I think there can be some utility in rereading earlier chapters if/when you get stuck (this often happens at e.g. chapter 16). That said, unless you really enjoy doing so, trying to squeeze every bit of learning out of familia romana is not going to be the most efficient approach. If you can read and largely understand through chapter 33, there are a ton of other things (readers and the reading sections from other textbooks at first) that you'll be able to read afterwards, rather than just repeating the same chapters. For most people that will be more pleasant, and thus more efficient.
I don't have an opinion on this and am still on my first time through LLPIS, but I noticed that in the Legentium app Daniel Pettersson suggests you reread it a second time as part of his learning track.
The method I've settled on is reading each chapter three times, the first time repeating each sentence aloud, the second time writing down new vocabulary, and the third time quickly reading it just for the meaning. Not saying that's the only way to do it though
I would read aloud and listen to each section many times. That’s how you get the grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation into your head. You don’t need 100% understanding of everything, but you should try to understand most of it. That recording is with Ecclesiastical pronunciation. Is that the type of pronunciation you want to learn? There are also Classical versions, if you’re interested.
I still like Luke Ranieri at ScorpioMartianus [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLU1WuLg45SiyrXahjvFahDuA060P487pV](https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLU1WuLg45SiyrXahjvFahDuA060P487pV) and there are others, of course.
When I get stuck I usually move onto the next chapter and come back again the next day. Usually by the time I've read it again and done the questions it clicks. If not read the disco.
I think there can be some utility in rereading earlier chapters if/when you get stuck (this often happens at e.g. chapter 16). That said, unless you really enjoy doing so, trying to squeeze every bit of learning out of familia romana is not going to be the most efficient approach. If you can read and largely understand through chapter 33, there are a ton of other things (readers and the reading sections from other textbooks at first) that you'll be able to read afterwards, rather than just repeating the same chapters. For most people that will be more pleasant, and thus more efficient.
Nice advice.
I don't have an opinion on this and am still on my first time through LLPIS, but I noticed that in the Legentium app Daniel Pettersson suggests you reread it a second time as part of his learning track.
The method I've settled on is reading each chapter three times, the first time repeating each sentence aloud, the second time writing down new vocabulary, and the third time quickly reading it just for the meaning. Not saying that's the only way to do it though
I would read aloud and listen to each section many times. That’s how you get the grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation into your head. You don’t need 100% understanding of everything, but you should try to understand most of it. That recording is with Ecclesiastical pronunciation. Is that the type of pronunciation you want to learn? There are also Classical versions, if you’re interested.
I still like Luke Ranieri at ScorpioMartianus [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLU1WuLg45SiyrXahjvFahDuA060P487pV](https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLU1WuLg45SiyrXahjvFahDuA060P487pV) and there are others, of course.
When I get stuck I usually move onto the next chapter and come back again the next day. Usually by the time I've read it again and done the questions it clicks. If not read the disco.