When choosing reading material for language learning, should we follow our interests or deliberately choose variety? It's a question I've found myself thinking about since launching Context Japanese.
Newspaper concept
One of the main ideas behind Context Japanese is that learners will enjoy language learning more—and stay motivated for longer—if they can read content that genuinely interests them at an appropriate level, rather than being limited to a fixed set of textbook topics. To make that possible, I wanted the site to offer a wide variety of topics. To achieve this, the concept of a newspaper with different article categories seemed a logical choice. A newspaper does not assume everyone wants to read the same thing. Different readers naturally gravitate towards different sections. It's still early and the data set is small, but I have been looking at user behaviour in relation to topic choice and some interesting insights are already visible.
Category selection
The first thing I have noticed is that users do not try to cover every category. Instead, they are selective and repeatedly choose the same categories. This is similar to how we might approach reading the news in our native tongue. We rarely approach news consumption in our first language by saying, "Today I should read one article from politics, one from science, one from sport and one from culture." We usually follow our curiosity. I often read the sports section and the top stories and perhaps some politics or business-related news, but rarely go into the health and lifestyle sections or arts and culture. One might expect that if you are using a site to learn a language, it would make sense to cover every category in order to expose yourself to the widest possible range of language. So far, that doesn't seem to be happening.
Favoured topics
The behaviour of registered users already hints at a couple of interesting patterns. Users tend to gravitate towards one or two categories—we might assume these reflect their interests. One user, for example, has read eight articles, six of them in Arts & Culture and two in Lifestyle & Health, but none from the other seven categories. Another user has returned four times and on each occasion chosen a Science & Technology article without reading from another category. One more user has wider tastes, spreading their reading across five categories, but still ignoring the remaining four. Similarly, another user has chosen Lifestyle & Health for more than half of the articles they have read.
Possible implications for language learning
This data sets the scene well for the sort of investigations that could follow once there are more users on the site. I am interested in how topic choice affects learning, and whether there is a better approach: staying within the same topic area or deliberately varying it more widely. One possibility is that repeatedly reading the same type of content makes key nouns and phrases increasingly familiar. That removes one cognitive barrier and may allow learners to devote more attention to new grammar and unfamiliar ways of expressing ideas. Equally, it may be that different topics naturally expose learners to different vocabulary and grammatical patterns, making variety the more effective approach. That is something I would love to investigate further.
Let's take sport as an example. If you are a football fan, does it make sense to read football articles every day? You would probably become very familiar with words like match, player, controversy and dispute. That familiarity might free up enough attention to notice new grammar or unfamiliar turns of phrase. But what might you miss? Would you encounter words like research, which might appear regularly in Science & Technology articles, or bankrupt, which you might see more often in Business & Economics? Perhaps repeated exposure to one topic also means repeated exposure to particular grammar patterns and ways of expressing ideas.
Looking forward
As Context Japanese grows, I'm looking forward to revisiting these observations in six months' time to see whether they still hold. For now, I'm left with one question: should learners follow their curiosity, or deliberately push themselves towards unfamiliar topics? My instinct is that both have a role. Familiar topics may help learners build confidence and process language more easily, while variety may expose them to a wider range of vocabulary and structures. As Context Japanese grows, this is one of the questions I hope to explore further.
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