Towards the end of last year, I wrote a blog setting out my objective for 2022. In it I stated that by 2023 I hope to have developed enough confidence in my spoken Chinese to start recording podcasts in the language, conversing on topics of interest.
My approach to achieving this will be largely unchanged. Input remains the central component of my studies as I seek to further improve my comprehension skills. However, I have begun to shift the balance in favour of listening over reading. I no longer use Mandarin subtitles when watching movies and I am spending more time listening to podcasts. The better my comprehension skills become the more benefits I get from ‘passive listening’ or playing podcasts in the background while completing other tasks.
This year I will not spend much time reading novels as the descriptive language is less useful for conversational Chinese than other kinds of material. I will return to novels later. But for now, the bulk of my reading will include articles on topics of interest and forum posts on websites like zhihu.com where native speakers write about all manner of topics in a similar style to how they speak.
Meanwhile, I am stepping up the amount of daily speaking I do. At my current level, I am usually able to express myself and be understood. Although I still make mistakes, tones no longer pose the problem they once did. My main issue now is that I often express myself in a way that Chinese people wouldn’t. My word usage may be comprehensible but it is often unnatural.
So after thinking about how I could structure my speaking time to resolve these issues, I came up with the following ‘Traffic Light System.’
My system is premised on the notion that improving speaking skills requires different kinds of practice. On the one hand, it is important to develop confidence to speak freely without constantly worrying about making mistakes. Yet it is equally vital to direct my attention to blind spots; problems which I haven’t noticed by myself but where I need to improve.
With this in mind, I have divided my Chinese friends and my tutor into the following three categories according to the kind of speaking practice I will engage in with them.
- Green Light:
The green light represents absolute freedom. Some of my Chinese friends don’t want to correct my Chinese because it’s annoying and gets in the way of a free-flowing conversation. This is completely understandable – I also don’t particularly enjoy correcting their English and rarely do as long as I can understand them. These conversations will take up most of my overall speaking time and will be crucial for developing my confidence.
- Amber Light
Chinese friends who are willing to correct my mistakes even when they can understand me are placed in the Amber category. These corrections will be restricted to times when my use of language or pronunciation sounds particularly unnatural. That way we can still have interesting conversations even if they are not quite as free-flowing as those in the green category.
- Red Light
This category is reserved for my Mandarin tutor. I have three, hour-long classes with her each week. Her role during these sessions is to correct me every time my speech sounds unnatural or is incorrect and suggest a better way of expressing my point. This approach may sound extreme – and it is definitely tiring – but it has proved effective for improving my tones. When we first started working on my tones 6 months ago I couldn’t get through a sentence without making several glaring mistakes. Being corrected on these was annoying but over time her interventions became fewer and fewer until eventually, most sentences didn’t contain mistakes.
I hope to achieve similar results over the coming year focusing on appropriate sentence structure, and word usage.
How about you? What are you doing to improve your spoken Mandarin? Do you think the Traffic Light System could work for you? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below.
Speak Like a Pro
Without Moving to China
Master conversational Mandarin without quitting your job or moving abroad with my simple four-step cheat sheet.
Inside the speaking fluency cheat sheet:
- The critical mistake most learners make
- My personalised audio immersion method
- Step-by-step instructions you can implement today
- Real example transcript and audio file
Cheat Sheet
PDF GUIDE


Leave a Reply