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Apps turn learning Chinese into a fun game
PHILIPP Mattheis knew his gaming app was addictive when he realized he kept checking his phone — hooked by the brightly colored reminders telling him to play again or risk falling from the triple-figure level he had reached.
Gripping the German journalist's attention was not Candy Crush, but one of a new generation of Chinese language apps that are using tricks traditionally employed by online games to get users hooked on learning.
For years, the thrill of studying a new language has been tempered by the tedium of rote learning and repetition required to be truly accomplished — particularly the case for memorizing a character-based system — but now language apps are increasingly turning to the same praise, reward and challenge format that games such as Candy Crush use to such devastating success.
Shanghai-based Mattheis is an avid user of Memrise, an app offering courses in standard Mandarin Chinese and several dialects, and has 25 million users.
“We’ve turned learning into a game where you grow a Garden of Memory,” according to the firm.
The premise is that when users learn words, they plant virtual seeds, which grow and bloom the more they review and practice. If they forget, reminders are sent that their buds are wilting.
“It’s so quick, it doesn’t feel like any effort,” Mattheis says. “I learned a few hundred characters without really trying.”
Memrise, along with rivals Skritter and ChineseSkill, all feature interactive tools that entertain as well as teach — a trend known as “gamification” — pioneered by the big daddy of education apps, DuoLingo.
“In a lot of Western countries we now see ourselves as competitive with Candy Crush. We want to be a very popular game and we want people to play when they’re bored,” says Gina Gotthilf, a DuoLingo spokeswoman.
DuoLingo does not currently offer a Chinese course, leaving a gap for language learners keen to capitalize on a rising China, and Mandarin as a lingua franca in smartphone-hooked Asia.
‘You feel like a hero’
“Candy Crush is effective because it adjusts the difficulty level to just the right level for you,” says Ben Whately, who worked on Memrise’s Chinese courses. “Adapting to a level where people feel clever is a great way to keep them playing ... That is exactly what our learning algorithm does: adjusts when you are tested so that you always have to struggle a little bit, but you are generally successful.”
Users commit Chinese characters and definitions to memory with the help of animations and mnemonics, and are notified to review the characters each time they are just at the point of forgetting them, a technique known as spaced repetition.
“Within a couple of hours of study you can read most of a Chinese menu. Every time you go to a Chinese restaurant or walk through Chinatown, you re-engage with that. You feel like a hero,” Whately says of his app.
Daniel Blurton, a director at a pediatric mental health clinic in Hong Kong, says he enjoys the ability “to see immediate progress and track how much you’ve accomplished,” making the daunting task of starting Chinese seem “managable.”
This sense of reinforced achievement is also evident in the app ChineseSkill, which features a cute cartoon panda that punches the air with happiness when you remember, for example, that ren means “people.”
ChineseSkill uses the classic video-game tactic of “unlocking” levels only when you get enough answers right, bringing users back again and again as they try to beat their own memory.
A lesser-considered obstacle in Chinese learning is learning to write characters correctly, a time-consuming technique that greatly enhances one’s ability to remember them.
Skritter instructs users on the order and direction of strokes with bright graphics and feedback that flashes when you miss, recalling another popular game called “Fruit Ninja.”
“The only way to quickly learn lots of characters is to write them over and over (20-30 times),” Hong Kong-based businessman Brad Jester says by e-mail. “I started by doing this on paper, but Skritter is better because it replays them for you in a better-timed sequence.”
Helpful tools, not a panacea
A key question is whether these methods work any better than traditional immersion in a native-speaking environment or a traditional classroom.
Jester, now a fluent speaker, comments: “People sometimes think they can take the easy route of using flashcards and dictionaries to learn Chinese but that is 100 percent not the case. Until these apps shame you into studying harder, they will just be helpful tools that reinforce lessons learned.”
Linguistics expert Dr Peter Crosthwaite of the University of Hong Kong believes such apps may facilitate memorization — an important aspect of language learning — but cannot offer the holistic approach a good teacher would deliver.
“Due to the continued growth and expansion of China’s economy, more people than ever are wishing to learn Chinese,” Crosthwaite says.
However, “There are very, very few examples of the Internet being used to teach someone a language from a beginner to advanced level of proficiency,” he cautions.
“The gamification of (language) learning is, in my opinion, a welcome approach — particularly with children — although one must be careful to focus on the learning aspect of the tasks, rather than the point-scoring.”
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