Why Learning Through Knowledge Is Often Easier Than Learning Through Language
Learning a foreign language is often presented as a process of collecting words. First vocabulary. Then grammar. Then exercises. Then conversations. For many learners, this becomes an endless cycle of memorization. They know hundreds or even thousands of words, yet still struggle to speak naturally. The problem is not always the language. Sometimes the problem is the order in which we try to learn it. We Already Know More Than We Think Imagine a student who has studied mathematics for ten years. They already understand equations, percentages, functions and probability. Now they begin learning English. Traditional language education starts from zero. It introduces words like apple , table and window before allowing the student to discuss mathematics. But why? The student does not need to learn mathematics again. They already understand the concepts. They only need to learn how those concepts are expressed in another language. This changes everything. Meaning Comes B...