Elementary --> Intermediate

peonyer
October 22, 2010, 07:53 PM posted in General Discussion

Hello, Chinesepod,

How can I transition from the Elementary level to the Intermediate level?  Your elementary lessons are too slow and repetitive and will never result in such a transition, the real study kicks in only from the Intermed,ate level up.  The elementary lessons just repeat the same short dialog 10 times (3 + 3 + 1 + 3) as if I have no "rewind" button on my car stereo, they even repeat the English translation twice.  There is very little actual new material per lesson.  But the Intermediate lessons are too hard, I don't understand most of what is said.  What to do?  Thanks...

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abelle
October 23, 2010, 11:34 AM

Ni hao, Peony:  I am in the same boat that you are.  I'm at the Elementary level also, have completed about 75 lessons, but am not sure that I can handle the Intermediate level yet.  I also have listened to the dialogues and they're still too difficult for me.  I am taking Chinese courses at a local school and study ChinesePod in addition, usually on the weekends.  I have almost completed two semesters of Chinese at school.  I will complete Chinese 102 soon and am also in a Conversational 103 course.  I'm thinking that after I finish the 102 course, I'll try to move on to the Intermediate level in ChinesePod, at the end of this year.  Hopefully by that time I will have learned some more Chinese at school to help me tackle the Intermediate level.  Good luck!  --A-Belle

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pretzellogic
October 23, 2010, 12:32 PM

I'll tell you what I did to transitionfrom Elementary to Intermediate. But first let me give some background on what I was doing at elementary level:

I listened to elementary lessons in the car on the 1 hour commute to work. I could listen to 1 lesson (Ken/Jenny talking then hearing the dialogues) about 3 times during the commute. I would first listen in the car, then try andrepeat the dialogue from memory. At the point I was in Elementary, I could recite about maybe a third to a half of an elementary lesson after hearing it 2-3 times. I would know about 30% of the words in a lesson. over the course of the week, I'd listen to the lesson over and over, and then would end up being able to repeat a dialogue from memory. After about a year of this, I moved up to intermediate, mainly because I was bored with elementary lessons (certainly not because i understood 100% of the elementary lessons on the first pass). Intermediate seemed more interesting.

After the First intermediate, I realized that I couldn't just listen passively anymore in the car. I started doing the following:

1)listening to lessons at home

2)writing down on paper what I thought I was hearing in the dialogue.

3) writing down individual words that I had problems remembering

4) memorizing the dialogue (or at least 60-80% of it)

5) listened to the dialogues in the car

6) instead of listening to lessons as cpod published them, I listened to only taxi lessons, so that I could hear at least some of the words over again in a new lesson. This helped me get through lessons without having to listen to just one repeatedly, and getting bored fast.

So in short, I went from a very passive listening/learning experience in the car, to an active learning experience in the car and home. But Intermediates don't seem hard anymore (not that I get all of them either). I think i'm just used to them at this point.

Hope that helps.

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RJ

My personal preference would be that the banter would remain mostly English until the upper intermediate level. The fact that Jen speaks almost entirely Chinese makes these lessons harder than they need to be, but that is just my personal opinion. Sink or swim doesn't work well for me. At least not yet. I do agree with your assessment regarding active vs passive learning.

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mark

I can only comment on the great elementary transition to intermediate debate by analogy, because I was already at intermediate level when I started listening to Chinesepod. Every next level has its challenges. For me it was the advanced lessons that seemed insurmountable for a time. My advice would be:

1. Keep at it. 2. Be an active rather than passive student. 3. Remember, you don't need to understand everything to benefit from a lesson. If that were my criteria, I would still be listening to exclusively intermediate and below lessons. A few mysteries to crack, is a good thing.

Back when I couldn't understand most of the lesson banter that was in Chinese, I felt that the English portion of the intermediate lessons was sufficient to understand them. I think John does a good job of explaining the important points Jenny makes, and now that I do understand what she is saying almost entirely, I can promise you that you aren't missing out on anything required to understand the lesson, maybe just some color points and listening comprehension practice. It is not like she is off conducting some whole other lesson, really.

