![]() ![]() Now that there are no more volunteers the only way for a course to get updated is if someone inside of duolingo does it, and as you’ve noticed duolingo only really puts internal resources behind English/French/Spanish and so the other courses are languishing. Last year they cancelled the volunteer program and moved everything in house. To be fair, this isn't as frequent anymore.ĭoes this happen with the other languages? Is there anything I can do besides reporting at least 2, 3 issues every week?ĭuolingo’s course materials in the beginning were crowdsourced and partially maintained by volunteers, that’s how they were able to have so many languages in the system. Sometimes, the answer to a speaking exercise won't be the same as that for a written exercise although it's the exact same sentence. The lack of consistency for right answers. ![]() This scenario persists after the update, but I think the new format makes it make a bit more sense now? Although the same 3,4 sentences keep showing up over and over. Although this is my biggest issue with Duolingo, I'm also very annoyed at how some of the basics aren't properly programmed into the course:Īudio is missing in soooo many exercises, it's always either a character or whole sentences sometimes.ĪLL comments sections are locked since months ago.īefore the last big update, sentences totally unrelated to a corresponding module would pop up. There's so many things and fancy features available on the other courses, while the Chinese course hardly ever gets anything new (the characters-to-English matching is the latest feature). Through all this time, I've witnessed the lack of attention this course gets as compared to Spanish or English (for Spanish speakers). I currently have a pretty long streak "learning" Chinese. ![]()
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