How Australian Army Linguists Learn Languages Quick
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Study , How Australian Military Linguists Learn Languages Quick , , 8XBOeymqPek , https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8XBOeymqPek , https://i.ytimg.com/vi/8XBOeymqPek/hqdefault.jpg , 27143 , 5.00 , The Australian Protection Drive (ADF) is the largest army drive in Oceania, with 85000 full time personnel throughout the Australian ... , 1657814403 , 2022-07-14 18:00:03 , 00:31:38 , UCSSLq4KYuztsj6ch2RbqoIg , Olly Richards , 1057 , , [vid_tags] , https://www.youtubepp.com/watch?v=8XBOeymqPek , [ad_2] , [ad_1] , https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8XBOeymqPek, #Australian #Military #Linguists #Be taught #Languages #Quick [publish_date]
#Australian #Navy #Linguists #Learn #Languages #Fast
The Australian Protection Pressure (ADF) is the largest navy pressure in Oceania, with 85000 full time personnel across the Australian ...
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- Mehr zu learn Eruditeness is the procedure of effort new understanding, cognition, behaviors, trade, values, attitudes, and preferences.[1] The ability to learn is berserk by humans, animals, and some equipment; there is also bear witness for some sort of encyclopedism in certain plants.[2] Some education is immediate, spontaneous by a single event (e.g. being burned by a hot stove), but much skill and cognition accumulate from continual experiences.[3] The changes induced by eruditeness often last a lifespan, and it is hard to place nonheritable matter that seems to be "lost" from that which cannot be retrieved.[4] Human education begins to at birth (it might even start before[5] in terms of an embryo's need for both interaction with, and immunity within its environs within the womb.[6]) and continues until death as a outcome of current interactions betwixt populate and their surroundings. The nature and processes active in education are unnatural in many constituted fields (including educational psychological science, physiological psychology, psychology, psychological feature sciences, and pedagogy), as well as emerging fields of knowledge (e.g. with a common refer in the topic of learning from guard events such as incidents/accidents,[7] or in collaborative encyclopaedism condition systems[8]). Explore in such fields has led to the identity of diverse sorts of eruditeness. For good example, encyclopedism may occur as a outcome of physiological state, or classical conditioning, operant conditioning or as a effect of more convoluted activities such as play, seen only in comparatively natural animals.[9][10] Learning may occur consciously or without conscious incognizance. Encyclopedism that an aversive event can't be avoided or loose may outcome in a state titled enlightened helplessness.[11] There is inform for human behavioral encyclopaedism prenatally, in which dependance has been determined as early as 32 weeks into physiological state, indicating that the cardinal unquiet arrangement is insufficiently developed and set for learning and remembering to occur very early on in development.[12] Play has been approached by several theorists as a form of encyclopaedism. Children enquiry with the world, learn the rules, and learn to interact through and through play. Lev Vygotsky agrees that play is crucial for children's maturation, since they make content of their environs through and through musical performance learning games. For Vygotsky, notwithstanding, play is the first form of eruditeness word and human activity, and the stage where a child started to see rules and symbols.[13] This has led to a view that encyclopaedism in organisms is primarily affiliated to semiosis,[14] and often related to with objective systems/activity.
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Nate sounds great.
Kinda makes me wish I'd learned Japanese through the ADF instead of uni. Still not too keen on the whole 6 years service after your degree, though.
good that australian army accepts foreigners. i intend to serve australian army.
In the Australian Army I learnt Arabic full time at the defence force school of languages. Very comprehensive full time course where I went from knowing absolutely nothing to fluent in 10 months.
四十年まえに豪州空軍語学校で日本語を習いました。40 years ago I learned Japanese at the RAAF School of Languages. Yes, it was intense. I believe determination is as important as aptitude.
It seems odd that the students would do further studies in Mandarin on the mainland, PRC, and not on Taiwan,
Simple they ape the yanks !
Fyi its 87,000 total personel including reservists, its more like 57,000 full time.
NOBODY TALKS ABOUT Ikenna ?????????????????????????????????????????++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
0:11 – is there a computer game or app like that?