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darkstar94

what do you do in terms of revising lessons? (if you even do) Like if you studied a lesson like a few months ago, does it retain well?

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pretzellogic

RJ, I agree with you. Jenny's mandarin only was a challenge for me at first. But I got used to it after about 10-15 lessons.

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pretzellogic

darkstar, as you might guess, I retain some lessons better than others. So lessons from a few months ago are dependent on how much I liked them, or worked with them. Ultimately, i'm treating this like a class at school; i try and devote as much time with the class when i'm assigned it, then move on if I test at 70-80% of the knowledge of the lesson. I don't do formal reviews, but I have about 1200 flashcards in cpod that I use when the cpod ipod touch app works. I partly benefit from the fact that there are plenty of cpod lessons with the same theme (Lao Wang and others), so I don't have to do a deep individual lesson review to get the benefit of a review. But no doubt, I should be doing better. If I were to grade myself as if i'm in school, i'm probably getting a B-/C+ right now.

One thing i've started to recently re-learn is that I need to work more with writing out sentences and working with sentence patterns. At the intermediate level, sentence patterns are getting more complex, and if you don't know/work with the pattern itself, you start putting words you know in the wrong order, and that really is what confuses Chinese people the most when I speak, not my atrocious tones :-)

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darkstar94

yeah that's a reason why I'm reviewing a bit more now is that I understand sentences but then I try to think of them myself (as in patterns) and I just completely blank out. The only positive about that is that I always remember what lesson I actually learnt it from haha, if only I wasn't as dependant...

Thanks for the advice, I should take advantage of the flash card function, been taking advantage of the glossary function which I didn't realise was so helpful.

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RJ

Mark

I guess I have more trouble with the banter than the lesson. It overwhelms you to such an extent that you just feel left behind. I have learned so much, but I know so little.

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bodawei

' I have learned so much, but I know so little.'

Hee hee, absolutely! In terms of what we know we peaked at age 14; we knew pretty much everything then. We have been steadily declining ever since.

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paulinurus
October 23, 2010, 10:38 PM

Hi Peonyer,

This matter of transitioning from Elementary to Intermediate has been discussed to great lengths many times before in the past. Yes, there is a gap, and quite a big one when one transitions from the Elementary to the Intermediate lessons. Some poddies have said that even though they have studied all the Elementary lessons, they still found it difficult to understand the explanations spoken in Chinese in the Intermediate lessons. I recall one person saying that he studied hundreds of the Intermediate lessons before he could follow the explanations and the bantering. I've studied Mandarin for over 2 years and while now can understand more of what Jenny is saying, certain portions continue to befuddle me, for example 12.11 (what's that ???) and 14.26 (Mike Tyson's "lao hu" ? what's that) in Walk The Bird lesson. John "got it" and laughed, but I didn't. Which means, I'm still not there yet and have to study more to bridge that gap.

You asked, how can you transition from Ele to Inter? Based on what works for me, here are my suggestions:

1. With the current formats of the lessons, it will take years, there is no short cut to finally be able to follow the Intermediate shows. Hopefully Cpod is willing to tackle this issue and find ways to make changes in the lessons format so as to narrow the gap. I too find that there is too much repetition (even in English!) in the Elementary lessons while the Intermediate format can be quite incomprehensible. Perhaps until this "gap" issue is adequately addressed, there could be more empathy during the Intermediate shows that poddies may not understand what was said at certain points, and that translations are needed. 

2. Self study the lesson pdf before listening to the show. It will be very difficult to follow an Intermediate show without first studying the lesson pdf. A head start of the vocab will help you understand some of what is said during the show.

3. "A jack of all lessons is master of none". Study fewer lessons and study them well. Pick lessons of interest to you and study the vocab and sentence structures closely. I'm not a fan of trying to tackle one Intermediate lesson a week when you're transitioning from Ele to Inter. 

