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[tag:languagelearning]
Are children better at learning languages?
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## inb4
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge's_law_of_headlines](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge%27s_law_of_headlines)
## Introduction & context
People who learn a new language as a teenager or adult know that it's a very long and difficult process. There comes a time in every language learner's life where they wonder why learning their native language as a child seems to have been comparatively very easy.
There is a popular notion^[ww](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weasel_word) that the reason we can learn our native language so well is because childrens' brains are more *plastic* -- pliable, moldable, teachable. While I'm not opposed to believing that children have *some* level of biological advantage, I think this argument is overblown and serves to be a conversation-stopper more than anything else.
I am not a linguist nor a neuroscientist nor a psychologist. I didn't read any studies before writing this article and don't have any sources to cite. Sorry. The purpose of this article is [not to definitively answer the question](/writing/counter_counter_thoughts) but to exercise critical thinking in the face of Claims From The Internet. I am a layman on this topic and so are you [footnote_link]. Even if I read the neuroscience papers, I've heard too much about the flakiness and irreproducibility of psychological studies that I wouldn't actually feel any more confident. Purists will be annoyed that I can admit this and continue writing anyway. Such is the nature of understanding topics beyond my own expertise.
[footnote_text] probably
## Occam's razor
Oh look, it's another explanation of Occam's razor on the internet. Trust me, I wish I didn't have to do this, but there are too many people^ww who think Occam's razor means "the simplest explanation is probably correct". [Even Contact gets it wrong](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LLny5slQvE), and as far as I can tell everything else in that movie is scientifically accurate.
The problem is in the word "simple". If the question is "how do birds fly" then we could very simply answer it with "magic". In fact, that could cover just about anything we don't understand.
A better phrasing of Occam's razor is "one should prefer the explanation that makes the fewest assumptions". If we think that birds fly with magic, it makes a lot of assumptions: that magic exists, that birds have magic and we don't, and what's the deal with airplanes (hint: more magic). I also choose the word "prefer" because there's no need to pat myself on the back for having picked what's "probably correct" when the whole point is to objectively recognize what I know and don't.
When the question is "why is language learning easy for babies but hard for adults", then the answer of neuroplasticity starts to sound like magic, and there is not much in the way of quantifying the difference between child and adult neuroplasticity. It's just *enough* to explain away the question [footnote_link], but not too much or else adults would be totally incapable of learning.
Remember, this article is written by a layman using critical thinking to evaluate what I've heard. As such, the remainder of this article lists advantages that children have over adults and vice-versa without resorting to such assumptions.
[footnote_text] note I still haven't cited anything
## Advantages that children have over adults
### They don't really have a choice
Now, I'm not saying it's a matter of life and death like learning how to swim in the deep end (babies are notoriously bad at surviving on their own anyway), but you've got to admit there's an element of pressure for children to learn a first language. How else will they defy their parents or ask for cookies?
When I am reading or listening to something in Korean and I get frustrated or bored because I don't understand it, I can just turn it off and go do something else in English. Even in foreign language classes, where some teachers strive for 100% target language in the class at all times, of course peers will use English amongst each other, except maybe for the biggest nerds. Children don't really have those kinds of alternatives. Except crying I guess.
I read this comment recently and it stuck with me:
> Whenever I hear a native English speaker idly thinking of learning a language for "business reasons," this is the comparison I draw in my head ... it subtly hints at the reality: even with your hard-won language ability, you'll still need to pair it with another skill[set] to get the job. At minimum something like marketing, editing, or translating. No one will pay you to just speak the language.
\- [/u/xanthic_strath](https://old.reddit.com/user/xanthic_strath) on [How useful is Mandarin if you aren't Chinese?](https://old.reddit.com/r/languagelearning/comments/fidbrz/how_useful_is_mandarin_if_you_arent_chinese/fkgvynt/)
Do you really want to dump hundreds/thousands of hours into learning the foreign language, only to reach 'competence' when you could be developing your other skills into mastery? It's a hard sell.
My desire to learn Korean is purely interest-based, because I enjoy it, so I'm not worried about this part personally. I recognize that the situation is different for people learning English.
### Endless free time and constant immersion
Babies got nothing to do. No work, no school, no obligations whatsoever, [barely gettin' up to go potty](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4v34cgBnbfU). If I could sit around listening to my target language all day I'd progress a lot faster too.
There's not much detail to give here as I think it's pretty self-explanatory, but really these first two points account for a majority of the problem. An adult learner first has to subtract sleep and responsibilities from their allotted 24 hours, and with the remainder has to decide whether learning a new language is really important enough to give it up. Especially because spending X hours on something I'm bad at is tougher to do than spending the same X hours on something I'm already good at.
