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One truth about language learning is rarely mentioned in the industry. Today we are surrounded by opportunities to “learn” languages. Apps, websites, courses, tutors, conversation partners — the possibilities are everywhere. But this abundance has also created an illusion of ease. Because there is so much activity in the language market, it can feel as if everyone is learning. In reality, only a small percentage of learners ever reach a level where they can function abroad — something like B1 or B2. My guess is that over 80% of the language learning market actually serves hobbyists, not people who reach real functional ability. This video is therefore a reality check. Many learners are walking down a road that leads nowhere simply because they do not understand the numbers involved. For example, my French program contains roughly 900 pages of material. Each worksheet is about 5 pages long, which means there are around 180 study units. How long does it take to properly study and memorize 5 pages of structured material? For a very disciplined learner, perhaps two hours. If you completed one unit per day, that would mean 14 hours of study per week. At that pace, you could theoretically finish the entire program in 180 days — about six months. But that calculation assumes something unrealistic: • you never forget anything • you fully understand every lesson the first time • what you learned on day 1 is still perfectly clear on week 3 And at that stage, you would still need speaking practice. If you added just 2–3 hours of conversation per week, the total would rise to around 16 hours of weekly work. In the best possible scenario — extreme discipline and very efficient learning — someone could reach a solid level of French in about six months. But most learners do not work at that pace. A more realistic rhythm might be studying every two days, which easily turns the timeline into one year. If someone studies only every four days, the same program could take two years. Now, because the course builds on itself, not every worksheet introduces completely new material. So the initial estimate may be too high. If we reduce it, we might say: • about 8 hours of structured study per week But that still does not include vocabulary drills, which are done through video training. Adding those might bring the total to roughly 10 hours per week. And even this assumes you memorize everything efficiently. In reality, learning happens in stages. There is a big difference between recognizing something, understanding it deeply, and being able to apply it naturally in real conversation. So what does this prove? It shows that if you are not investing at least 6 to 10 hours per week, you are probably progressing so slowly that the path almost leads nowhere. Unfortunately, many people believe that occasionally using an app or having a weekly conversation will eventually lead to fluency. In most cases, it will not. Language learning requires time, structure, and repetition. OuiCommunicate teaches online French to adult learners https://ouicommunicate.com #LanguageLearning #FrenchLearning #expatsinfrance #LearnFrench #learnfrenchfast