Good luck!   

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RJ

Hi Paul,

I have no great insights, but Mike Tyson did have a pet Tiger at one time. Thats one mystery I can clear up for you :-).

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paulinurus

RJ, I just listened to the show again, and yes I should have caught the meaning of 'lau hu'.... must be the jet lag having just got back.

Re: Ken v John in the Ele shows, I agree that there is more substance and depth with John. However, the problem remains in that the Ele shows are too simple, and they keep using the same range of vocabulary but in different scenarios. I like to see them raise the bar in the Ele shows, have more new vocabulary, and thus narrow the substantial "gap" between Ele and Inter.

Also I think it is time for Cpod to review the show formats. This is the same format since day 1. Surely this manner of delivery should not be cast in stone as the one and only effective way of delivering the shows.... triple repeats in Ele, Jenny only speaking Chinese in Inter, and both John and Jenny only speaking Chinese in Upp Inter? Instead of spending all that time and money this year messing up the Community sections and inventing a convoluted and unnecessary system called the "Dashboard", I think Cpod should have researched on improvements to the show formats. After five years of maintaining the same formats at the various levels, isn't it time to review and ascertain whether there could be improvements? Surely there are improvements that should be implemented, for example, closing the gap between Ele and Inter. Also, I don't see why Jenny or John cannot slip English in for certain words or phrases in the Inter and Upp Inter shows, especially when Jenny is responding to John's grammar questions. Since the dialogues are already in Chinese, why is it necessary for Jenny or John to speak all Chinese in the Int and Upp Int shows? It is already difficult to catch all of Jenny's Chinese dialogue (without first having to spend years self-study on the Intermediate lessons), why is Jenny giving answers pertaining to grammar in Chinese? I think English should be used in all explanations pertaining to grammar in the Int and Upp Int shows.

Anyway, these are my thoughts after just joining back as a subscriber this week.

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RJ

All good points. No disagreement here.

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peonyer
October 24, 2010, 08:37 AM

Thanks for your comments!  What I am planning to do is to take the Dragon (Jenny) by the horns: study the Intermediate lessons even though I barely understand 10-20 percent of them.  The Elementary lessons are not done well at ChinesePod, sorry (although their audio reviews are quite useful, I'll keep those).  Today I spent several audio-hours at a single Intermed lesson - the first one about apartment renting - going back and forth between audio review and the lesson, it is better now, but not done yet.  BTW, my level is "fresh Pimsleur graduate", i.e. the 90 lessons of Pimsleur Mandarin.  Pimsleur is precisely how Elementary lessons should be structured.  "Study fewer lessons and study them well" - excellent advice.  "Study at local school" - here the problem is that you are either taking a beginner's class (turtle pace, full of unmotivated absolute beginners) or an intermediate class (way too hard).  The same problem, actually!  I also do most of my learning in the car.  "Be an active rather than passive student" - do you think that audio reviews give enough activity?  "Move on if I test at 70-80% of the knowledge of the lesson" - good point too.  Flashcards - haven't tried them yet, if they generate audio I will use them, otherwise - sitting at the computer screen after a whole day of the same?...  Thanks again!

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bababardwan

peonyer,

not sure if it's been mentioned above , but just a few tips.

Firstly, I'd reiterate what Mark says....John just basically translates what Jenny says, so you pretty much have the essential stuff if you just hear what John says and can't understand any of the Chinese ...the rest is just practice to see if you could follow what Jenny said before John translates it for you.

Next...there are some QW's on podcast language....some stuff just crops up all the time...like 接下来。。。meaning next, ..moving on in the lesson

Also, as has been mentioned, this discussion comes up reasonably regularly, so you may find some other useful tips if you can track down those threads. I'd suggest using google to help track 'em down.

