
Discipline and commitment


Depending on your commitment and how motivated you are, you can more easily plan the time you will spend on your reviews and the activities that you will carry out during your study weeks.
When you start studying and planning to learn a language, you will have to assess how much time you are willing to dedicate to it, 15 minutes? 30 minutes? 1 hour a day?
Due to lack of time, you can choose not to study every day and prefer to organize yourself to study by alternating your daily activities with studying. For example, you can start studying every two days a week, then three times a week and so on.
The important thing is to maintain a constant rhythm and commit to the established time from the beginning.
Recommendations


1. Write down your daily activities in an agenda
In this way, you will remember "your commitment" and feel the need to fulfill it.
2. Share your goals publicly
If you practice this exercise with your friends through social networks or directly by making a comment to your work colleagues at the time of the break, you will feel committed and can celebrate your achievements publicly.
3. Schedule reminders so you don't forget your learning sessions
Following the advice above, you can help yourself with reminders on your mobile or with small notes at your workplace to avoid forgetting your commitment.
4. Take a notebook with you to write down the words you learn each day
When you travel, you quickly realize that the people you meet use informal language or words that are not in the official dictionary of the language you are learning.
Remember: To memorize 10 new words, just review five minutes a day. At the end of a month of review you will have learned 300 words (10 words in 30 days), two months later, 600, and so on.
5. Have fun while you learn
When you learn a language, you can work on different language skills at the same time (listening and speaking), (listening and writing)… the key is to maintain an interest in learning.
