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⬇️Are you learning French? I've got all you need right here: ⬇️ Want to finally make visible progress and get fluent this year? Join the best online community to learn French, complete with live workshops and daily contact with your favourite French coach? Join the French Fluency Accelerator now: https://www.frenchfluency.net/acceler... Would you rather work with me one-on-one? Learn more and book your free consultation over at https://www.frenchfluency.net/about-t... Just want some more expert advice for free for now? Read my blog: https://www.frenchfluency.net/blog/ Want some free expert advice in your social feeds? Let’s connect: Facebook → / frenchfluency.net Instagram → / frenchfluency Pinterest → / frenchfluency Resources quoted in this video: The ONE thing you need to learn French successfully → • The ONE thing you need to learn French suc... Learn French grammar the easy way → • Learn French grammar the easy way Students testimonials playlist → • Testimonial: French Fluency Accelerator + ... Read this on the blog → https://www.frenchfluency.net/blog/le... 6 reasons why you suck at French - and how to fix it Did you take French for years in school, and still can’t speak much? I’ve met so many people in this situation. Sometimes these people even had very good grades in French, but they have never been able to have a conversation. In this article, we explore six reasons why this happens, and how you can avoid repeating the same mistakes when you study French as an adult. As you will see, none of these mistakes are your fault, and it’s not even your teacher’s fault. No matter how serious you were as a student or how great the teacher, the context of a school just isn’t a great place to learn French. The bad news is that these typical shortcomings are also present in many classes for adults or self-study methods. Here’s the good news: as an adult, you can choose every aspect of your French study. So in this article, we’ll explore what goes so wrong with standard language teaching at school - and which elements you need to change to get real results. I’m talking get fluent in a few months kind of results. 1) Lack of a good reason to learn French As I explain very often (for example here), the one thing that makes a difference between French learners who succeed and those who fail is how good your reason to learn is. "I learn French because it's on the program, or because my parents chose it for me." is about as bad as it gets, for a "reason" to learn. If you really want to learn French, you certainly have better reasons than that. Make sure these reasons are crystal clear to you and keep them top of mind. 2) Not enough time to speak Too many students, not enough lesson time. When I was eleven, we used to have four hours a week of English study, and there were about 30 of us in the classroom. This amounts to a whooping eight minutes (!) per week per student. This assumes that the teacher would never speak and that no time would be dedicated to other activities. As we know, most of the time wasn't dedicated to speaking anyway. That would leave us with maybe two minutes per week speaking the language. With two minutes of weekly practice, you should be happy that you learned anything at all. The obvious fix is to make sure you have plenty of time to practice speaking. How you get better at speaking is by speaking I recommend one-on-one coaching, or any other learning modality that gives you lots of time to practice such as 1-1 tutoring, learning in a small group or a language exchange. 3) Over-focusing on grammar In school, grammar has a very important place. This stems from an outdated mindset which used to view a language as a set of rules and exception - rather than as the way humans communicate. The truth is: grammar isn't everything. Grammar is much less important than we tend to think. If you speak without respecting any grammar rule, you won't be able to pass an exam, but you will still be understood by natives most of the time, assuming that your pronunciation and vocabulary are decent. Now the question is, what do you want? Do you want to ace your school exams or to be understood when you speak the language? If you aim for the latter, focusing so much on learning the grammar is basically a waste of time and effort. If you are concerned about learning grammar, I recommend this article that’ll show you a way to learn good grammar and also be able to speak and understand at the same time. My approach is always to put the emphasis on speaking and understanding real-life French and only learn grammar when it supports this goal. 4) Punishing mistakes instead of encouraging them. Read the rest on the blog → https://www.frenchfluency.net/blog/le...