I admit defeat.. but only this week (Personal PhD update #1.2)

I admit defeat.. but only this week.
It has been a month since I have started my Personal PhD project. I set a schedule for myself of how much course material I wanted to cover per week.
I have been on vacation for a week now. Before I went I thought I will have so much free time I will get so much done!
Alas, that didn’t happen. Visiting home in Latvia is a lot of work, a lot of people to catch up, plus jetlag doesn’t help either and I am not as productive during the few moments when I do have free time.
So for this update I didn’t get done as much as I hoped. Now, the temptation of the perfectionist was to try to finish everything and only then send out the updateafterwards.
But one of the goals for Personal PhD was writing and sending regular updates, so here I am admitting that that this week I am behind schedule. However I will have a free weekend in couple of weeks, so I will be able to catch up then.

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Personal PhD update #1.1

It has been two weeks since I have started my Personal PhD. It is still very exciting! So far I am progressing along as planned for my first quarter curriculum.
Q1 curriculum:
Computer Science track:
1. I have finished Week 1 of Andrew Ng Coursera course right on my half-speed schedule of one week of course material in two weeks.
2. Watched 2 lectures of Automatic Speech Recognition class. It is very dense. Turns out Speech Recognition is based on Finite Automata. When I studied about Finite Automata in college I never thought that theory would be ever so useful. But here I am now using them at work. 🙂 Looks like there is a Coursera course specifically on Automata here.

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My Personal PhD journey has started!

I have just started my Personal PhD journey. I’m super excited!

The idea is to gain deep understanding and expertise in the field of Computational Linguistics. All the details are described in this document.

I have fulfilled my “admission criteria” that I set for myself:

  1. I have shared the document above about this idea with more than 10 people. At first it was scary, but then it turned out I received a very positive response plus fantastic suggestions. It also made me to clarify more things and add more stories. One thing I am learning from this experience is that once you share a project with the world it somehow takes a life on its own. 🙂 Experience will show whether that’s for better or worse.
  2. I wrote up a document on how I studied Spanish for three months and then went to Costa Rica and was able to get around with my Spanish. It includes tips of how you could have a similar mission. Here.
  3. I wrote up a document and shared it at work about my experience over last five years of migrating data storage systems. (Unfortunately can’t share it outside of Google). That was definitely pushing my comfort zone as it was sharing an opinion so it shouldn’t have the right or wrong answer. But it is software engineering and many things can be argued till they are black or white. I was afraid people would argue that I was wrong, but it did not happen.
Here is my curriculum for the first quarter (Q3 2015) of my Personal PhD:
Computer Science track:
1. Do half of Andrew’s Ng Machine Learning course on Coursera (https://www.coursera.org/learn/machine-learning), watch videos and do homework. I opted for doing the course at half speed as 2-3 hours per week is a more realistic target of what I could devote to it than 5-7 hours per week as stated on the course website.
2. Go through all materials of NYU Automatic Speech Recognition class.

Linguistics track: 
3. Brush up on my German using similar method as I did for Spanish – study for 30 days German itself + learn more about the linguistics aspect of it.

Reading:
4. Come up with a system for myself to keep track of papers I read and start reading papers.

Writing: 
5. Send updates on my progress via email every other week.

If you have any comments, questions, feedback – send me a note!

Diana,
July 11, 2015

Learning Spanish: Summary of Month 3

Ok, so the third month of my Spanish learning mission was completed a long long time ago (it lasted from October 17th to November 17th). Unfortunately posting about it has been delayed, but hey, as they say better later than never!

Overall, I managed to study every single day. It doesn’t matter that the shortest day was 4 minutes long (it was a vocabulary review session on Memrise). But it kept the momentum going. The longest day was 76 minutes in which I listened to 4 podcast episodes.

On average I spent 32 minutes a day studying Spanish. This is not a small feat considering that my schedule is super busy. (The total time was 999 minutes over 31 days). For comparison, in second month I spent 1h:13min per day, and in the first month 57 minutes per day on average)

This month I didn’t experiment with any new learning methods. I just did what worked best from the previous two missions. I studied using Memrise on most days (on average comes out to 17 minutes a day). In the beginning I did Duolingo, but then dropped it. I kept listening to podcasts. I completed the remaining 10 episodes of Show Time Spanish (Coffee Break Spanish Season 3) and first 20 episodes of Notes in Spanish Intermediate podcast.

I wanted to get a tutoring session once a week. But I ended up doing it only once right in the beginning of month three. I was surprised how well it went. I was able to chat in Spanish the whole time.

I think overall my Spanish learning mission was a success. I was ready to go to Costa Rica for vacation and test it out.

