Concentration is the key
Remove all distractions and get focused. Put your phone in another room, sit in a quiet, uncrowded space and absorb the words you’re listening to. Select audio as per your learning level and slow down the pace if required. Don’t try to be overambitious jumping to complicated subjects.
Listen Actively with your undivided attention.
To register data, your brain requires you to highlight things, that you want it to remember. By paying close attention to something and repeating it multiple times, you send a clear message to your brain that something is important and needs to be remembered. While this is applicable straightaway to things like learning vocabulary, it’s also true when it comes to the other parts of listening, including sounds, accents, intonation or phrasing. You need to bring attention to them. That’s why it’s very important to listen actively rather than passively listening and multitasking. Listen to the Audio without text – audio alone. Don’t read the text in advance and don’t follow along with it as you listen. The point here is to focus solely on your aural skills and see how much you can understand without any visual aid.
Repeat Listening without text yet!
Many learners make the mistake of turning to the text too quickly. The first time around, you probably would have identified one or two keywords or ideas. But as you repeat the audio, and listen again you can actually see yourself pick more words or phrases you may have missed the first time. Repeating this exercise more times will enhance your listening significantly.
Listen With the Text
Read through the transcript and check how much you understood from your listening. Assess if you were able to get the ‘gist’! Once you’ve read through the text a few more times and looked up any words you didn’t understand, you should now listen to the audio again a couple of more times while you read along with the text. This is the one time during the process that you’re using aural and visual stimuli together, so take advantage of it. Try to connect the written words to the sounds and pay special attention to phrases or groups of words and how they’re pronounced.
Find listening to sources with exercises – Many Sanskrit audio resources have accompanying exercises, and these are great for beginner learners. If new words are introduced in a particular exercise of your listening resource, don’t just read through them. Take your time to learn them first. The best way to learn is by jotting down everything you know about Sanskrit in a diary. Always keep it handy.
Listen to the natives
Listening to a native Sanskrit speaker, will give you a clear idea of the accent and the pronunciations of every word. Alternatively find friends pursuing Sanskrit. Let go of that anxiety, make friends with other students, to interact and it will help you, not only improve your listening skills but also to improve your speaking skills. You will be able to respond appropriately only when you hear correctly. You need to have a conversation with somebody who not only speaks Sanskrit but is patient and preferably, interesting.
