unbibium: (Default)
unbibium ([personal profile] unbibium) wrote2003-10-08 04:51 pm

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BTW, if you're a language geek like me, and want to learn a language as it's spoken rather than it's written, then television courses are really the way to go. Some of them may be airing regularly on a channel you already receive, like know99, MCTV the Annenberg/CPB channel, or your local PBS affiliate. Also, if you have broadband, you can view some series on-demand from anywhere in the world, through the Annenberg/CPB website.

Of these, my favorite is French in Action: This is probably the best way to learn French without growing up in Paris.
It is designed on the principle of immersion: conduct the course entirely in French, but make it easy for students to figure things out by context. But the real genius of it is how it makes even the beginner lessons interesting.

The first handful of lessons take place in a classroom setting where they set up the story that will take up the rest of the lesson, and the teacher matches wits with a smart-assed student who already speaks French. The rest of the series is a light-hearted story about a young American man who comes to Paris on walkabout, and meets a young Parisian woman, and they go have adventures while this creepy Man In Black follows them around. Most of these episodes are 15 minutes long, with an additional 15 minutes where Pierre Capretz clarifies some aspects of the language used, with the help of various movie and television clips, cartoons, mini-skits, and photographs.

Also, the textbook is still widely available, and it provides a grand feast of additional reading material, including everything from comics to classic poetry to famous quotes.

I've only watched half of the lessons myself, and read maybe a third of the textbook, but I found I could converse rather comfortably in French when I visited Paris and Strasbourg last year. In contrast, I took four years of Spanish in high school, and at the end of it, I could conjugate the hell out of an irregular verb, but I had no fluency. If I ever had to speak any Spanish, I'd freeze up, and run endless grammar checks in my head. You'd think in this town, I'd have ample opportunity to practice, but I'm too shy for that. With a TV course, one can see the language in use, and trust that anyone else could use it the same way. And, alone in my room, I could repeat stuff in front of my TV until I was blue in the face, and feel no embarrassment.

I could sing its praises for hours, but I suggest you see for yourself; the entire series is available for online viewing if you register with the Annenberg/CPB channel.

[identity profile] pentomino.livejournal.com 2003-10-09 03:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, you've kind of articulated something I haven't really had to think out in words since I started learning. There was a point in the course where I realized that certain things sounded alike, but couldn't be treated the same, just like when you're a child and you don't remember the exact moment you realized people say "better" instead of "gooder".