polymathwannabe comments on How to learn a new area X that you have no idea about. - Less Wrong Discussion
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I find 3, 4 and 9 difficult to implement in teaching oneself a language.
example of 3 for learning a language - Chinese (I don't know much about Chinese) to a fluency level of being able to function while on holidays in china for a month:
for 4 in this specific example - confirming how many characters there are, and the general map of characters to each other, and verbal language to each other. (I assume the difficulty in 4 was in not having 3 completed)
For 9 specifically - Don't buy a book about Chinese language history if you are looking to be fluent in Chinese for a month.
Does this help? Or are your difficulties elsewhere?
Yes, this helps.
I was thinking that now I need a step of "define X" earlier on. The problem with "learn a language" is its very broad; like people saying they want to learn programming. Or exercise more. Or lose weight. Its a not an SMART goal in not being specific.
Thoughts?