Learning To Speak Spanish



Written on July 17, 2007 – 9:29 am | by gaulardcom |


Hmmmm…what am I going to do next? As you may have noticed, I need to have a steady flow of personal projects to keep me happy and motivated in life. I am very high maintenance.

I remember back in Henry H. Wells Middle School in Brewster, NY, I started learning my first foreign …French. I took French for three years in middle school and then for one year in Brewster High School. I never thought the French stuck with me very much, but to my surprise, I kept inserting French words in to my . Oh well, I guess I am tri-lingual. Yeah, right. I virtually know nothing in either , but at least I know enough English to be harshly critical of other people’s grammar. Thanks mom.

Later on, I took one more year of during my 3 1/2 year stay at Westchester Community College. I am not sure I retained any of that either.

I always wondered why, on the first day of class, the teacher has to walk in blurting out ten minutes of trash in another . How does that help anyone? All it ever did for me was to completely turn me off and make me think that I would never learn what they were going to try to teach. Also, why do they find people who’s native is the you are trying to learn? I have the hardest time trying to learn the , but also trying to decipher the person’s accent just puts me over the edge. How about a nice clear instructor who speaks perfect English with a nice English introduction. Then, slowly move into the you will be learning. That would put me at ease.

I remember I was taking an accounting class at Westchester Community . I had to drop it (or maybe I failed it) because I couldn’t understand a word through the thick accent of the Indian instructor. He was probably a genious, but that didn’t do me any good.

This has nothing to do with anything, but I just feel like telling you this, as long as I am on a roll. For the longest time, I would fail any math class I would take. I had sucky instructor after sucky instructor. I started to think it was me. Well, I guess I always thought it was me. Well, the strange thing is…the first class ( Algebra) I took with Dr. Rick Dilsizian, I got an A. Yes, an A. Can you believe it? We covered the same amount of material as in all the other classes, but this guy did a bunch of extra things that made learning a lot easier. I couldn’t believe it one day when he handed back a bunch of exams and I was the only one in the entire class who scored 100%. This is coming from a guy who failed every other math class he ever took. So thanks Rick.

I guess my point is this…the instructor and type of instruction matters. Probably more than how smart and capable the instructor is. They gotta get the stuff across to the student.

I have done some research on how to learn to speak . I wasn’t too impressed with what I found. Laura has a book sitting on a shelf at home. I might as well just chuck that thing through a window. I learned more in five days in Punta Cana than I did in all my classes. That doesn’t say much for the classes.

I saw a commercial on TV the other day for Rosetta Stone Language Learning. They seem to have a nice tactic on how to get the information absorbed into the student’s head. I took a look at the online demo and was impressed. They mix listening, repeating and visuals. It worked for me. I think I might order the first CD…Spanish (Latin America) Level 1. The only problem is that I have no one to talk to…to keep it in my head. Laura is taking another class in school next semester, so maybe we will make an effort to be bi-lingual.

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  1. 6 Responses to “Learning To Speak Spanish”

  2. By Mom on Jul 17, 2007 | Reply

    You’re welcome!

    Mom

  3. By Steve on Jul 17, 2007 | Reply

    Have you considered using podcast lessons. There are quite a few Spanish teaching resources out there now. CoffeeBreakSpanish.com is popular, as is SpanishSense.com. SpanishSense.com also has a lot of integrated learning tools on their website.

  4. By Stephanie on Jul 17, 2007 | Reply

    Good luck to ya!! Personally, I like french.

  5. By Les H on Jul 18, 2007 | Reply

    I’ll come back sometime to see how you got on with Rosetta Stone, good luck with it. It’s a popular program but I haven’t seen it myself, yet. I’ll have to get myself a copy.

  6. By John B on Jul 18, 2007 | Reply

    I agree the classes aren’t all that useful. My wife and I took a Japanese class in Shanghai, and at least 4/5 of the class was in Chinese. We already speak that! We ended up just hiring a tutor — we could get virtually 100% Japanese conversation, so that the time we spent was spent almost entirely on learning.

    As for Spanish learning resources, have you checked out SpanishSense? They produce a lesson a day, and seem to do a pretty good job.

  7. By Ken Ryan on Jul 18, 2007 | Reply

    You’ve got to visit studyspanish.com — unbelievable amount of free content including lots of oral. Also a premium level and CDs for sale, but check out all the free stuff!

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This is my blog. Welcome to it. I write a lot of stuff that doesn't pertain to anything in particular, but you may find a common theme in here somewhere. Enjoy. More

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