I need something structured and systematic. I don't know if I can do listening. I suppose I need to introduce that into my repertoire eventually. But I can't do everything at once. It's not my style.
I think these things are for later. I will stick to my plan which is shadow Essential Korean. I am only a beginner so I can't expect to understand or follow these audios. These audios are for more advanced students.
And also when I practice with people later, I will get lots of listening practice.
So just step-by-step.
Go through the Essential Korean. This will ground me in the basic stuff. After that, you can try out the simple easy readers like the Migrant book and the WOW comics. You can shadow them. You can shadow the dictionary as well. Then move onto harder stuff, like the Using Korean book and the teenage book. Eventually, move onto the International Learners book. I suppose I could shadow the dialogs in LingQ but they are all over the place.
I think I will use these sites when I am at an intermediate level. Doing all the stuff I'm doing should bring me up to early intermediate level with speaking.
Then after I've done these things, you can start interacting with Koreans in Korean.
So there is a lot to learn ...
If you get too much input you don't understand, you get stressed out. So don't try. Just know the stuff you are learning well.
Don't get too ahead of yourself.
What about reading? You have to do that eventually. And the writing too.
But anyway, spend several months shadowing stuff for a few hours every day and eventually you will get there.
So just follow Glossika's methods for the time being. I find his methods to be the best.
The ones who have become fluent aren't necessarily good teachers. And their learning styles might be different to mine.