Tuesday, March 07, 2006
Success Story
Just wanted to relay a little success story for you and your book.
As you recall after attending your class in *** I achieved the highest scores ever in the 13 years I had been taking the DLPT I was a 3/3 (raw scores were 50/52) after your excellent instruction in December of '03.
After returning to *** I studied a bit, but not as much as I could have. In January of '04 I attended a 4 week class at our JLC. The instruction was good, but not up to the Jabra standard. Despite the one extra week I came out of the class with lower DLPT scores, 2/3 (raw scores were 44/52) My lowest listening score in a very long time.
Since January of '04 I have been extremely busy. My work did not afford me the opportunity to attend a class. I knew that I would not be able focus only on language. In October I started using your book almost exclusively. I read each night (almost). I loaded your audio onto my MP3 player and listened as I folded clothes, did chores, drove to and from work.
On Friday 3 March I took my DLPT, a bit nervous. I felt good about the listening and breezed through the reading, finishing the 65 passages in just under an hour. I've been waiting on pins and needles since then.
Today I received my scores. Without any formal training throughout the year, only your fabulous book to guide me I scored the highest I've ever scored in my 16.5 years as a linguist, 3/3 (raw scores of 56/54, 60 being perfect).
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
Small Mindedness @ Princeton
Helping Future Officers
Saturday, February 18, 2006
Say No To More Subsidized Academic Language Training
Saturday, February 11, 2006
Language Program Promises Culture and Linguistic Education
Thursday, February 09, 2006
University of Oregon Adds Arabic & Korean
Language Learning Software
Monday, February 06, 2006
Rosetta Stone Review
A Great Opportunity
Sunday, January 29, 2006
Tech Gadgets Aid Language Teaching
I talked about the Rosetta Stone program the other day and I love it but I don't think they have it in MP3 format. Pimsleur on the other hand have converted their lessons to MP3 format and they sell it along with an MP3 player. As I said before, I love both, but I prefer the mobility of the MP3 format.
Thursday, January 26, 2006
How To Find An Arabic Program That Meets Your Needs
Sunday, January 22, 2006
Learning Arabic Abroad
Saturday, January 21, 2006
I like the Rosetta Stone But...
Rosetta Stone, Pimsleur, Berlitz and anything you can get your hands on in the initial stages of learning is great. I love all of it. I have been working on my Farsi and Dari for the past year and a half and I have used the Farsi curriculum from all the above and the results were amazing. But I am a linguist and a language teacher. I know how to motivate and guide myself and how to avoid the trappings of frustration when you're stuck. Online learning is a great idea but giving our soldiers and language learners in the armed forces the Rosetta Stone without any further instruction or interaction is not sufficient and will not produce the desired results. RS needs to be supplemented with classroom instruction and the human touch. Maybe the military is doing this already, I don't know because I don't have access. But what I know is that commercial grade language materials should be supplemented by things like online conferencing, Podcasting and voice enabled instant messaging. If you have some good feedback on the subject I would love to hear from you.