### Enthusiastic support from day one
From the moment a child is born, it's surrounded by a group of people who
- are enthusiastic about and participate in the child's learning (and put up with their mistakes, see below).
- use simple sentences and vocabulary (baby talk).
- use vocabulary which is relevant to the child's own life.
This group is often known as the "family" or so I hear.
Compare that with adult learners who
- don't have someone holding their hand. Unless you're paying someone or are sufficiently handsome, you won't find a stranger who wants to hear you struggle in your foreign language.
- read and listen to native-level material at native-level speed [footnote_link].
- read and listen to material that isn't actually interesting to them simply for the sake of practicing comprehension.
[MotivateKorean](http://youtube.com/channel/UCBpRNdkIp4LSUCgXOcp1NSQ) often says that when you're learning vocabulary, there is an important moment where you "make it yours". Discovering an opportunity to use a new word, and succesfully using it, hearing it come out of your own mouth, contributes much more to your learning than just doing flashcards. For children this will occur naturally and frequently. For adults, especially those learning on their own, it won't.
[footnote_text] You've probably seen Stephen Krashen demonstrate [comprehensible input](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fnUc_W3xE1w&t=3m20s). It's a good lesson, for sure, but in practicality it's extremely difficult to find material that matches your `i+1`. Partly because it's hard to define your current `i` in the first place. The parent-child relationship excels at this in a way that a language teacher / tutor / internet material simply can not. I have been listening to TTMIK's Iyagi since nearly the beginning, and although it is still above my skill level, I can feel that my comprehension has been going up. Don't get stuck in an endless search for the perfect `i+1` material, just find *something* that isn't impossible and get started.
### Not afraid to make mistakes
I was going to make a separate header for "not expected to output for a long time" but let's just combine those thoughts here. When an adult starts learning a language, they'd like to start using it sooner rather than later. Even those who emphasize input-before-output like [Matt vs. Japan](https://www.youtube.com/user/MATTvsJapan) [footnote_link] understand that adult learners don't want to, and in fact shouldn't, refrain from talking for two years like children do. Children have the advantage that nobody expects them to say anything for a long time; they get to sit back and soak it up first.
When an adult learner starts texting or talking in their new language, they'd prefer to not make mistakes. Some are more embarrassed about mistakes than others, but I think it's true for all of us. I for one would rather forgo a thought than blunder it (I have the luxury of learning solely as a hobby with no real pressure or requirements for what to express). Of course, mistakes can be very productive because you can get feedback instantly and in context which are pretty much the two best things for feedback to be. It's just very difficult to overcome the pride. See also the previous point about how nobody wants to listen to you stumbling all the time and suddenly I'm even more self-conscious about opening my mouth.
[footnote_text] he probably would prefer that I link to [massimmersionapproach.com](https://massimmersionapproach.com/) first and foremost, but truthfully his youtube channel is a better resource than the site at the moment
## Segue: remember all those spelling quizzes from school
The whole premise of this article is an adult trying to figure out why learning a new language is so hard when learning their native language was so easy. So to that end it's important to remember that you had mandatory English classes every single year for, like, twelve years. So when your math classes progressed from arithmetic > algebra > geometry > trig > calculus, and your science classes progressed from biology > chemistry > physics, all the while there was English > English > English > English > English. Literacy rates haven't always been as high as they are now. Children learning to read and write is in fact a big undertaking and not as trivial as it seems in our distant memories.
Just take a look at the vocabulary and expressiveness of a ten year old and remind yourself that *that* is what ten solid years of uninterrupted native exposure results in. If you can beat that level of comprehension and expressiveness in your foreign language in under ten years (if you're studying, I bet you can), then you're beating the pace you set by learning your native language. I'm currently at 1.5 years of my leisurely pace of Korean studying and I can mostly comprehend teen level text as long as I'm allowed to use a dictionary (listening comp is a different story, but anyway). I know that if I had studied harder over this past year and a half I'd be a lot better, too.
I want to restate this point: It seems to me that learning the second language is **not** actually harder than the first. We just didn't feel and/or don't remember how hard it was and how much help we had the first time around.
## Advantages that adults have over children
> Brady: You feel so omnipotent when you're with little kids, and you understand things so much better. And we adults are like these gods, and they're trying to understand nuance that they can't possibly understand and you occasionally have these waves of emotions where you're like "I just know so much more than you. I can impart so much knowledge on to you and you don't understand this but I do".
