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Tymur Levitin
Tymur Levitin
Profesora del Departamento de Traducción. Traductor jurado profesional con experiencia en traducción y enseñanza de inglés y alemán. Imparto clases en 20 países del mundo. Mi principio en la enseñanza y la realización de clases es alejarse de la memorización de reglas de memoria, y, en cambio, aprender a entender los principios de la lengua y utilizarlos de la misma manera que hablar y pronunciar correctamente los sonidos por el sentimiento, y no repasar cada uno en su cabeza todas las reglas, ya que no habrá tiempo para eso en el habla real. Siempre hay que basarse en la situación y la comodidad.
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Columna del autor por Tymur Levitin
Fundador y Director de la Escuela de Idiomas Levitin
🔗 Iniciar la Escuela de Idiomas por Tymur Levitin

🧭 “Speak only in English from Day One!” — sounds great, right?

You’ve heard it before.

“Total immersion is the best method!”
“No translations allowed!”
“You’ll start thinking in English immediately!”

This is the promise of so-called full immersion courses — now aggressively marketed everywhere. But here’s the truth:

Total immersion without understanding is not learning.
It’s survival.

And survival doesn’t build fluency. It builds habits. Often incorrect ones.

🧱 Repetition is not understanding

Yes — you will hear new phrases.
Yes — you will repeat after the teacher.
Yes — you may even sound fluent in basic situations.

But:

  • Can you change the structure?
  • Can you say it in a different time frame?
  • Can you explain why it’s built that way?

If the answer is no — you’re not speaking. You’re imitating.

🧠 But it worked for my friend!”

Let’s talk honestly.

1. Some people absorb language naturally

Especially:

  • polyglots
  • early bilinguals
  • those raised in multilingual cultures
  • people with very high self-study discipline

But they are the exception — not the standard.

2. Full immersion fits only some learning styles

Some students thrive in chaos.
Others — need clarity, logic, and structure.
Ignoring that is not a method. It’s laziness.

🚧 What actually happens in “immersion”?

🔻 You copy what you hear

But don’t understand why it’s used.

🔻 You guess meaning from context

Which often leads to misunderstanding.

🔻 You build confidence — but not competence

You speak, yes. But:

  • only in familiar scripts,
  • without flexibility,
  • and often without control.

And when life gets more complex — your “fluency” collapses.

What makes real immersion work?

There es value in immersion — if done right.

Here’s how to make it real:

✅ Explain what’s happening

Even briefly, in the learner’s native language if needed.

✅ 2. Build a core before immersion

Give the student enough vocabulary and structure to survive with understanding.

✅ 3. Correct with context

Not just “Wrong. Try again.”
But: “Let’s look why this works — and how it changes if you shift focus.”

🎯 Who is responsible for this mess?

“We don’t teach translation. We teach communication.”

That’s what they say.

But real communication requires structure, tools, and awareness.
Throwing a student into language chaos is not innovation.
It’s abdication of responsibility.

🧩 What I teach instead

I don’t isolate skills. I combine them.
I don’t reject translation. I use it as a bridge.
I don’t push students into panic. I train them to build confidence from clarity.

Because language should not be overwhelming.
It should be a tool for living, thinking, understanding, and connecting.

And that’s something “full immersion” alone will never give you.

🔗 Related reading from our blog

→ La barrera lingüística no tiene que ver con el idioma
→ Por qué no prometemos que hablará en 30 días
→ Understanding Sentence Structure as Meaning, Not Just Rules

© Tymur Levitin

Author, founder, director, and lead teacher at Levitin Language School
Este artículo forma parte de la columna del autor:
🟦 Lenguaje sin ilusiones: La columna de Tymur Levitin sobre el aprendizaje real

🔜 Siguiente de la serie:

“What a Dictionary Won’t Tell You — and Why Intuition Might”
Próximamente.

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