Glossika is a highly engaging way to learn 60+ different languages. It does this with AI-supplemented sentences, high-quality audio, and a variety of different types of exercises. In this Glossika review, let’s take a walkthrough of the platform and discuss who can benefit most and who won’t.
And if Glossika doesn’t look like your kind of language app, keep scrolling to see some Glossika alternatives.
Glossika review: available languages
As mentioned, Glossika offers courses in 60+ languages:
- Arabic (Egypt)
- Arabic (Morocco)
- Arabic (Standard)
- Armenian (Eastern)
- Azerbaijani
- Belarusian
- Bengali (India)
- Bulgarian
- Cantonese (HK)
- Catalan
- Chinese (Mandarin)(Beijing)
- Chinese (Mandarin)(Taiwan)
- Croatian (Å tokavian)
- Czech
- Danish
- Dutch
- English (British)
- Estonian
- Filipino (Tagalog)
- Finnish (SW dialect)
- French
- Gaelic
- Georgian
- German
- Greek
- Hakka (Hailu)
- Hakka (Sixian)
- Hebrew
- Hindi
- Hokkien
- Hungarian
- Icelandic
- Indonesian
- Irish
- Italian
- Japanese
- Kazakh
- Korean
- Kurdish (Sorani)
- Latvian
- Lithuanian
- Manx
- Mongolian
- Norwegian (Nynorsk)
- Persian
- Polish
- Portuguese (Brazilian)
- Portuguese (European)
- Russian
- Serbian (Ekavian)
- Slovak
- Slovenian
- Spanish (Mexican)
- Spanish (Castilian)
- Swahili
- Swedish
- Thai
- Turkish
- Ukrainian
- Uzbek
- Vietnamese (Northern)
- Vietnamese (Southern)
- Welsh
- Wenzhounese
And because Glossika cares about language preservation, a few of them are available for free; you don’t get all the benefits of a paid membership, but you do get unlimited spaced repetition practice to do your part to keep these languages alive.
We’ll talk about that more at the end.
Glossika review: the placement test
To start with Glossika, you can first opt to take a placement test. It’s a very simple test: listen to a few audio recordings of sentences, and select the sentence that you hear. If it ever gets too hard, you can always let Glossika know that you need to start from that level.
Unfortunately, like most placement tests, it’s pretty useless.
While the audio recordings themselves are very clear and high quality (the same goes for the usability of Glossika as a whole), I’d rather they just toss the whole thing.
The sentences are so different that all you need to do is recognize one single word at the beginning to answer correctly. This is regardless of whether you understood the statement itself or could even create it – you can see towards the end of the above video that I could answer correctly based on literally the first word.
And that’s beside the fact that it’s only testing listening (despite claiming to exercise all the language skills) and didn’t even attempt to test me beyond B2. Where the placement test is concerned, I’d rather they just ask me directly.
Glossika review: learning new phrases
Glossika teaches users a new language by introducing new sentences that are useful in day-to-day life. You’ll learn to understand the language implicitly, as opposed to learning new vocabulary words and grammatical terms piece by piece.
You’ll learn 5 phrases like this at a time, through reading, writing, listening, and speaking, as well as using spaced repetition.
Glossika lessons follow this format:
- The new phrase is presented written in both your source and target language
- You hear a recording of the phrase in both languages, so you can follow along
- You type out the phrase in the foreign language
- You reread the phrase just in the foreign language
- You record yourself saying the phrase in the foreign language
As you can see, you got these phrases drilled into your brain really well. It doesn’t seem to be wildly sensitive to mistakes (I didn’t use any capital letters or accents, for example) which can be a significant drawback if you don’t get used to spelling appropriately, especially with Spanish.
Glossika is very customizable, which is a plus; for example, you can opt out of speaking practice if it’s not convenient for you at the moment, or you can turn the English translation on or off. The only problem is that these customizations aren’t obvious.
Another example: this next video was actually my first attempt at a lesson with Glossika.
I didn’t realize that it had automatically been set to “listening mode” until I started clicking around. There’s no tutorial showing you these options, nor any attempt to even let you know they’re there, so you’ll have to do some experimenting for yourself.