> Brady: Like a kid'll go near a lake or something, and you'll be like "don't go near the lake" and you'll stop them from going in the lake. But you know so much more about why that is. You know about drowning and oxygen and swimming and all these things. You have so much more knowledge than them. And they're just these little nothings that know nothing.
> Grey: When I'm around little kids, probably the thought that is in my head the most often is "you're just so useless at everything". Like you can't do... you can't do anything. You don't know anything about anything and you can't do anything. And you're just this huge burden on society that we tolerate because eventually you'll grow up and you will be useful. But not today.
> Brady: But doesn't that make you feel good because you are useful? You're like "one day you be mighty like me. One day you will be able to buy food. One day you will be able to drive a car. One day you will be able to open a door, but now you can't. I am the god that can do these things". And you and the other adults look at each other knowingly like "we know, we know the stuff. We know how to open a door. They don't".
> Grey: I guess I don't derive feelings of superiority by surrounding myself with uselesness.
\- [Hello Internet #29](http://www.hellointernet.fm/podcast/29), around the 1:00:00 mark.
### Ability to actively seek what we want
When a very young child is learning their first language, they accumulate vocabulary mostly according to the whims of the world around them: what their family talks about, what's on TV. An older child can [pick out books](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvrnKrZiqPE) but will have difficulty really searching for something. The older you get, the more accurately you can search the internet, pick materials for your skill level, ask (well-formed, please!) questions on forums, etc.
### We know how to actively study
Earlier I gave the children a point because they get constant immersion for free all the time, but that's passive immersion. Adults can do deliberate study and review and use tools like Anki to make sure that, even when we forget something, we'll get reminded of it in due time.
### Familiarity with general grammar concepts
Learning a new language requires learning new grammar, obviously, but there are plenty of concepts and patterns that will be the same. When you learn the grammar for expressing "if A then B", you don't have to relearn the entire concept of 'if' as a baby does, you just have to learn the new words for saying it. The same goes for prefixes like anti-/un- or suffixes like -ic/-al and so forth.
## This isn't a defeatist piece
If you're keeping score, you may feel like overall the kids come out on top. Even if an actively studying adult can outpace a child's language learning, the amount of effort and difficulty in reaching fluency makes it feel like more of a slog. However, I think that negative feeling would be even more amplified if we were to concede that children just have special plasticy brains and they have the biological advantage and there's nothing we can do about that. Now that I've given my reasons for not believing in that as a primary cause, we can find some actionable takeaways by applying babys' strategies to our own learning.
- **They don't really have a choice** --> An adult learner should also strive to remove their choices. Stop fleeing back to the English safe zone. Change the language of your phone or computer. This is why Matt vs. Japan calls it the mass immersion approach.
This isn't always conducive to the best work/life/responsibilities balance, but babies don't really have those things. Just try to get as close as you can.
- **Endless free time and constant immersion** --> I know I can't say to just create more free time, but look for ways to increase the time you spend listening. Any time you are not speaking to someone, or doing audio-based work, or forbidden from wearing earbuds, you could be listening.
Remove the friction between you and the process of listening. On my phone I use [Musicolet](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=in.krosbits.musicolet&hl=en_US) which lets me have one queue for music and one queue for Korean [footnote_link] so I can go from not-listening to listening very quickly.
At the moment, my current source of friction is wearing earbuds. They tend to get caught on stuff if outside my shirt, I don't like wearing them inside my shirt, and it is too easy to take them out and not put them back in. I could increase my listening hours by playing Korean on speaker at all times, but I don't for fear of bothering people.
- **Enthusiastic support from day one** --> It's difficult to give any advice here that isn't already commonplace. Find a friend online so you can encourage each other. If they're learning the same language as you, be careful that you don't wind up reinforcing mistakes (because you can't correct each other) or invent phrases that native speakers wouldn't actually use. Again, I think that the parent-child relationship for language learning can't be equaled, so this one is a straight advantage to the kids.
- **Not afraid to make mistakes** --> Imagine how would feel if you saw or heard someone make a mistake in English. Would you think they're dumb? No, of course not. So when you make a mistake in your target language, remember that although you might feel embarrassed, the listener probably doesn't mind. And if they do, you should find someone else to talk to.
I won't give too much advice here because I'm still bad at this part. I think I should write more or talk to myself more to practice without the pressure of having a listener. It's dangerous to invent new phrases on your own, but you can safely practice the phrases you already know, get better at saying them out loud, and improve pronunciation.
[footnote_text] I switched from Google Play Music because I couldn't switch domains like this without throwing away the current queue. It's not the same as a playlist because queues need to maintain your track position and be easy to edit. Also GPM kept asking me to pay for a subscription.