The title of this post is pretty much the only sentence I can say in French. It’s probably wrong, but I say it all the time just to prove that all my time in French classes was not for nothing. I took French until grade three, on and off between grades 4 and 9, and all through high school. I came out of high school with an alright understanding and the desire to take it further, but I hit a roadblock in my first year of university. Sitting in my first day of class, the professor spoke nothing but French and everyone in the class seemed to be already fluent. I dropped it after the first day because I literally had no idea what was going on or what the expectations would be (beyond already speaking French…).

Being the giant lazy sloth that I am, I just stopped. Well, that’s a lie, I attempted, poorly, to take an independent class through Athabasca University, but that was a complete wash and a waste of money. Now, I have decided to finally get back on tackling #6 on my life list to become fluent in French. I have been fairly dedicated so far, listening to podcasts everyday, reviewing old French textbooks, listening to French news stories to get an ear for the spoken rhythm of the language. I’m hopeful. I also will be enrolling in J’explore a French learning program offered at various locations across Canada, care of the Canadian government. The program is 5 weeks long and I hope to be able to do it in either Montreal or New Brunswick. The goal is conversational French fluency, but of course they have varying levels of classes. My personal goal is to not end up in the beginner’s class!

So far, my absolute favourite tool has been Coffee Break French, produced by the Radio Lingua Network. Radio Lingua has several different French podcasts, including One Minute French and the video-based Walk, Talk and Learn French, but so far, Mark and Anna at Coffee Break French have been the absolute best at helping me get a new lease on the French language. I highly recommend you check them out if you are also trying to learn or relearn Francais, either at their website or on Itunes!

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Brooke vs. the World said, October 18th, 2009 at 1:58 pm

Learning a language is difficult – let alone learning it fluently! Good luck with this goal :) It does appear that you’ve taken quite a bit of French – do you feel that you know a lot of vocabulary and rules, but are just unable to speak/comprehend it?

I have that problem with every language I learn and the only thing that has helped me are one-on-one lessons where I was forced to speak in the language for multiple hours a day. Worked best for both spanish and russian. I bet if you just found someone to sit down with a few times a week, you’d see huge improvements :)

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Chelsea said, October 18th, 2009 at 5:00 pm

I know the vocab to some extent, luckily it comes back quickly and the rules are fairly easy for me. It is in large part the forming sentences off the top of my head and understanding people that throws me off. I have been in the market for someone to talk to weekly, but not many people in Alberta know French. After my stint in Montreal I’m definitely going to make it a must! Thanks for the comment!

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Mary said, October 20th, 2009 at 2:22 pm

Just found your blog via almostfearless.com. I love your list! I think it’s the longest life list I’ve seen. Hehe. Good luck with relearning French. I hope to do the same thing with Spanish soon. :)

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