Learning Spanish: Kicking Off Part 3

I’m ready to roll and start part three of my learning Spanish mission. It will be a month of focus on studying Spanish every single day. I started with a mission to learn Spanish in 3 months, but it turned into 3 separate focused effort months spread out over a longer period of time with review/keep-up time in between. Part 1 lasted from June 10 to July 10 and part 2 lasted from July 17th to August 17th. And there is nothing wrong with that 🙂 As they say in Latvia “the slower you will go, the further you will get.”

The main reason why I started studying Spanish was so that I learn basics and I don’t get lost and don’t get on the wrong bus the next time I’m in a Spanish speaking country (which happened the last time I was in Panama. I got on the wrong bus and ended up in a city 3 hours away from where I initially wanted to be.) Now I’m just having so much fun that I want to continue 🙂

The goals for the part 3 of my Spanish mission:
* study every single day, at least couple of minutes, but strive for an hour on average
* get a tutoring session once a week
* use Memrise regularly and finish Spanish vocab by frequency (words 1 to 675) course http://www.memrise.com/course/169109/spanish-vocab-by-frequency-1-675/

I’m starting on Friday, October 17th.

When motivation wanes

After I finished the part two of my Spanish mission I did not end up starting the part three right away. I went on a vacation, had a completely different rhythm and was very busy (one of those vacations where you need a vacation after vacation). So I was not studying Spanish as much at all. After I got back 10 days later, I thought I would get right back into it with the intensity I had before, but work got busy, lots of things to catch up after the vacation.

However, because of my habits I developed in the previous two months of always carrying headphones and downloaded Spanish learning podcasts with me on my my smartphone, I still kept listening to podcasts in any free moments – while walking or waiting for something. It wasn’t as much as before (73 minutes on average in the second month, or 57 minutes on average in the first month), but it was still a little bit every day, most days. I ended up skipping on average a day a week (usually a weekend day because it has a different routine).

The main takeaway is that I did not officially start the third month of the mission and did not set any new goals, as a result I did not pressured myself to study much at all. Therefore I did not feel bad about skipping a day during this time as Spanish was not even my main focus. It is much easier to pick yourself up after a “failure” if you don’t feel bad about yourself. So the missed day never evolved into two missed days. I felt good about doing any studying at all because I did not even HAVE to do any studying, but I did it anyways because of good habits on autopilot.

Why is it important to feel good? Because you will keep doing things that make you feel good. I did not quit learning Spanish completely! As a result, now I can pick it up right back where I started which much less motivation than what I needed to start learning Spanish for the first time.

So if you lose motivation part way through your 3 month language learning mission, don’t despair. Take a break from focusing on the mission. But don’t quit cold turkey. Still keep reviewing just for a little bit most days (even just few minutes) to keep the level you had achieved, so that it is easier to get right back into it when time/motivation reappears.

It has been a month and half since the end of part II (month 2) of my Spanish mission. In that time I listened to about one or two podcast episodes a day, which came out to a half an hour a day on average. That’s 2-3 times less than when I was actively focusing on Spanish, but it has added up! For one I think my level has stayed the same as opposed to dropping which is so easy when learning foreign languages. I also have finished 30 of the 40 Show Time Spanish episodes and all 30 episodes of Notes in Spanish Beginner series and few other episodes.

To sum it up: when motivation wanes – rely on good habits. How to create those habits, that’s another post 🙂

Learning Spanish: Summary of Month 2

This post is long overdue, but hey, better later than never!

So how did I do in the second part of my Spanish mission (it lasted from July 15th to Aug 16th)? I think, pretty well. I’m very pleased. 🙂 Here is why.

As mentioned in the previous post, on the last day of the month, I had a natural conversation in Spanish with a Spanish native for 10 minutes! It was a much more natural setting than a language learning meetup as we discussed topics that I would have discussed in English (like dancing and living in San Francisco) instead of language learning topics. So that’s a win!

Also, an online test (http://www.spanish-test.net/) says I have passed A1 level! At the end of previous month I was at 63% percent and you need 70% to pass. Now I’m at 83% of A1 and 57% at the next level up – A2 (also need 70% to pass). It seemed that the difference between A1 and A2 is that in A1 mostly grammar is tested, whereas in A2 in addition a more complicated vocabulary is tested.

In total I spent 37 hours 53 minutes studying Spanish in month 2. On average 73 minutes each day (ranging from 55 minutes per day in one week to 90 minutes per day in another week). I’m very pleased with this. Remember all this time is on the go, while waiting for something, on the commute. It’s not like I sit down at the desk and study Spanish.

