lot better.
In addition, Duolingo (and every other language learning tool) is significantly better for some languages than others. There is now the "story" feature for some languages, which helps a lot with reading comprehension, especially after you get past the first few easy tiers of stories.
I'd say that completing the Duolingo tree in German got me through a similar level of grammar that my four years in high school did, but what it is lacking is the many hours of listening practice and vocabulary practice.
Disclaimer: I have no connection to Duolingo or any of the other tools I mentioned; I am simply a fan.
It's definitely not "just" spaced repetition in the way that Anki is (asking you how difficult it was to recall the answer and choosing to ask you again at some time "t + now" in the future, where "t" is determined by your answer). As far as I can tell, as you're working through a tree in Duolingo, it tries to sprinkle in words that you've seen a few checkpoints ago, but it doesn't seem to do so dynamically based on demonstrated mastery or lack thereof of the words sprinkled back in.
Duolingo tries to do some spaced repetition, but it’s not very effective. Spaced repetition should be at least explicitly memorizing the definition of vocabulary (and related uses) with a smart algorithm while Duolingo only exposes you to words occasionally, in the form of sentences.
Credit where it’s due though. The low barrier to entry and habit-forming nature got me learning Italian. I’m definitely not fluent but I can have conversations with people in cafes and restaurants and it’s pretty fun! Recently I’ve moved on to Babel and I like that too.
I used Duolingo for about 1 month to learn Portuguese and was close to the end of the tree. I learned quite a lot, the grammar drills were useful introduction and basic vocabulary, however I stopped using it due to it requiring me to translate back into English which made it hard to think in the language. I bought other books, like side by side texts, and grammar books to continue and watch YouTube videos from Brazil to drill in the sound of the language.
I learned German at a University in a German speaking country, and the classes were completely in German from day one which I found helpful. I also bought quite a number of books and studied quite a lot before I become fluent.
So I don’t think an app is a one stop solution, it takes a lot of material, I’m not sure why people think any one system is enough, especially considering you never stop learning a language. Fluent just means you know enough to continue to learn in the language on your own.
Surprised Duolingo is the first out of Pittsburgh. There's a huge tech scene out there with tons of interesting stuff happening but with a reasonable cost of living. They have the top ranked CS program plus a bunch of interesting robotics stuff going on.
As someone who went to CMU, there are just so few investors in Pittsburgh. In fact, many years ago I was talking with Severin Hacker (Duolingo cofounder) about some of the challenges of running a company there. There is a lot of engineering talent...and that's it. Marketing? Business development? There just aren't (or weren't) that many people there. I also know that Anki moved to San Francisco because it was the only way they could raise money. I also left Pittsburgh because it was the only way I could raise money.
So long as the investors are in the Bay Area, it will continue to be the startup mecca of the world. That does seem to be slowly changing, but not nearly as fast as anyone promoting their city as the next startup hub is willing to admit.
It's changing for the better. We raised our seed round here a few months ago with low friction (from valley VCs, not Pittsburgh VCs, but who cares?). We plan to stay Pittsburgh-based for the most part; we and our investors are entirely happy with that.
I’m currently based in NC. Pittsburgh caught my eye as a potential place to move to, but it’s just too far away from... everything. I also understand it’s a very “sporty” city, which is something I’m not very into.
> I also understand it’s a very “sporty” city, which is something I’m not very into.
I wouldn't necessarily discount the city for this; in my time there, I realized there were really two Pittsburghs. You'll see the steel-town football-obsessed side any time you walk past a bar, but near the CMU/Pitt bubble it actually had a really intellectual vibe that I miss now that I've left. Not just the abundance of grad students, doctors and the like, but good libraries and bookstores, a fantastic symphony orchestra, a quality coffee scene, etc. Has a Portland/Seattle-like (including gray weather) vibe. And Steelers games are great times to go grocery shopping!
The travel situation isn't great though. PIT has direct flights to most east coast cities but getting to the west coast indeed sucks. (United does have a direct SFO flight, IIRC, if a bit pricy.)
