I’m hoping to stimulate a debate about the most effective way of learning Thai. There have been many discussions about this before, but so far no one has tried to set out a practical strategy. It’s all very well having great material, but most of us do not know how to go about learning a language, other than what we’ve experienced in our conventional schooling.
It’s a long posting, because there’s a lot to say. The fundamental principles are relatively easy, but they take some explaining. The concepts are very different from what you might be used to, so if you want to learn Thai (or anything) more effectively then please keep an open mind.
A larger discussion will be posted on my website www.learnthaionline.com and you can participate in this discussion on the facebook discussion page.
Why bother?
Most of us think we’re only going to be in Thailand for a short while. So we don’t bother. Or we think that Thai isn’t an important language compared with Chinese or Spanish or French, say. But if you put it off then you will find yourself justifying why you never need to speak Thai and look for ways to do without. Thai is like sex in a way. If you’ve never experienced it then you won’t really miss it. Also, if you can only fumble about in the language then you won’t really enjoy it. Persevere and make it part of your daily routine – it’s like doing 10 minutes’ push ups every day – before you know it you’ll be having a lot of fun. For most people, Thai is not a priority in life – yet at some point we want to be able to communicate with Thais as equals.
Unfortunately, most approaches to learning Thai seem to focus on mountains of material requiring hundreds of hours of study. Who has the time for that!? At least not normal, busy, sociable people like you and me LOL!
The 'Rapid' approach is designed to fit into your busy lifestyle. It uses a number of Accelerated Learning techniques, mnemonics for memorization, and sports training concepts for developing fluency. But above all, it's a less-is-more approach, the idea being that you only need to master a carefully selected body of material to be reasonably conversant in everyday situations. At a more advanced level, this even applies to business and politics (because, although the vocabulary used is quite complicated, it's usually limited to a few hundred words that are used frequently).
Who are the people who learn Thai?
Well, most people don’t bother with Thai. They tailor their lives to get by in an English (or expat) enclave or bubble, with bilingual go-betweens (in the form of secretaries or girl/boyfriends) and avoid any deeper interaction with the locals. We can see this more obviously in the West, where foreigners (Spaniards, Chinese, Japanese, Turks, Pakistanis, Nigerians, etc.) will settle in the US or UK or Germany never being able to speak more than a smattering of the official language. We look down on these people and even try to kick them out of the country. (I wonder how the Thais view us, then… especially those of us who settle here long term, buy property, run a business and/or raise a family… but still cannot speak Thai!?)
Perhaps initially enthusiastic, most of us give up when we realize how much time and effort is involved (understandably, especially how boring and arduous it is to learn the conventional way). I remember the grinding hours of learning French or German in the stuffy little classrooms with uninteresting fellow students. I learnt very little this way, never really getting fluent in German. I only became fluent in French through self-study and by using a number of psychological techniques that turned out to be very effective.
There are a very small number of dedicated language students who treat languages as giant intellectual jigsaw puzzles and enjoy spending hours studying vocabulary and the intricacies of the language. I know one fellow – Dylan Haddock – who speaks Thai more fluently than a native speaker (if that's possible), but his idea of bedtime reading is the giant Royal Institute Thai Dictionary! I also know several polyglots who can speak a dozen or more languages fluently, but again their idea of fun is to spend every spare waking moment studying…
Then there are the rest of us who do genuinely want to communicate with local people and get to know them and the culture through their own language. But we lead busy lives work-wise and socially, and pursue other interests. We don't want to spend more than an hour or so per week, yet we'd like to be relatively fluent and be able to interact naturally with local Thai people.
So what’s the Rapid Approach then…?
There are three phases. The first is the reading course: learn to recognize the letters and words, and sound them out accurately with the correct tone, without necessarily understanding what you are reading. I use quirky images and bizarre (sometimes obscene) stories to imprint the letters in your brain. But it’s not just about recognizing the letters; you also need to understand how words are formed and how the tones work. And it’s important to learn and practice to pronounce the sounds right, otherwise we sound like Donald Duck’s Siamese twin!
It takes about 12 hours to achieve this, with another 4 hours to practice and consolidate what you've learnt. Some people quibble about this claim, saying that I require people to prepare for the course beforehand, so it's not really 12 (or 16) hours. Well, one hour's preparation is all that's required, so call me a liar and make it 13 hours of study time!
I've discovered that in practice, the more you space out the study time, the better. I used to do this course in one day, but it was just too much. Even a weekend is very intensive. It's important to practice a bit whenever you can.
And that's the key: the more actual reading you do – at the right level – the more intuitive it will become (just like driving or dancing: there's no point in just learning the how, you also have to do it, you have to go out in traffic and drive, or go out to dance parties and dance).
The more intensively you follow the Rapid Method, the more important this is. I recommend to participants that they start reading simple texts the day after the course. Start by paying attention to the street signs, make a point of reading the Thai portion of the menu in a restaurant, go immediately on to the Everyday Thai for Beginners course (or something equivalent) and start reading simple texts.