On average I spent 44 minutes per day of listening to podcasts and 19 minutes learning via Memrise. Not enough speaking (10 minutes in total) or writing (13 minutes in total).

Below is the table with all the stats 🙂

Minutes of studying time per week
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
+3 days
TOTAL mins per month
Average mins per day
Memrise
112
170
123
135
54
594
19
Duolingo
66
82
49
45
21
263
8
Podcasts
209
228
254
441
235
1367
44
Videos
11
5
16
1
Writing
13
13
0
Speaking
10
10
0
Total minutes
387
490
426
632
338
2273
73
Total hours
6h:27m
8h:10m
7h:06m
10h37m
5h38m
37h:53m
1h:13m
Average mins/day each week
55
70
61
90
113

Let’s see how I did against my own goals for the second part of the Spanish mission. Here they are (from http://www.diana.is/2014/07/announcing-my-next-spanish-learning.html) plus my comments of the end of month status:

* study every single day, aim for at least half an hour a day, but less is ok too => overachieved spectacularly with 73 minutes on average per day and I didn’t skip a single day.

* keep Duolingo streak with at least one lesson a day => done!

* at the end of it be able to have a half an hour long conversation => I had 10 minute long conversation with a native. Not quite half an hour, but I think its close enough. I think I get bonus points for a conversation with a native in a normal situation instead of a language meetup partner. 🙂

That’s all for now. But don’t fret, there will be part 3 of my Spanish mission! 🙂

So which Spanish podcast to listen to? (Day 31 of month 2)

This is a very belated post about my Day 31 of month 2 of studying Spanish (which was August 16th). I was on vacation in Europe and had no time to write, though I did continue studying Spanish, mostly listening to Podcasts.

From the podcasts I tried out recently, it is clear that I’m not ready yet for straight up advanced podcasts in Spanish by native Spanish speakers. They speak too fast and I can only pick up few sentences and thoughts.

So then we are left with intermediate Spanish learning podcasts.. Show Time Spanish is definitely my favorite. I will continue with that one. Then I will also do Notes in Spanish, including their beginners course as well, since it is not truly beginner the same way Coffee Break Spanish is. I will also do the Spanish Obsessed to add some variety. And since it doesn’t have many episodes in Spanish From Scratch and Beginners sections, I will finish those as well.

Very fittingly, on the last day of the second month of learning Spanish I got lucky and the Lyft (taxi) driver was from El Salvador and we had a 10 minute long conversation in Spanish. It seemed more natural than the one I had before at a language learner’s meetup. We chatted about dancing, living in San Francisco, her moving to south bay. Totally a conversation I would have had in English.

Hopefully the final day’s 152 minutes will bring up the average 🙂 Here is the breakdown:
10 speaking Spanish
28 Memrise
3 Duolingo
13 writing Spanish
98 ShowTime Spanish episodes 4-7

First impressions of Las Cosas Curiosas podcast (Day 30 of month 2)

Ok, this is the last podcast I’m trying out for now. Las cosas curiosas also turned out to be too advanced for me right now. I listened to just the first episode which is 1 hour long. The intro music was so, so. Also the sound quality sometimes lacked, but they probably improved it over time. Because I didn’t understand much, the music effects were sometimes distracting. Also if the Cabreamos podcast seemed a bit monotone, there was too much going on in this one. Lots of voices, I did not quite get the transitions, lots of ads for other podcasts. The second part of the podcast was the host asking random people on the street to tell something interesting.

This day was a good day for studying. Got in 96 minutes. Here is the breakdown:
5 watching video
7 Duolingo
15 Memrise
69 Las Cosas Curiosas podcast episode 1

First impressions of Cabreados podcast (Day 29 of month 2)

Today I tried out Cabreados podcast and listened to it’s first two episodes. The podcast starts with episode 0, which is not a surprise given that the host is an engineer. 🙂

This is an advanced podcast as well. He didn’t speak as fast as the host from Desde El Bano, but I still didn’t get most of it. Though I did understand the first minute of each of the zeroth and first episode. I gathered that he is an engineer. He explained what a podcast is, said something about unix and AdSense. He just kept talking and talking for a half an hour. Didn’t seem that there is any kind of structure, which makes it even harder to get the gist of it. Now I understand the importance of intro, body and a conclusion 🙂 In the second episode he was talking to another guy, who I think was another podcaster. There was a nice music track at the end of each episode.

Given that I’m an engineer, I think I would find this podcast interesting if I understood it. So I definitely plan on returning to it when my Spanish is better.

I got in 90 minutes of studying! Here is the breakdown:
11 Duolingo
11 Memrise
68 Cabreados podcast

Till tomorrow!