I was in a similar boat coming to Pittsburgh, but I will say this about the mixture of tech and sports here: I've watched it have the effect of getting people who didn't care about sports one way or the other at least surface interested. It's a city where you can find a great many sports nerds who can introduce a person to why these games are interesting from a statistical and story side, which is how I've come to interact with them.
There's something to be said for places that overlap multiple cultures.
There's a lot of tech talent, but most employers are dinosaurs stuck in an ancient circa-2004 mindset (check any job listing from Pittsburgh and it'll be a soup of buzzwords from 2004. jQuery abounds. PHP is king. Even the "senior software engineer" job posting at Duolingo asks if you know "DOM" and "AJAX"). Also most jobs are contract, not even contract-to-hire. Some bank or trucking company needs some webforms worked on for a few months, and then you're gone.
What's the point of all of this? Well, the hipsterism and average engineer tenure at a single company in silicon valley (which last I heard was 1.5 years) leads to everyone in silicon valley kind of being homogeneous cogs that are interchangeable. 20 years ago we all used PHP, Java, 10 years ago it was Rails and jQuery, and now it's React.
I think that Pittsburgh is cut off from the talent here in silicon valley, because if you dropped a React developer into a company there they might as well be a space alien.
I had to learn marketing, advertising and PR in a previous engineering role.
Perhaps entrepreneurial engineers that leave the area should cross train and bring those skills back to Pittsburgh once they've got some years behind them.
Pittsburgh has a weird vibe to it. Pretty much everybody that lives there is surprised by how much they like it (including myself) and aren't eager to leave, but once you have left there's just very little desire to go back. I have lived in many places (including other countries), and that's the only city that I didn't want to leave but also don't want to go back to.
Basically it's nice enough to be comfortable, but not great enough to be desirable.
As a CMU alumnus I can’t agree enough. I was pleasantly surprised with how neat a city it was (10 years ago) but once I left for SF I don’t think I could ever go back!
Spent a large chunk of my life there and I can't believe how accurate this is. It's a wonderful place with so much to offer but I don't really feel like going back... I spent a lot of time on the rivers but the climate is changing it into a sort of cold Florida.
I’m from PGH but live in Seattle now. I plan to move back in the next few years based on the favorability with cost of living differences. Especially when you consider life with a single income family. It’s not as cool as Seattle but it’s not that bad either so I think it’s a good compromise.
The VC-funded part is tricky to evaluate. FORE systems (in the 80s/90s) was worth almost $7b in 2019 dollars at the time of its acquisition. But I'm not sure if they took VC funding.
Avere Systems was (2018?) acquired by Microsoft, but the terms weren't disclosed, so it's unclear if they grew a centrally located cranial horn or not.
I went till the end of the tree on Duolingo 5 years ago on just the free tier. Installed it a few months ago for my daughter and now the free tier is useless, can't do much at all.
Memrise is more useful on free tier but quite buggy.
I was looking into building a language learning app the other day to help my spouse with their passion but the market appears over-saturated. The only niche I see is for a good game teaching English alike https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.prodigygam... but that's not something I can arrange.
For all its faults, we can't argue with the fact that thanks to the popularity of this app many people have engaged with another language, even if it fails to deliver. Overall, on a global level, this increases compassion and global understanding through cultural exposure. I can't possibly be against it for that.
Great app. 151+ day streak on it. I think there are some problems with monetization (right now the free tier has just as many features as the paid tier), but it is really a great tool.
That's probably because you are in another A/B test group. In mine, I can make up to 5 mistakes a day, before I am cut off for the rest of the day (except when I pay, of course).
Duolingo isn't as simple as some of these comments make it out to be. I can only speak for Spanish as I'm 75% done through the new tree (one more group to go). They have actual written, albeit small bite sized written lessons for every lesson branch. If you compiled all the written lessons (the bulb icon next to each lesson) you would have an introductory Spanish text book.
I also take lessons on italki and my gf is a native spanish speaker. It's a great supplement tool if you're consistent.
