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Friday, April 15th, 2005
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12:05p - decision-making tool: which language(s) should I learn?
One thing I enjoy doing is creating decision-making tools.
One such project has been itching in my mind for the past few months: a language-learning decision-maker: which language should I learn next?
Given a language L and a person P, we want to calculate P's costs and benefits in learning L.
Costs: Effort: how much work is this language for P? (P's talent, linguistic flexibility, knowledge of related languages) Money: how much money would P spend in learning this language? (different combinations of effort and money may work, but it will be a trade-off in any case) Time: P's opportunity cost: what is the cost of not doing other things he could be doing?
Benefits: Economic: how much does knowing L improve P's job prospects? How much more business can P do by learning L? (what is P's area? what kind of person is P? where does P live? where does P intend to live?) Social: would P make more friends by learning L? (where does P live? where does P intend to live?) be more attractive to the opposite sex? appease his partner's parents? Entertainment: would P enjoy learning L? Would P enjoy the consequences of knowing L?
Are there any common reasons for learning a language that I am not covering here?
Here's a slightly bullshitty, yet comprehensive coverage of the whys and hows of learning a language. Here is a guide to the difficulty of learning a language for a native English speaker (measured in hours required to achieve proficiency).
Here is the ACTFL proficiency scale, a simple self-assessment guide. I am an "Advanced" in Dutch, in English and Portuguese I am "Superior" or "S-4" depending on my mood, and somewhere between "Intermediate High" and "Advanced" in French. I don't claim consistent S-4 level in any language, since there are times when I can't express myself very well at all.
In any case, it seems clear that I should learn Chinese. But first German, since I'm already halfway there. Having said that, it would only take me a couple of months to learn Spanish properly, so that might be the most sensible thing to do.
Here are the world's most important languages, as measured by GDP:

Languages on the Internet may be a better measure of how many highly-educated people a language has, so you might prefer this measure:
More measures... ( Read more... )
An interesting tangent, is that the BRIC4 countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China) are predicted to economically surpass the G6 (UK, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, USA) before 2050.
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6:35p - I couldn't resist this
Your Linguistic Profile:
| 55% General American English | 25% Yankee | 15% Dixie | 0% Midwestern | 0% Upper Midwestern |
although my accent probably sounds more Dutch than American by now.
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