2:43
In school in Qld Australia, in my school anyway we had lote and had to learn Japanese. God only knows why?
I did enjoy it at the beginning and was getting B+ and above.
Until the teacher left and was replaced by a shit one.
Suicide?
Hii 👋🏻 this is my Instagram account that I share posts in 3 languages. If you want to support me you can follow my account. I would appreciate.
@theduolingo
https://www.instagram.com/theduolingo/
Olly (or anyone who cares to answer): I am an English speaker learning the German language. I am also fluent in Spanish. After having lived in Peru and being married to a Bolivian national, Spanish has been a relatively easy language to learn just simply because of constant exposure to the language. Unfortunately, because there seems to be no one around that speaks the German language in my area, I have no way to practice. I was able to purchase both of your books of German stories from Amazon. My vocabulary and reading comprehension have improved immensely just after reading two of the novels. However, I think there is a listening component to the stories and am not sure where to get it. I really need to better improve my listening.
So here are my two questions:
Does reading comprehension improve listening (if read aloud)?
Where can I get the audio version of the German stories you are suggesting?
Thank you so much!
Aaron Greenway
I found the music comments interesting! When I was a kid I learned a lot of French from listening to songs, who else can sing, "Sur le pont, d'Avignon…"? And then when I moved to the US, I have a Mexican friend who did her engineering degree here and learned a lot of English from listening to Elton John.
how can we antagonize china if i don't know chinese? yikes
also, i would suggest people look into 'woke imperialism.' we shouldnt be happy that the empire is becoming more diverse. it must be ended instead.
love your channel tho!
I think moving to another country will make the process a whole lot enjoyable.👊💥💕
lol I couldn’t call the school state of the art.
I did the test when I was serving. I didn't do so well. They wondered how I even managed to learn English.
We're a bunch of smart cunts over here mate!
Hehehe you can always tell if someone has never been to Australia based on the way the say Melbourne, we pronounce it MelBin. When it comes to our words, find the laziest way to say it, and that's probably how we pronounce it, e.g Good day – G'day, Afternoon – Arvo, Friend – C#nt. Enemy – C#nt, Hey – Oi C#nt
Australians have trouble with English never mind foreign languages. Grunting and Farting is the linga franka of Australia.
Check out Mormon missionaries, those sods learn FAST
Can you do a language video about the Canadian military
"…and a few students even committed suicide…"
This was too much success. They actually became Japanese. And then worked themselves to death.
A video on how to learn Australian. Please 😂
Nate, 你很棒!
brother where are you from?
I spent a year at the Australian school of languages and learnt Thai in 2005, had a great time
Don’t learn how to army fast tho… useless
Hi Olly.
I did 3 Courses at Langs and got to do plenty of tasks as a linguist.
Great video. I'm an ex-Australian soldier who often worked with recruitment projects and this definitely feels like it was sponsored by the Australian Defence Force. But we need soldiers and its honestly a fun job so I'm all for it! Sign up, people!
i thought the mandatory language you need to know, would have been english
Mate, just recruit multicultural Australians into the ADF, you dimwit. Australia is the most Multicultural Nation in the world. You need to recruit Australians who speak other languages at home. You may be able to speak other languages but being an Anglo Saxon Australian will set up as a hostile to many foreign deployment areas of Ops. For instance RAMSI, ADF are viewed as monocultural even though they may be able to speak Pigdin, they are viewed as Anglo-Australian and monocultural. This is a primary reason why the Solomon Islanders veered away from the ADF and the AFP (IDG) because most were WHITE Anglo Saxons. Yes, it is because you look EUROPEAN not because you speak their language and have some sense of rapport. No, its what you are and your attitude!
In the 80's I did the aptitude test. I was RAN in intel. Only 3 out of about 120 of us passed. The actual course was intense.
Salut Olly ! Thank you for the time and effort you put into these videos.
My guess on the compulsory language: Chinese
What? No stories! What about immersion?
Great vid! Very inspiring. Wish my country had such options. But the most important thing is to have fun while learning the language.
