Mango Languages | Am I Fluent Yet? | Science Behind Language Learning @mangolanguages | Uploaded May 2022 | Updated October 2024, 2 hours ago.
Are you fluent in your second language? How do you know? In our latest video, Kaitlyn Tagarelli (Linguist, PhD) talks about what it means to be fluent, and why that might look a little different for everyone.
View our detailed blog post for more information: blog.mangolanguages.com/am-i-fluent-yet?
Not yet as fluent as you want to be? Check out our video for tips on finding your path to fluency: youtu.be/Gt0s29jstSM
If you liked this video, please let us know by hitting that like button, and join the Mango Languages fam by subscribing to our channel. We also invite you to check out our website at: mangolanguages.com and follow us on social media @MangoLanguages. And remember – language is an adventure. Enjoy the ride!
Wondering what languages were used in today’s episode?
English (recording language)
Thai | สวัสดี (sawat1dii) means both “Hello” and “Goodbye”
Dzongkha | སྐུ་གཟུགས་བཟང་པོ། (kuzu zangpo) means “Hello” and ཡར་སི་མས། (yasi mey) means “Goodbye”
Interested in learning Thai, Dzongkha, or one of the other 70+ languages that the Mango app offers? Click here to start learning! mangolanguages.com/app
Want to know more about the scientific research underlying this episode? Here’s some of the research we consulted in this video:
DeJong, N. H. (2018). Fluency in Second Language Testing: Insights From Different Disciplines. Language Assessment Quarterly, 15(3), 237-254.
Ullman, M. T. & Lovelett, J. T. (2016). Implications of the declarative/procedural model for improving second language learning: The role of memory enhancement techniques. Second Language Research, 4(1), 39-65.
Kaitlyn Tagarelli (PhD, Georgetown University) is a Linguist and the Head of Research at Mango Languages. She holds a Ph.D. in Linguistics from Georgetown University, specializing in how the mind and brain learn languages. Aside from geeking out about all things neuroscience and linguistics, she loves hanging out with her family at their Connecticut home, trying to convince them to speak French with her.
#languageEd #worldlanguageEd #languagelearning
Are you fluent in your second language? How do you know? In our latest video, Kaitlyn Tagarelli (Linguist, PhD) talks about what it means to be fluent, and why that might look a little different for everyone.
View our detailed blog post for more information: blog.mangolanguages.com/am-i-fluent-yet?
Not yet as fluent as you want to be? Check out our video for tips on finding your path to fluency: youtu.be/Gt0s29jstSM
If you liked this video, please let us know by hitting that like button, and join the Mango Languages fam by subscribing to our channel. We also invite you to check out our website at: mangolanguages.com and follow us on social media @MangoLanguages. And remember – language is an adventure. Enjoy the ride!
Wondering what languages were used in today’s episode?
English (recording language)
Thai | สวัสดี (sawat1dii) means both “Hello” and “Goodbye”
Dzongkha | སྐུ་གཟུགས་བཟང་པོ། (kuzu zangpo) means “Hello” and ཡར་སི་མས། (yasi mey) means “Goodbye”
Interested in learning Thai, Dzongkha, or one of the other 70+ languages that the Mango app offers? Click here to start learning! mangolanguages.com/app
Want to know more about the scientific research underlying this episode? Here’s some of the research we consulted in this video:
DeJong, N. H. (2018). Fluency in Second Language Testing: Insights From Different Disciplines. Language Assessment Quarterly, 15(3), 237-254.
Ullman, M. T. & Lovelett, J. T. (2016). Implications of the declarative/procedural model for improving second language learning: The role of memory enhancement techniques. Second Language Research, 4(1), 39-65.
Kaitlyn Tagarelli (PhD, Georgetown University) is a Linguist and the Head of Research at Mango Languages. She holds a Ph.D. in Linguistics from Georgetown University, specializing in how the mind and brain learn languages. Aside from geeking out about all things neuroscience and linguistics, she loves hanging out with her family at their Connecticut home, trying to convince them to speak French with her.
#languageEd #worldlanguageEd #languagelearning