Learning-while-Reading is phase two. It will be a bit of a struggle at first, because it feels so slow and you have to look up virtually every word in a dictionary. That's what computer dictionaries are for – no need to learn the order of the alphabet and hunt around a printed dictionary – just type in the word and bob's your uncle!
So call me a liar again, because to be able to read reasonably well takes maybe another 30-40 hours, maybe spread out over two months or even four months, whilst developing a knowledge of the language and acquiring a decent vocabulary (600 words will do, 1200 is better, and 2000 will be more than adequate for basic everyday situations and conversations). All of this doesn't include the 2-3 minutes every now and again throughout the day deciphering signs and notices, which sneakily adds up to maybe another 4 hours of reading practice per month. So long as you do it consistently, it doesn't feel like any effort – and your level of Thai improves dramatically. Plus you'll find that you can start reading relatively effortlessly within a month or so.
The Everyday Thai for Beginners course is a book that you can buy from Kinokuniya, Asia Books or Amazon. I then supply you with an adapted Anki flashcard deck. It's also all in Thai, there is no Romanization or phonetics.
This course can be studied alone, but I recommend finding a Thai teacher and getting one or two private lessons a week.
If you choose to work with a Rapid-certified teacher, this will be your schedule: Work through one lesson on your own (50 minutes on day 1) just to familiarize yourself with the words and basic concepts. Then work through the vocabulary for that lesson using anki (10 minutes on day 1 and 2) followed by an hour on day 2 with the Thai teacher who should explain what’s going on grammatically, help you with your pronunciation and practice some simple conversations with you.
You should spend the rest of the week doing 10 minutes a day of Anki and another 10 minutes a day of speech training. This is where you take a few sentences and repeat them over and over again in a loud and exaggerated way until you can say them quickly and accurately without thinking. It’s pure muscle training, getting your mouth and tongue to move automatically. Later, you can vary the pattern slightly: Can I have a cup of tea, Can I have a glass of milk, Can I have a bottle of beer, etc.…
It helps to spend another hour with your Thai teacher around day 5, but this time just have fun. The Rapid teacher guides the conversation carefully using only the vocabulary and concepts that you’ve learnt up till that point. She also diagnoses and corrects your pronunciation, using the ‘speech training’ method.
The following week, you then move on to the next lesson. There are 30 lessons, so that means seven months, but only spending 2 hours ‘studying’ (plus 1 hour doing vocab and an hour or two with speech training and conversation) per week. You get to experience several hours of language learning without realizing it, especially as you can slip a lot of into your day, while travelling or waiting or just as part of having a coffee/tea break. You’ll be surprised how much you’ll be able to say and understand in a few months, with so little effort.
I would also recommend getting the Pimsleur Audio Thai Language course ($120 instead of around $200 from other suppliers). It’s a bit pricey and fairly dull, but is another excellent tool for speech training. To ‘accelerate’ it, I wouldn’t just listen to it (which is the Pimsleur approach)… it’s better to memorize the vocabulary as you go along (using Anki… and in fact, I will put together an Anki file for this in due course) – because then you can focus on pronunciation and understanding, without being concerned about vocabulary.
The third phase (finally) is to follow my Thai Fluency course, which is based on a Thai novel called Sydney Remember… about a Thai girl who goes to visit her cousin in Sydney. It’s a great story and the writing style is straight forward and very colloquial. The course follows the same pattern as recommended for Everyday Thai. Read a lesson, understand it, internalize the vocabulary for that week, listen to the story and repeat (for ear and speech training) 15 minutes every day. After 50 lessons, one a week, and no more than 2 hours of ‘study’ each week, you will be pretty fluent in almost everything except academic, political or business situations.
It’s slow in one sense, but it’s practical and realistic and doesn’t require hundreds (or thousands!) of hours of arduous study to achieve the same result. Most of us don’t have the time or the inclination to dedicate several hours every day to studying a language – especially when so little is retained and such a lot of boring and ineffectual repetition is required. The ‘Rapid’ approach is about studying a small amount of relevant material in an intelligent, focused manner and mastering it, so that it becomes imprinted in our minds.. Before you know it – you will be communicating with native Thais like one of them.
Other Resources
If you prefer mountains of material and have the time to work through them then there are other useful resources to try. HighSpeedThai also uses Anki and attempts to incorporate mnemonics in the reading phase (note: it's slightly flawed) but consists of 1000 pages of material as well as a line-by-line rendering of a typical Thai movie. LearnThaiPodcast is a series of mini video lessons with subtitles that develop your understanding step by step as you watch the series (try not to look at the Romanization). The reading method is taken (stolen?) from Read Thai in 60 Minutes, but I suggest you ignore it: it's okay, but wrong in a few crucial aspects. Then there's its4thai - a useful way to practice individual phrases (make sure you switch off the Romanized script in the settings). And finally, a great way to develop your listening comprehension is to attend the AUA classes. They're cheap and cheerful. My recommendation is to attend the level one below the one they suggest to you. Their (ALG) method is based on the theory that you have to 'stretch' into understanding the language by struggling in an immersion environment. It works, but very slowly. I think it's better to just go for the sheer fun of enjoying the antics of the (two) teachers and being able to easily understand what's been said.