I'm fluent in 2 languages, and can read French as well, but when I tried to learn Japanese through Duolingo, it was an epic fail. Beyond some very basic things, it was pretty clear that not only the developers don't use the service themselves, they also don't really listen to people who do use it in any kind of a consistent fashion.
Imo all these complaints against duolingo not being good enough are not fair. Have you seen the alternatives ? I mean they did get 1 billion dollars for not nothing !
It’s bad because it takes a very long time for a language learner to assess their own progress. Duolingo relies on its userbase making an uninformed choice. If Duolingo warned a user “it will take a you 30 years of daily ‘Casual Level’ use to learn the basics here” he or she would likely choose a different website or strategy.
Yes, the reason is that it takes around two years before a user realizes how ineffective the site is. That’s about the maximum amount of time a user can fool themselves into thinking “I’ll start to see some progress any day now!”
If Duolingo were as effective as sites that require the user to make actual effort, its popularity would be more than justified.
Have you used it? You're limited in learning when you make a few mistakes/typos. As if mistakes are bad!? Then you need to pay to continue that day. Just a new cash-cow feature.
I think that it's important to acknowledge that an effective language learning approach is multi-faceted and learner-specific. Any single app can only be a small part of a larger learning strategy, combined with books or podcasts or tutors or reading and listening practice or making friends with native speakers... you need it all.
Full Disclosure: one of the developers of Japanese Complete here. We are aiming at providing learners with a full path to native-level comprehension and fluency. We estimate it'll take ambitious learners 3-5 years to complete everything. You can subscribe monthly. https://learnjapanese.best has more information
There are lots of other general language learning apps, but they’re all about the same as Duolingo. However, more specific apps can be a very useful tool. Specifically, using a spaced repetition software is the best way to memorize vocabulary. I personally use Mnemosyne, which is open source, but there’s also Anki, Memrise, and a number of others.
Pimsleur is what you want and you can get it free form your library. You can play the audio tracks from your phone if you burn the CDs. It could well be a native app, and I wish it was, but there must not be a lot of tech product vision at the Simon&Shuster.
I love Duolingo and think it's great. I took two languages in school and another for a job and I've learned more with Duolingo than with formal education. I think if you're a certain kind of nerd then learning from a textbook works great but for me the casual little lessons in Duolingo are just right. I know two sets of linguist parents and they think it's great and have their kids on it.
Self-promotion here, but my app, Supercoco, is far better for serious learners (Spanish only, iOS only). Focuses on speaking and listening rather than reading and writing, and is based on a large quantity of high quality content (about 300 conversations) that most apps just don’t have. https://supercocoapp.com
I hate that Duolingo has no grammar lessons or dictionary for vocabulary. Is that different for Babbel? How is that structured?
Duolingo also has a weird discrimination between iOS vs Web/Android. In the iPhone App you lose health with wrong answers and wait for regeneration or have to buy "hearts", this restriction is not present on Web.
IMO, if you really want to get to a high intermediate or advanced level of proficiency, an app is never going to cut it. Nor are classes. It's worth the up-front effort - and less effort in the long run - to work out your own system.
There are a lot of individual apps and sites that can you can cobble together, and that play a part in a lot of people's personal systems. Spaced repetition is a great idea. But you will want to do it using a DIY-oriented app like Anki, and make your own flashcards. Forvo is a fantastic website and app for working on your pronunciation. For any popular language, YouTube will offer a wealth of channels offering video content (with transcripts) that you can use to get in your listening practice. Reverso is great for pinning down idioms. Just grab whatever grammar book from your local used bookstore (at least for starters - once you've spent a while learning, you'll have a better sense of what you want in a grammar book, and that's the time to pick a specific one and pay full retail price for it.) Once you're able to read a comic book or watch a slow-paced nature documentary in your target language (this is quite attainable within 6 months if you work steadily), get 1:1 tutoring on iTalki. Etc. etc.
