Hehe. It's way out of the original topic of this thread,
but I believe that the most important factor in learning
a foreign language effectively is how to balance *input* and *output*.
A lot of people focus too much on input only
and therefore don't really make progress
despite all the great material that they have at hand
...
And I think that's one of the reasons that
it's usually easier to write than to *speak* a foreign language.
So... at some point I realized I was doing the same thing... hehe..
and starting from my first year in highschool, I started focusing
more on *output* rather than *input*.
I tried to spend more time speaking (mostly just recording my own voice
and occasionally talking to English-speaking people whenever I can)
rather than trying to study from books and boring lecture tapes
,
and times would come when I know that I can now say
everything I can write - and that's when I would decide that
I should to listen to and read some more (and different) stuff.
That was basically how I studied.
I hope you can do the same with Korean!
But don't get me wrong - I wasn't like... only studying studying studying.
heh heh. I enjoyed studying English, and I wanted to be able to
understand the humor and culture in the movies and songs better,
and that was always a good excuse for me to watch a lot of movies
and do a lot of online chatting.
I wish there had been podcasts teaching English 10 years ago
(was there any?) - it would have been sooo helpful
Not so many schools in America have Korean classes
as a part of their regular curriculum, right?
Let's practice some Korean together on skype someday!