Finally, there is a group called Transcripts with Tal where many of the Intermediate lessons are translated by fellow poddies. You might even want to have a go yourself at some stage. I think it really helps your listening comprehension. Good luck :)

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pretzellogic

peonyer, I was also a 90 lesson pimsleur graduate. My problem was that when I got to Beijing and I had to get myself around, Pimsleur didn't really seem to have an answer when the taxi driver turned around and said (what I think was) "mind if I take 3rd ring road?' to the hotel I requested. When I desperately needed Chinese, all I could remember of pimsleur was "do you want to drink something?"

If you are planning to come to China, as you know, Pimsleur is not enough, and no one else does Pimsleur. Unfortunately, Pimsleur doesn't seem in danger of coming out with Mandarin IV - XXX, which was what I needed them to do to learn enough real-world Mandarin, if I was going to come to China for any length of time.

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RJ

peonyer,

Let me say first that everyone learns differently, but I have to disagree when you say the elem lessons are not done well. In fact they have improved immensely since Ken left. Ken had a pretentious, patronizing style that I didn't care for much. Jen and John sometimes play "smart cop dumb cop" where John assumes the role of the learner and Jen the teacher. I think they learned this from Ken, (only he wasn't pretending). John, I know is smarter than that, so its a little silly, but no big deal. Anyway I wont pick on Ken any more since he is not here to defend himself and some of the quirks of the presentation have nothing to do with the lesson material itself. I find that the elem lessons are good for hearing/speaking practice where a higher level lesson is needed to learn new vocab, reading, and sentence structure. Some other folks pick up the hearing and speaking part straight away and the other skills lag behind or in some cases, keep pace. I should be so lucky. I also started with Pimsleur, which is the best CD course out there, but I got so sick of those lessons, and there is no written back up. Big problem for me. At Cpod you have fresh material continually so words are heard over and over in different contexts and their meanings become clear as they lock themselves in your memory, just as is done in learning by immersion. I don't think there is any magic answer to the transition problem. Just keep at it. The ice will finally melt, or so they tell me. To this, I am looking forward.

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paulinurus

Peonyer, your query about the difficulty transitioning from Ele to Int again confirms the one big weakness in the Cpod's program which have till this day not been adeqately addressed by Cpod... namely very poor lesson content planning to facilitate progressive learning. The Ele lessons are too simple and repetitive using a narrow range of vocabulary, while the Int lessons are choked full of new vocab. I've studied the over 300 Ele lessons and about 100 of Int lessons and yet looking at the vocab in the Apart Renting, many of the words and phrases are new to me. Unlike text books like Integrated Chinese and unlike college courses (yes, there is a college here in Toronto with progressive levels of courses in Mandarin, if I recall up to 8 levels) Cpod's lessons are planned ad hoc and somewhat whimsical. There is insufficient planning and no gradual progression of difficulty levels in the lessons and so there is this sudden shock and huge gap when transitioning from Ele to Int. Thus, the basis of my suggestion that lessons should be selectively picked and that planning one's one progressive levels of study is necessary. For example, if you are planning to visit China for the first time, then study all the lessons pertaining to travel, food, and health. If you are planning to develop relationships in China, then study all the lessons on relationships, which by the way, has the biggest share of lessons in Cpod's inventory.

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paulinurus

I agree that Cpod's lesson dialogues are very practical and can't be found in text books... this is its great strength and attraction. I got by OK in China by just being able to understand the gist of Chinese spoken by hotel & restaurant staff, and vendors; and by just being able to speak a few key words to get my message across. Ha..ha.. I recall the first day checking in at the Beijing hotel... the hotel bellboy was very diligent (after receiving a tip) and was over-showing me everything about the room, except the safe. So I asked him "Safe, 在哪?" He didn't understand "safe" and I didn't know the Chinese word for it. So I said "Vault, 在哪?" He didn't understand that either. I was scratching my head trying to find the right word. Finally it dawned on me to say "箱,钱箱,在哪?”"Oh, oh", he said, "保箱". Then he brought me to a broom closet where there was a small safe sitting UNBOLTED on top of a small old table. I lifted the safe under my arms and we both laughed.