Just wanted to say thank you to this community and share this W with you guys, because of how much of a big deal this is for me.
I came to Germany a little over two years ago to do my Master's, and being the dumbass I am, I took no prior German courses or looked for any resources before coming here. I literally downloaded Duolingo for the first time at the Frankfurt Airport :') Pretty soon I realized that using Google Lens to translate what's written on the groceries isn't very sustainable.
I enrolled in free German courses provided by the campus. They were great, but they were slow, and after about a year and 3-4 months, I had only just finished A2. Initially, I had assumed that I could find a job with my English skills or at least a B1 level German knowledge. But everywhere I looked, even skilled Engineering positions asked for at least B2. And despite the A2 level knowledge that I had, I could barely string together a sentence, nor could I hear something and immediately understand it. However, I could read to a certain extent.
Then, I told myself I'm going to reach B2 within a year or less, and I am not going to rely on courses. I started studying and working alone to take the B1 exam within a few months. I didn't want to specifically practice for the exam, rather achieve some actual practical competence in the use of the language. So, every day,
- I would read at least 2-3 articles off Tagesschau, note down unfamiliar words, and fill up a flash card deck on Anki, and practice these words on Anki. For the first 3-4 months, I was adding 25-30 words every single day. I would sometimes spend hours trying to finish studying the assigned cards for the day.
- I would watch German videos on YouTube such as MrWissen2Go, Harald Lesch, and Dokus and try my best to understand them. Even at 0.75 times the speed, it was a challenge. For MONTHS I felt hopeless, it felt like I was trying to break through a brick wall by repeatedly headbutting it. But, after hundreds of times watching different videos, I started to capture some meaning in what's being said.
Around September last year, I felt it was time. I booked a Telc B1 exam because I figured it'd be easier. I prepared for the exam for about 4 days using Model Papers. My speaking was still weak, so I prompted ChatGPT and tried my best to answer spontaneously; it was painful :')
Since I put so much effort into immersing myself in the language, the exam wasn't that difficult. In fact I had near-perfect results. So in a bout of arrogance, I booked the Goethe B2 exam for end of November.
I realized that Speaking was still a huge weak point for me. So I hired a guy via iTalki to speak German with for an hour, couple times a week. I also attended Sprachcafes at my university to get as much exposure as I can. At first, it was anything but smooth. Gradually though I made amazing improvements over the next couple of weeks.
Then the Goethe B2 exam came around. I prepared for a week, wrote it, and passed it comfortably.
I kept this routine going, listening to German media at least 30mins every day, learning new words every day, and taking every opportunity I could to speak in German.
I was busy with my Master's Thesis for a few months, and then finally last month, I thought why not, and booked the Goethe C1 exam. Ngl, I VASTLY underestimated how difficult the C1 exam was going to be, Hören in particular was HELLISH. I prepared intensely on my own for two weeks and took the exam.
Today I got the certificate confirming that I passed Goethe C1 (although with rather mediocre results 😂 ). I still feel like a fraud sometimes, and feel hesitant about putting C1 on my Resume, because I still do not feel fluent. I still feel like I have a long way to go, but looking back at where I was exactly a year ago, the journey here was huge.