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Very interesting posts lately about the expat life and speaking other languages.
When I studied Japanese I was a younger man, in a traditional college environment. Classes, tapes and spending time with Japanese kids on campus.. It was great, but can't go back there. I am thinking about learning another language - and "Pimsler" and "Rosetta Stone" seem to be the big two methods. Pimsler apparently has audio materials and workbooks. Rosetta uses a PC/MAC based interactive software.. Text, graphics and sound. What experience does the PPOT brain trust have with learning another language as an adult? Thanks. |
Well the very best method - bar none - of learning a language as an adult is to fall in love with someone who speaks it fluently.
Second best would be a total immersion program in the country, the language of which you want to learn. Third best would be the US military Defense Language Institute just outside of Monterey. That's probably not very helpful. But there you go. |
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I have used Pimsler and it is pretty good. I can't make a comparison with Rosetta, as I have never tried it.
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If you have the time to do it, the total immersion is probably the best way to do it (6 months and you are good to go). I travel to Bulgaria every year and I'm amazed at how well I'm able to communicate by just listening and trying. I started with a pocket size phrase book that phonetically spells it out. I would also draw diagrams of body parts, table settings, you name it. Each night, study the alphabet and the sounds of each. Once I get back here, its tough to continue the learning part of it. Also, we are teaching my son Bulgarian, he'll be 4 in August and he already knows more than me.
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Billy--
I have a set of the Pimsleur CDs, they are pretty good. I am going to convert them to MP3 so when I talk to nobody in particular on the Subway it will be auf Deutsch. Rosetta Stone is also very good, it actually analyzes your voice and gives you feedback as to whether you are doing it right. Some of the programs are now available as direct downloads to your iPod. That seems to be the key-- have the thing on a portable device (iPod, phone, whatever) so you can be on it more or less all the time. I know a large employer in Virginia who is looking for fluent speakers of non-romance languages. :) |
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my wife and her family speak mandarin and taiwanese exclusively. they sometimes throw me a bone, and translate a few things for me. it is amazing! i can formulate the next to impossible sounds, and mixed with body language, actions, etc, i am starting to understand. i will be fluent sooner or later. |
Drastic full immersion.
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I used Rosetta Stone to pick up some basic Hindi, and liked it. The visual reference to the object made it much easier for me to remember.
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Thanks guys, great input. Talking to myself in Hindi or Mandarin in the subway would keep the weirdos away!
I got home from Japan after my first year and thought I had done pretty well..then I met an old boy at the local coffee shop who went through a DOD Japanese program in WWII. THAT was an intensive program! The thing was - the better you did - the longer you stayed in school and the higher up you went in the chain of command. The guys that tested out or dropped out of the program went right to the front, to put to good use what they had learned... Talk about an incentive to study! |
I found the older Rosetta Stone for Mandarin to be useless. Pimsleur is somewhat better, but there is not workbook - it is all audio. I am a "combination" learner and I need to see the pinyin (text) when I hear the sounds.
Depending on the language, Fluenz looks decent although it is for the beginning end of things. I agree that immersion and having someone around you that will speak it constantly is the only way to do it unless you are *really* driven and don't have to work for a living. |
Personally?
Pelican Parts OT forum. |
What you want to learn should be directly related to how hot the women are. Germany, Sweden, Brazil, etc. Stick with plan A and you'll be fluent in no time, along with other "benefits".
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您好吗?我的罚款。 |
I used Berlitz for Japanese and Arabic, they were good!
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BTW, I chuckle every time I see that Rosetta Stone ad about the farm boy who meets the Italian supermodel. |
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