Well, learning other languages apparently makes your brain more flexible, but I share your frustration about how they’re formally taught in highschool, at least versus the much more interesting ways of learning languages which are living amongst the natives or “absorbing” a language from hearing it on TV because you already know a similar language.
I remember being taught Dutch formally when I moved to the Netherlands and almost none of it stuck, but some years later I ended up working for a small company were everybody but me was Dutch and they would just have all the meetings in Dutch (not with a bad intention, IMHO - always thought it was partly to help me learn it) and a mere 3 months later my Dutch was pretty decent. Being thrown in at the deep end is stressing but you learn fast and it’s never boring.
Well, learning other languages apparently makes your brain more flexible, but I share your frustration about how they’re formally taught in highschool, at least versus the much more interesting ways of learning languages which are living amongst the natives or “absorbing” a language from hearing it on TV because you already know a similar language.
I remember being taught Dutch formally when I moved to the Netherlands and almost none of it stuck, but some years later I ended up working for a small company were everybody but me was Dutch and they would just have all the meetings in Dutch (not with a bad intention, IMHO - always thought it was partly to help me learn it) and a mere 3 months later my Dutch was pretty decent. Being thrown in at the deep end is stressing but you learn fast and it’s never boring.