What constitutes a good speaking-centric learning programme? Right now, I am doing the following:
(1) Writing (memorizing and writing characters and words using Skritter)
(2) Reading (reading the characters and words I learned from the short stories of the same textbook)
(3) Listening (listening to the short stories while reading the text using the audio included with the textbook, writing down the short stories when doing a dictation)
(4) Speaking (reading the same short stories out loud to a tutor who corrects my pronunciation, trying to have small conversations that are either related or totally unrelated to the text)
When I first started to learn Chinese, it was suggested somewhere that much more progress could be made by just learning heaps and heaps of words (the pinyin, that is), building and learning sentences with those words and using those to build conversations.
However, I feel that the points above need to be done all at once to be able to learn the language properly. I tried to get away with learning just the pinyin, but would just keep on forgetting it time and time again. The characters serve as memory hooks for the pinyin (and vice versa), as do the reading and listening in context. I intend to add multiple sources of input so that they can all reinforce each other. It is a very time consuming approach (some 100 words and 200 characters a month), but how else can you properly build the vocabulary you need in order to have a half decent conversation? If there are better approaches to this, I would very much like to know.
I have on average 5 hours a day I can dedicate to learning Chinese. The main goal is to be able to converse fluently in a wide range of topics and have a listening comprehension that is more or less at the same level, but at the same time I do not want to walk around in Beijing and not be able to use the bus on my own or find a store or restaurant because I cannot read the characters. At my current rate, it might take 2 years or more to get there. In terms of the required vocabulary, that is. My pronunciation remains horrible. I fear I may be tone deaf, but listening to and parroting the natives for long enough will hopefully remedy that.
What is your take on this?