The natural approach focuses on learning a language the same way we acquired our first one, through exposure, comprehension, and low-pressure communication. Developed by linguists Stephen Krashen and Tracy Terrell, this method emphasizes understanding before speaking and creating an environment where language grows naturally.
What is the natural approach?
The natural approach is based on the idea that languages are acquired, not just learned, through meaningful, comprehensible input. Instead of memorizing grammar or forcing output, learners absorb language naturally by listening, reading, and connecting meaning from context.
Speaking emerges gradually, once comprehension is strong. This process mirrors how children learn: they understand long before they start producing sentences.
Core principles of the natural approach
- Comprehensible input: learn through messages you can understand, not through grammar drills.
- Low anxiety: a relaxed state promotes faster acquisition.
- Natural order: grammar is learned subconsciously, following predictable stages.
- Meaning before form: focus on ideas, not structure.
- Gradual speech: speaking develops naturally after enough input.
How to
How to apply the natural approach
1. Focus on input first.
Listen to easy podcasts, watch shows with subtitles, or read short graded readers.
2. Relax and enjoy the process.
Don’t pressure yourself to speak early; comprehension builds the foundation for fluency.
3. Use visual and emotional context.
Associate new words with situations, gestures, or images instead of translations.
4. Let speech emerge naturally.
Start speaking when it feels automatic, even simple phrases count.
5. Surround yourself with the language.
Create an immersive environment: change device language, follow native creators, or join online communities.
Why the natural approach works
- Stress-free learning: low anxiety improves memory and performance.
- Long-term retention: meaning-based learning makes language stick.
- Authentic communication: fluency grows from real understanding, not translation.
- Natural grammar acquisition: rules emerge from repeated, comprehensible input.
Common mistakes (and how to fix them)
- Focusing on perfection too early. Fix: accept ambiguity, meaning comes before accuracy.
- Neglecting listening. Fix: prioritize input over production.
- Translating mentally. Fix: use images or gestures instead of direct translation.
- Comparing progress. Fix: remember that acquisition takes time; it’s not a race.
Daily routine example
10 min: watch or listen to comprehensible input (e.g., YouTube, easy podcasts).
10 min: read something interesting at your level.
5 min: repeat or retell what you understood.
5 min: note new expressions naturally absorbed.
Total: 30 minutes a day for natural acquisition.
FAQ
Do I ever study grammar?
Only after exposure, grammar makes more sense when you already know the patterns.
Can I use subtitles?
Yes, especially if they match the target language.
What if I don’t speak for months?
That’s normal; your brain is still learning passively.
Is this method effective for adults?
Absolutely, adults can acquire languages naturally if input is consistent.
Acquire languages naturally with A1 Polyglot
Follow the principles of the natural approach with immersive content and real comprehension practice. Take the A1 Polyglot Method Quiz to find the learning path that matches your natural rhythm.