Cover the book. Only listen and speak.
Play the audio. The speaker asks a question. Pause the audio. Answer in a full sentence. Then play the audio again to check. method callan
Moving too fast. Wrong: Finishing one lesson per day. Right: Repeating the same lesson for 3-5 days. Cover the book
"Student, what are you doing now?" Me: "Now, I am sitting on a chair." Teacher: "Good. Repeat: Now, I am sitting on a chair." Me: "Now, I am sitting on a chair." Teacher: "Student, what were you doing five minutes ago?" Me: "Five minutes ago, I was listening to the teacher." Teacher: "Correct. Repeat: Five minutes ago, I was listening to the teacher." Me: "Five minutes ago, I was listening to the teacher." Teacher: "Student, what will you do after this lesson?" Me: "After this lesson, I will drink coffee." Teacher: "Good. Repeat: After this lesson, I will drink coffee." Me: "After this lesson, I will drink coffee." The speaker asks a question
Day 1, 9:00 AM: Teacher asks, "What is the past tense of 'go'?" I answer, "Went." Day 1, 9:10 AM: Teacher asks again, "What is the past tense of 'go'?" I answer, "Went." Day 1, 10:00 AM: Teacher asks again. I answer, "Went." Day 2, 9:00 AM: Teacher asks again. I answer, "Went."
At first, this is difficult. I wanted to write everything. But after two weeks, my brain changed. I began to think in English automatically. The teacher speaks at natural speed. Sometimes the teacher speaks very fast. Why? Because in real life, English people speak fast. If you only hear slow English, you cannot understand real conversations.
P.S. — The Callan Method is not the only method. But for speaking and listening, it is the best method I have found. If you want grammar explanations, use a textbook. If you want to speak, use Callan.