Entry tags:
Duolingo
Over at
covidcoffeecorner, today's discussion question is about what games people are playing right now, in person or otherwise, and one of the examples
liv used was gamified self-improvement stuff like Duolingo, and I wrote:
I'm mostly, and deliberately, ignoring the gamified parts of Duolingo, at least for now. "Maintain your streak" is gamified talk for "do at least a little every day," and I want to keep that up, because it's easier to maintain that sort of habit than "I will do French at least four days a week" or the like.
I was looking at the "league promotion" bit when I first started, because I had a bunch of free time, and found the early lessons extremely easy. Right now, I'm doing intro French as much for listening practice as vocabulary. It's still at the point where I know most of the words before Duolingo "teaches" them to me, many via Spanish cognates or borrowed English (it has me practicing that the French for "weekend" is "week-end") or picked up from menus and signs in Montreal. But I can't go too fast right now, because typing can strain my left hand.
I suspect the gamification would work better for me if I was doing this with people, friends or in a class, or if all those "lingots" I earn for things like meeting my daily goal were usable for anything I remotely wanted.
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I'm mostly, and deliberately, ignoring the gamified parts of Duolingo, at least for now. "Maintain your streak" is gamified talk for "do at least a little every day," and I want to keep that up, because it's easier to maintain that sort of habit than "I will do French at least four days a week" or the like.
I was looking at the "league promotion" bit when I first started, because I had a bunch of free time, and found the early lessons extremely easy. Right now, I'm doing intro French as much for listening practice as vocabulary. It's still at the point where I know most of the words before Duolingo "teaches" them to me, many via Spanish cognates or borrowed English (it has me practicing that the French for "weekend" is "week-end") or picked up from menus and signs in Montreal. But I can't go too fast right now, because typing can strain my left hand.
I suspect the gamification would work better for me if I was doing this with people, friends or in a class, or if all those "lingots" I earn for things like meeting my daily goal were usable for anything I remotely wanted.
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
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A friend is using it to learn some Spanish and Japanese, and keep her German fresh.
no subject
The sad thing is that I'm getting to the end of what they have for Hebrew, and I want to keep improving that, not move on to a different language. I've still got at least another six months, but the end is in sight. I've played a bit with Memrise, but I've had trouble with making it work usefully for me. (I don't need to repeat words I know solidly six more times to prove I know them.) But I'll probably have to contend with that eventually.
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I truly don't care about the "streaks", and even if I did I wouldn't agree with its measure of my streaks, anyway, as I measure a "day" as that time between when I wake and when I sleep. My normal time to do a duolingo lesson is just after I crawl into bed and as my dawnlight is bringing on dusk. Therefore my streaks count only the number of days in a row that I happened to go to bed on the same side of midnight.