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We've all heard of Duolingo, and we've all probably used it at least a little bit. I have friends who think it's amazing.

But what are the drawbacks to using Duolingo? In particular, have any studies been done which show particular weaknesses in the Duolingo system versus other learning methods?

Flimzy
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6 Answers6

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This is basically a summary of what this website has to say.

  1. You are not exposed to natural sounding conversations and sentences (at least, not until very much later as you reach more advanced lessons). In this respect, Duolingo is in dramatic opposition to other language methods such as Assimil, Teach Yourself, or Berlitz. I don’t know how often you use the words “elephant”, “lion”, “snake”, or “horse” in your daily conversations with people, but no matter how useless you think this vocabulary is, you’ll have to go through the lessons that introduce it whether you like it or not.

  2. As stated above, because the program progresses in set stages and introduces vocabulary in what I call “boxes” (animals, food, jobs, furniture, etc.) rather than in a more natural fashion, the sentences you are exposed to, in a large number of early lessons, are essentially useless and at times nonsensical. For example, I’ve come across such sentences as: “My snake eats your cake,” “I have our cow,” “Their elephant drinks milk,” “The knife is in the boot,” “We come from the women,” and many more similar ones. Probably not the best arsenal of sentences to impress the native speakers on your next trip overseas…

  3. Duolingo has no natural sounding conversations, the stuff you would normally find in most good textbooks. Rather, you’ll only be exposed to short phrases/sentences.

  4. Duolingo uses a computerized voice system for all of its listening exercises, so you’re not introduced to how the language really sounds. The voice is dry, non-rhythmical, and well, it sounds like a computer. Because of this, I found the listening exercises quite useless, and you will simply not learn to speak or listen to the language correctly.

  5. As stated above, Duolingo does not offer any explanation of grammatical structures as part of its mobile platform. However, grammatical occurrences are explained in the desktop version of Duolingo (as pointed out by @Ven in the comments).

fi12
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  • "You are not exposed to natural sounding conversations and sentences." 2. "...the sentences you are exposed to [...] are essentially useless and at times nonsensical..." 3. "Duolingo has no natural sounding conversations..." A little bit weird (I realize this is how the source has it.) Seems like what they are trying to say is: 1. strange words, 2. strange sentences, 3. nothing to prepare you for a normal conversation. They could have put that in one paragraph...
  • – J.Past Jul 26 '16 at 11:58
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    @Ven My mistake, edited to correct. Currently, I prefer to use the desktop version, but when I wrote this answer, I used primarily the mobile app, and was unaware of the grammatical explanations. – fi12 Jul 29 '16 at 15:39
  • Wait, there are natural sounding conversations and sentences in later, more advanced lessons? That's awesome. At which skill does this start? (I'm learning Spanish if that matters.) – Kevin Jul 29 '16 at 19:40
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    "Duolingo uses a computerized voice system" - that is untrue for the four languages I've heard on Duolingo. (German, Russian, Spanish, Irish). Maybe the language you are learning has a poor voice recording or the human doing it is just not that good.Which languages do you think are computerized on Duolingo? (the rest of your points I agree with) – Mitch Jan 26 '17 at 15:46
  • @Ven - Re 5: What is worse, mobile version should at least notify the user that desktop version has the explanation. I was using the mobile version, and had no idea that I am missing something (and decided that duolingo sucks too much for be usable). – Peter M. - stands for Monica Jan 09 '18 at 18:22
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    @PeterMasiar the iOs version is a bug in itself. It even has protection that prevents you from learning -- and have to wait 24hrs. Even as a paying customer. – Ven Jan 09 '18 at 18:36
  • I have two more bullets in my answer which are expanding on your answer. @TommiBrander suggested to add them to your answer. I can edit your answer, or you can add them. – Peter M. - stands for Monica Jan 10 '18 at 13:50