The Lozanov method uses six principles to maximize language learning: 1) removing negative self-limitations and suggesting learning is easy, 2) relaxation to absorb information stress-free, 3) creating a mental map before reading text, 4) an "active concert" of reading text along with classical music, 5) a "receptive concert" to absorb language patterns subconsciously, and 6) "activations" the next day involving games and play to review words in a fun, childlike way. The method aims to use both logical and emotional pathways to speed learning and increase retention through coordinated use of music, visuals, drama, and relaxation.
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The Lozanov Method
The Lozanov method uses six principles to maximize language learning: 1) removing negative self-limitations and suggesting learning is easy, 2) relaxation to absorb information stress-free, 3) creating a mental map before reading text, 4) an "active concert" of reading text along with classical music, 5) a "receptive concert" to absorb language patterns subconsciously, and 6) "activations" the next day involving games and play to review words in a fun, childlike way. The method aims to use both logical and emotional pathways to speed learning and increase retention through coordinated use of music, visuals, drama, and relaxation.
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The Lozanov method, says Kline, involves six main principles:
One - We have to de-suggest the idea that your ability is
limited. To remove the negative mental blocks that cramp our natural learning ability. Those self-imposed limitations are a cultural legacy and paradoxically are produced by our school system! In place of these artificial limitations, we put the powerful and positive suggestion that learning is in reality easy, fun and enjoyable. Two - We relax - because we know that relaxation creates the ideal condition of stress-free alertness, when information is rapidly and effortlessly absorbed. Three - We create a mental map of the information we are going to learn. In the case of a language we go over the entire lesson first in English, so we know the story and what to expect and to provide a context we can relate to. Then we read it in Spanish to get the feel of it. Four - We hear what is known as the "Active Concert". This is a reading of the Spanish text in a dramatic manner to the accompaniment of a specific type of classical music as a background. The music is mostly by Baroque composers like Corelli, Telemann, Haydn, Bach, Albinoni and Vivaldi. Music composed between 1700-1750. The teacher's voice follows the rhythm of the music in a natural way - as if his voice were an instrument in the orchestra. We follow the sound of the language and look at the words in a unique text book. The words are so laid out, that even while the eye is following the Spanish text, the English translation is in the peripheral vision of the reader - in other words he is subconsciously taking in both texts - the Spanish consciously, the English subconsciously, out of the "corner of his eye". "This", explains Peter Kline, "is one of the visual subliminal elements. The music is the main audio route into the subconscious. We find we can access the further reaches of the subconscious better through art, because art involves the emotions. Harmony of form and colour music and rhyme, reach not only the heart but the mind - via a much shorter route than logical facts and arguments." In fact the music works by activating the right brain and in this way the left and right brains are directly and independently stimulated. Sound and visual stimuli, your conscious and subconscious, "Super-liminal" and subliminal stimuli, are each involved to speed the information into the memory in a positive and enjoyable environment. The brain is known to store information in a rhythmical way, so the use of rhythm as an external aid is entirely logical. Bio-feedback expert, Dr. Budzynski, writing in "Psychology Today" confirmed Peter Kline's point - "Apparently the right hemisphere processes verbal material better if it is coded in rhythm or emotion. When someone speaks in a monotone, only the verbal, dominant hemisphere is activated. If the speaker adds intonation, the nonverbal side starts to pay attention. The right hemisphere's language is not the logical content of what is said, but the emotions conveyed by how it is said. Lecturers, preachers, and politicians who are famous for the oratory know intuitively what to do with their voices to generate emotion and thereby persuade their audiences". The medium is the message. Five - After the Active Concert there is a break. Then the Receptive Concert takes place. It is so called because it requires that the student apparently makes no effort at all. In reality, however, an enormous amount of mental activity is taking place. Before the Receptive Concert the students are told "Relax in your chairs, close your eyes and just concentrate on the music". Now the music becomes the dominant factor and the words of the Spanish text are only just audible to the conscious mind. They are, however, perfectly understandable to the subconscious and thus the barriers of the conscious mind are neatly side stepped. "The purpose of the receptive concert," says Peter Kline, "is to give you a familiarity with speech as normally used in the language you are studying - its patterns and natural rhythms. You are relaxed, and the music creates an ideal mental state (alpha) for an effortless absorbtion of the material. "The whole of the first lesson will bring about a coordination of left and right brain, in a synthesis that creates a quantum leap in learning speeds and retention. " "Just how much of a leap?" asks a student. Peter Kline answers that every Western Application has shown a significant gain in learning - from minimum of trebled learning effectiveness to as much as ten times faster. "Expect a fourfold increase" smiles Kline "and you will be pleased at your results. " The class ends after a total of two hours. The posters and cards around the room have, again subconsciously, reinforced the lesson. The next day begins with the sixth and final main element. six - After the deliberate intervention of a night's sleep, the next day's class starts with what is termed the Activations. These consist of a series of games, puzzles, and playlets devised to review the words learned the previous day, in an environment that is fun and deliberately childlike. Lozanov insists that a key to the method is to return to the way children learn before they go to school. It's not only stress free, it's characterised by high expectations of success. Mistakes, if they occur, are taken, correctly as a sign that the learner is deliberately stretching herself with new material. It's a sign of ambition and lack of fear. One game that particularly impressed me used a ball! The teacher would throw the ball to the student to catch and simultaneously ask a question in Spanish. The students answered spontaneously as they caught the ball. Time after time they exclaimed "l was surprised I knew the words of the answer. They just popped up. " In fact the teacher was deliberately distracting the student's conscious attention by the act of catching the ball - and allowing the words, which were already stored in the subconscious, to surface. It was impressive proof that the memory had indeed already been created. The thinking behind the second day's Activation session is that the intervening night's sleep and dreaming will have allowed the brain to assimilate the new words. The next day review ensures that they are then `fixed'. One cannot help but be impressed at the way everything in these Lozanov classes is co-ordinated to bring about "learning in the round". The storyline of the lessons is dramatic because dramatic facts and stories with emotional associations are more easily remembered. The pictures in the text book are expertly drawn because as Peter Kline points out "art aids suggestion". Additionally, individual pictures have the Spanish word lettered into the outline of the drawing. A picture of a lion for example has the word "leon" lettered into it.