Maybe there’s an option to require correct accents somewhere? If there is, it’s not obvious.
Another helpful setting that Glossika didn’t tell me: if any of the phrases are too easy for you, just click the smiley face, and they’ll be taken out of the cycle.
Nonetheless, if used appropriately, this approach can provide language learners with a very well-rounded language education.
As a whole, I do love Glossika’s approach! In general, it’s engaging, modern, and really attractive.
Glossika’s “reps”
If you hang around Glossika’s Facebook group enough, you’ll see tons of talk about “reps”. The basic idea is that Glossika teaches through repetition, and your mastery of any given phrase or sentence can be defined by how many reps you’ve completed.
With Glossika’s approach, if you repeat their sentences enough times, you’ll master the language! How many times? According to this page here:
25,000 Reps → Speak sentences comfortably
50,000 Reps → Start engaging in casual conversations at natural speeds
75,000 Reps → Start honing skills with more specialized topics
100,000 Reps → Mastery level where you can say just about anything
This is Glossika’s version of spaced repetition (also known as SRS). This concept is not unique to Glossika; it’s when a computer program predicts how easy or difficult any given term or phrase is for you. If it’s easy, and you get it correct, it puts that term to the side until it thinks you’re just about to forget it. Then it shows you that phrase again, therefore getting that phrase from your short-term to long-term memory.
Does this make sense? Sure. Using this strategy, could you theoretically boil down a language to a specific number [of repetitions]? Makes sense.
The problem is (and this is my personal opinion), repeating the same phrases tens of thousands of times is insanely boring.
You’ll practice each phrase 5 times at a minimum, more often if you’re struggling with it. This strategy is great for the more logical and scientific of minds, less so for those needing more entertainment.
Don’t get me wrong, repetition is very important for every language learner. But for my own personal needs, this level of repetition drives me crazy.
Using your stats
Glossika is very scientifically-lead, so their stats are a bit more interesting than most. For one, I love this feature of the “Memory” tab.
Note: I don’t know if the audio problems are because of my device, or a Glossika error.
As I was doing my spoken reps, I honestly didn’t realize that my audio was actually being recorded, so I was disappointed at first. However, going back into this section I can listen to myself repeating the phrase, and compare it to Glossika’s native audio.
This is a helpful strategy called “shadowing”, where you learn to mirror your pronunciation of a foreign language based on an audio clip. Honestly, it’s pretty tough to come by, which is strange considering it’s a simple way for any given language learning app to help you practice speaking a foreign language.
Another interesting feature: you can choose the topics of Glossika’s sentences.
I appreciate being able to tell Glossika that I have absolutely no interest in talking about the military or science. It’s not quite enough to make the approach less boring (again, as a personal opinion and not at all an objective one), but every little option that users can mess with is a bonus.
Glossika’s pricing
Glossika offers free trials to all new users, and then offers 2 pricing tiers: $30/month for unlimited reps in unlimited languages, and about half that per month to only change your language once every 30 days.
This new lower tier is brand new as of this Glossika review, and I’m very happy to see the compromise to make language learning more accessible!
And finally, in an effort to promote minority languages, the following languages are 100% free to all users:
- Catalan
- Gaelic
- Hakka (Sixian)
- Hakka (Hailu)
- Kurdish (Sorani)
- Manx
- Welsh
- Taiwanese
- Wenzhounese
If going through this Glossika review convinces you to give it a try (more on that below), I highly recommend you at least spring for your free trial. No credit card is required!
Glossika review: who it’s for
Glossika is beautiful, smooth, and high quality, but it’s not for everyone. For one, Glossika does not start from 0, with basic vocabulary and grammar. Instead, you’ll start with beginner phrases. It’s more of the “figure it out as you go” approach, as opposed to the “1+1=2” one.
If you’re a big fan of repetition, Glossika is great for a wide variety of language learners, especially how well they tackle all the language skills. The advanced customization is a huge plus, too, as long as you’re tech-savvy enough to figure it out for yourself.
But if you want usability with a less…sterile approach, you’re not alone. If that’s the case, I might recommend Busuu, which connects the language more by way of living, breathing community, as well as more explicit language lessons.
Hooked on Glossika and want to give it a try? Click here to start your free trial!
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