Sadly my experience was a bit depressing. The last language academy I did for a company was a shit show. Our tutor expected us to be perfect in the language almost from the first day. I was demoralized in nearly every lesson, especially at one on one's. My teacher always said (not in direct words but very closely when I pissed her off with my bad language skills): "Your garbage! Better leave as fast as possible and save time for others who are successful in the language." I was cursed with this because the rest of my coursemates had prior knowledge of the language while I didn't. This is a very hard time for me. + The language academy was only 5-6 months long which usually in normal terms would've been 1 year.
In the end, I did survive and I am working in the company but I had to re-learn the language on my own – at my own pace again because it was too much, too rushed and too demoralizing to find the motivation to do the course.
Спасибо за видео, очень познавательно! Каждый день узнаем новое:)
Hey Olly, as one of the Cryptologic Linguists you mentioned (referred to in service as a CTL) this was definitely a surreal video to see pop up in my notifications. Thought I'd share some of my experience at the school as I'm an Indonesian linguist and my course was run a bit different to how Nate's was. Firstly, within the Navy we no longer train people using the 6 month course. This course was called MCS or Military Communication Studies, and while effective the Navy wanted to improve overall linguist capability so they switched it out for the 48 week course. On that note, the 48 week course also changed from the "strategic engagement" to the "general language" course which as far as I'm aware is the best course that the school offers in terms of achieving a conversational level after the 48 weeks! Our time tables seem to have been pretty similar except I didn't have to worry about learning any new characters. We did still however have a formative assesment each and every Friday that we would need to pass. Given that Indonesian is a lot simpler for English speakers to pick up than Mandarin, that meant that we were able to learn much more vocab and towards the second half of the course we would average over 40 new words per day. Every. Single. Day. Dedicating all of our time to learning the language and still being paid definitely made this much more bearable haha. Unlike Mandarin, there came a point in our course (around the 6 to 7 month mark) where the native teachers would deliver the lessons entirely in Indonesian and would actually scold us for using English even if we were just casually talking amongst ourselves! That's one way to do immersion. Topic-wise we had about 24 topics that ran over the entire course and would span everything from basic pleasantries to more intenss topics like Religion, Terrorism, socio-economics, basically covering just about every topic of conversation you would reasonably except to come across in Indonesia. Within the last month and a half of the course we also got to participate in 3 weeks of In Country Training over in Jakarta! This was an amazing opportunity to speak with natives other than our teachers and really live the language and appreciate how much we had actually learned! Culturally, we all took part in a traditional Indonesian Selamatan ceremony towards the beginning of the course where we were all given our Indonesian names by which we were referred for the rest of the year, and many of us still go by our Indonesian names today! I've realised it's quite difficult to condense a full year of study into one comment but if anyone, including Olly, is interested in any more details or specific questions I'd be more than happy to help! Oh and btw I'm currently using the Story Learning method to Study Spanish and I absolutely love it 😉
Nate such a typical Aussie lol.
Am DLI grad, 1966-67.
Was "Nate" supposed to be understandable? I feel like I was having a stroke trying to figure out what he was saying.
Really nice video! Being paid to devote all your time to learning a language is awesome. Similar situation to academics who are linguistic anthropologists like me. I was paid (PhD scholarship) to do research on language-culture in specific situations in Indonesia and have continued to enjoy doing that for the last thirty years.
The moment my mind was opened up to languages was reading a book called 'Fear Drive Your Feet' by Peter Ryan, who was an Australian Soldier who was alone reporting on Japanese troops occupying northern Papua New Guinea during WWII.
He had to work with the local people which meant learning their culture and languages. He wrote about sitting in circles of elders trying to speak Pidgin English, making grammatical mistakes and everyone laughing at him. What hooked me was that he said that a lot of people thought that Pidgin was a baby version of English, but that it had its own grammar vocabulary, pronunciation and rules, and that to earn people's respect, you had to diligently learn those rules.
Good content, pity about the breathless delivery which spoils it.
all that translation stuff for assessments sounds like torture. i actively lose my ability to translate between two languages as i get better at the foreign one. it doesn't even take long so within a few weeks i'm stuck being terrible at my foreign language but understanding it without translating it regardless. this sounds like sabotage lmao