English is a big deal in a country where it is a secondary
language. Yet, this is not the best excuse NOT to learn it. In the same way
having a Hindi (or any other language) background is not the best excuse for
not working hard on English!
‘Sir, I am from Hindi Medium’, comes with much humility
from the student who feels bogged down by the presence of ‘English Medium’
candidates competing against him in the MBA-Entrance race. The other day, this
guy from my morning CAT-11 batch shared with me his frustration about not being
able to do much progress with reading comprehension.
So I decided to make him see the real picture. I posed a
few questions which now I wish to pose again for all those who are reading this.
1)
*Is having a Hindi Study background a sin? (And even if it
is, how does it matter?)
2)
*Does belonging to Hindi Medium mean that you are dumb?
3)
*Have you never come across English even once in your life
before?
As my student tried answering these questions, he also
realized that this was exactly how he was looking at it. And he needed to change
the attitude first before he practically started working on his English. Before spilling out my share of gyaan on how
to work on your English, I want to tell you my dear students that somehow you
are dearer to us than those who have an English medium background. The reason is
that you are more open to learning and don’t suffer from complacency
(self-satisfaction) about Verbal Ability. Always remember:
1) *
Hindi Study background DOES NOT mean that you are less
intelligent than those belonging to English Medium.
2) *
If you deal with English just like the way you deal with a
tougher subject, you can still master it.
3) *
English requires something that any other difficult subject
does: PRACTICE!
4) *
Everything seems difficult at first. It gets manageable
ONLY by spending more time with it and paying more attention to it.
Yet, you don’t have to believe me. Instead, believe in a
logic. I shall give you my own example here. I am not an engineer, have no other
technical degree. Till last year, I used to be a freelance writer who wrote
mainly website content of consumer goods and services or scripts for
walk-throughs and corporate films. A company asked me to write their technical
content including their product/service portfolios. This company creates several
softwares for e-business and websites; designs websites with high-end technology
facilities and increases traffic on client websites through social media
marketing and search engine optimisation. My first reaction was a big NO. I am
not a trained technical writer. I have no certificate or degree in instruction
design (one level up of technical writing). There was no way I was doing it.
But the company CEO made me start working with him. He said
I don’t need any technical degree to write their website content or edit their
technical documents. I started with simple re-writing and grammar corrections of
their content. Steadily, I started asking questions like : Is Ajax a software or
a framework? How does PHP programming different from Zend? A few questions were
obvious, some stupid, others intelligent. Yet I ASKED THEM. I didn’t shrink from
the thought of making a total fool of myself. Today, I am confident I can edit
any part of their content, technical or non-technical.
So what’s my point? My point is that a year before,
technical writing seemed to me the way English seems to all of you from the
Hindi medium background. And just as I refused to give up and kept writing, you
need to do that too. That’s because unless you do, you can never think of
crossing this language hurdle ever in your life.
I would suggest that you too start with some basic
practice. This includes solving all the grammar concepts/exercises and get your
doubts solved. I would say start with Subject-Verb Agreement. Do the following
on a regular basis:
1) *
Read a few English pieces from newspaper or concepts books
aloud for 15 minutes daily. Why? So that you improve your pronunciation and
develop a comfort level with English speaking.
2) *
Read two RC passages in a day, even if that takes you half
a day. Find out word meanings, write them. Solve questions, find out why a few
went wrong. Analyse your progress.
3) *
Write a Daily Journal. Write in English how you spent a
day, what you did, where you went etc. Get it checked from a VA faculty .
Pay attention to the corrections made. Then next day, write the day’s work
again. Track your progress. Then read that piece over and over again. Then keep
your notebook aside and now repeat what you read from it. Next time when someone
asks you to tell your daily routine, you will easily answer that in English.
4) *
The above point also means that once you learn to speak
‘rehearsed’ matter confidently, it will boost your confidence manyfolds and then
you will be prepared to deal with unexpected situations. Makes sense?
5) *
Pick an easy English novel or a non-fiction. Try to finish
it in a week’s time. Write a summary of it and get it checked by a VA
faculty.
6) *
Create your own sentences from the words from the wordlist.
Maintain a notebook. Revise old words weekly and read at least 10 new words
daily. ( Also read my blog: A twist in
the wordlist tale. )
7) *
Learn to love English. When you love something, you
don’t get bored with it, you truly enjoy it.
Sounds difficult?
You are not mistaken. So now I want to tell you how I, as a sixth-grader learnt
to comprehend Sanskrit. At first when we came across Sanskrit in school, we were
dead sure that even if we cram the shlokas, we will never be able to comprehend
the Sanskrit passages. But our dear teacher Mrs Neeti Dwivedi gave us a rule:
It’s a language. Lets start with basics and then the way you learnt Hindi, you
will learn Sanskrit too. Six months after she said this, I found myself easily
comprehending Sanskrit passages. How did I do it? I just followed three simple
rules, that you may now follow if you want to learn English:
1) READ: Read aloud in
that language. Try to make sense by breaking bigger sentences.
2) WRITE: Write
regularly in that language. At times, a quotation you liked or simply a small
paragraph in that language.
3) LISTEN: Listen things in that language. In
case of English, watch one Hollywood movie (not the Hindi-dubbed) in a week.
Download English songs. Watch motivational English videos online. Watch English
news channels.
Why
should you do this?
1) *
You want to compete in MBA-entrance race. No B-school in
this country has MBA course books in Hindi or any regional language. How will
you understand them?
2) *
You want to have good communications skills. Speaking good
Hindi is not enough, you must be able to speak in English too.
3) *
You want to be like that smart English-speaking guy or gal
who looks so confident.
I am not saying this is easy. But that doesn’t mean you
must not attempt it. This process is going to frustrate you, bother you, leave
you sleepless and restless. It would be like a dark tunnel on a railway track.
You won’t see much unless you go half way through it. Then you shall see a beam
of light entering it and then before you knew it, you would be out of it as a
winner. So get set and get started. For queries, we are always there to help
you. Feel free. Speak to us. Share your problems. We promise to help you. God
Bless.