The common criticisms about canned courses, at least according to a lot of folks in the recreational language learning community, are:
1. There's a speed limit. In a class, your pace is limited to that of your least motivated classmate. In a freemium app, you're limited by their monetization policy. With Rosetta Stone, you're limited by excessive animation crap in the UI.
2. You're stuck using whatever content someone else thought would be interesting. If it's not so interesting to you, your motivation is going to suffer.
3. You're stuck learning stuff in the order someone else thinks you should learn it. This can just murder your pace if, for example, the order in which your brain wants to pick up grammar rules doesn't exactly match what the course designer thought the right order should be. Which it won't.
4. Apps and courses sink way too much effort into metrics, either in order to assign grades or in order to gamify things or just to control your pacing. This creates a streetlight effect: They teach you what's easiest to drill on with short answer and multiple choice questions, not what's going to best enable you to use the language independently.
As for how a homegrown system should work, there are a lot of books and blog posts on that; I'm disinclined to endorse any one of them because it's better to read several and cobble together your favorite ideas into a system that's all your own than it is to follow just what happened to work for some other person. It's got to be your system that you worked out for yourself because it's got to be something you actually enjoy doing if you're going to have any chance of sticking with it for the long run.
This company apparently has a $100mm revenue run rate. How? I read somewhere that companies pay for translations from learners. Does that make sense? These are people with very low fluency. Does anyone with more info know more about their revenue model?
There is also a monthly subscription plan. Dunno what their conversion rate is, but recently (maybe sometime this year?) they added a game-style resource mechanic where any mistake makes you lose a heart, which you gain back either by waiting a few hours or by being a premium user.
Duolingo is super frustrating if you're learning Spain-Spanish, there are lots of complaints of them not adding Spanish variants of words and Duolingo hasn't moved on it at all in 5+ years.
I stopped using Duolingo when they added my native language and there was no way to change the "base language" back to English. Thankfully Anki will never do me dirty like this.
If you truly want to learn a language, no singular app will work.
You need to find a good curriculum for your language for grammar. Typically this means taking a class or buying a good textbook. Sometimes you get lucky and find a comprehensive website.
For audio / speaking practice, I recommend glossika. It’s like a modern version of pimsleur.
For vocabulary I recommend Anki. I have used that for the last two years and written about it. Generally you can start with a premade deck and eventually make your own once you’re a little bit more advanced in the language.
For talking to people, try HelloTalk. You can make posts and natives can correct them, and you can have conversations with native speakers.
Once you are intermediate or advanced+, you need to start consuming native material. Try searching on YouTube, or look for graded readers.
Searching reddit about recommended textbooks / etc is usually useful, depending on how popular your language is.
> Language-learning app Duolingo is valued at $1.5 billion after a $30 million investment by Alphabet's CapitalG.
Erm, so Alphabet threw in $30 million for 3% in a Series F that has already taken $138 million (I wonder what kind of preferences they got on that, LOL) and magically Duolingo is a unicorn.
Uh, yeah, sure.
Basically, Alphabet paid $30 million for a lot of user information to throw into the voracious Google maw.
Google paid $30 million for 3%. Even the most optimistic unicorn projection isn't going to return much of a multiplier on that. Pearson is a behemoth in the space, and it's, what, about a $5 billion company?
The financials simply don't add up.
So there is some very important aspect of the deal that can't be publicly announced. The only thing Google would want from Duolingo that would have to be kept on the down low would be lots of user data.
Or they think the project has legitimate worth and this team is the right one to execute (people having more language knowledge makes it easier to make the world's information universally accessible). Or it's a favor to a high-value ex-Googler. Google's been known to pay big numbers to keep key people happy; maybe they're making a long-term investment in Luis von Ahn under the assumption he may come back some day.
Is that enough? Definitely not. Not for me at least. They basically give you the 'hello world' of a language.
I speak 5 languages (learned through school and life choices) but when I tried to learn a 6th on Duolingo I felt like the experience was not good enough for me. A tutor or a class would probably be mandatory and using Duolingo just for re-affirming some basic concepts would be a nice to have, like a companion app..but they have to be able to let teachers create their own lessons.