Well, all I'm suggesting is to try it once or twice as an experiment.
My college textbook also put the dialogue first and then did grammar and vocabulary. JPod has the freedom to be creative and try something new.
Jason wrote:Charles wrote:It's like I know already know beforehand that I'm not going to understand the whole thing, so I kind of give up and struggle to just listen through the yukkuri (slowing down words you don't know does not make them any more understandable!), until I hear the vocabulary and grammar sections.
Well, that's kinda the whole point. Putting the vocab and grammar at the end forces you to just listen to the dialog without trying to analyze it. It's very important to just get used to the sounds of a conversation in addition to understanding the meaning. If they put the vocab and grammar first, everybody would be trying to analyze and understand everything and not just listening and absorbing.
We just finished Beginner Lesson #74. I think people already have some idea of what conversations sound like, don't you? Perhaps the Intermediate lessons are better as tracks to just absorb without the expectation of understanding now.
Ignoring the sweeping assumptions on what "everybody" would do, I think you have a point. Analyzing while listening can hinder listening.
However, it can hinder understanding as well! It seems like you're saying that understanding gets in the way of listening, that same way analysis gets in the way of listening. I don't agree at all. I think understanding improves listening.
Bueller_007 wrote:If you want to hear the vocab section first, I recommend that: you suffer through the conversation without it; get the vocab; listen to the conversation again after you know the vocab.
Right, this is a podcast, and one of its strengths is to listen to things over and over again.
However, I think it's more important to understand a conversation the first time. That's what's most fun, most rewarding, and the is goal we're all shooting for.
You can't pre-study before real conversations. And if you're not used to hearing unknown words, you can really be thrown when you hear one in a real conversation.
This is a great point too. Perhaps every now and then JPod could throw in a word that hasn't been introduced
unexpectedly.
Right now, it's expected that you're not going to understand everything. It may be more important now to handle unexpected situations than it is to expect that you're not going to be able to handle them.