Language points you’ve learned. Of course, you may have other exercise books or places you’re writing down vocab and grammar, but here’s an opportunity to help things stick in your memory. What was your favorite recent word you learned? Which grammar point are you finding particularly difficult to get your head around? A diary should be personal, not just lists of language or language exercises.
How you’ve practiced. Think of this like a regular diary, where you would record the things you’ve done or thought about during the day. Did you ask for your cappuccino in Italian? Write it down! Learned a new Japanese song? Where did you hear it? All these points give a diary color, making it an excellent memory tool and a wonderful record of your language journey.
Every language learning diary is personal and you need to make it your own, but these are the nuts and bolts of it.
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