Google Birmingham, Michigan
¿Como explicas a tus padres que Google te ha invitado a ser el presentador invitado?
Mis padres son mayores y no hablan ingles. Mi madre solamente sabe conectarse a Skype para hablar conmigo pero no sabe nada de computadoras. Mi padre nunca ha utilizado un ordenador. Internet es un concepto que ellos han oído pero no saben exactamente qué es. Después de esta introducción, ¿como puedo explicarles que la compañía Google me ha invitado a ser su presentador invitado para su reunión trimestral? … Voy a publicar las sugerencias de mis estudiantes y amigos
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Tuesday evenings Spanish program
Are you traveling to a Spanish speaking country? Are you doing business in Mexico? or , would you like to brush up on your Spanish? If so, this is the class for you. Spanish for Travelers is a beginners class and students will learn through a variety of conversational exercises. Come see how learning Spanish can change your travel experience. Text: “Easy Spanish Step-by-Step” by Barbara Bregstein, available at most popular bookstores.
Register by pressing on brochure.
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Spanish for travelers
Are you traveling to a Spanish speaking country? Are you doing business in Mexico? or , would you like to brush up on your Spanish? If so, this is the class for you. Spanish for Travelers is a beginners class and students will learn through a variety of conversational exercises. Come see how learning Spanish can change your travel experience. Lessons are for beginners and will be taught through speaking, listening, reading and writing.
Text: “Easy Spanish Step-by-Step” by Barbara Bregstein.
Tuesdays, February 8th to March 22th, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
7 sessions $145
380 South Bates Street, Birmingham, MI 48009
Enroll online or by calling 248 644 5832
Questions about the course? contact us
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Learning Spanish
Our small Spanish class from Wednesday night is moving out of Spanish for beginners into Spanish conversations. We started reading Spanish conversations using the Spanish imperfect tense and then we explained when this tense is used in Spanish. We also read some of the sentences using verbs like Gustar in the different tenses that students had to do for homework. Moving from speaking Spanish in the present into the past is a big step and students feel a great sense of accomplishment. Above all, the camaraderie among the students and the facilitator is one of the best parts of learning Spanish and something I strive for in all of our Spanish classes. This is our mission and philosophy: To create an environment where learning Spanish flows naturally, with no pressure, at your pace… enjoying the experience of learning to speak and communicate in Spanish.
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What is the easiest way to learn Spanish?
How to learn Spanish? Learning Spanish is a process of speaking. As infants we repeat what we hear and a lot of times don’t know what we’re saying. Our students start speaking from the very first day of class. For many of them this is new. Some of them have studied Spanish some time in the past but were never pushed to speak Spanish. I wondered how can you learn to speak Spanish without speaking it…? Makes you wonder what the instructor knew, if the teacher spoke Spanish or if he or she just had passed all the multiple-choice tests without ever having to speak….. Our students speak Spanish in every single session, and then we explain the concepts, grammar and methodology.
A couple of our latest college students are Nabeel and Karen. Nabeel is starting this fall in the University of Michigan biomedical engineering program and plans to minor in Spanish. He contacted us because he feels he needed to speak it to practice it. Our one hour sessions twice per week are completely in Spanish and in every session we discuss several topics using real-life Spanish. As an assignment, I bring him an article from a Spanish newspaper to read. You don’t need to have Nabeel’s Spanish level to contact us. The largest majority of our students are beginners. Contact us to enjoy speaking Spanish, and tomorrow I will tell you about Karen.
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Spanish Language Classes in metro Detroit
We offer private, semi-private and small group classes. All classes are tailored to meet the students’ goals and levels.
You may wish to have private tutoring if you wish to:
- Plan your classes around your schedule
- Work at your own pace
- Have personalized & content-specific instruction.
Our semi-private tutoring sessions are ideal for those who wish to have more personalized and intensive sessions with one or two other students (maximum of 3 students).
Small group classes consist of four to eight students and offer a fun, social setting in which to learn Spanish, while still maintaining a high level of intensity.
For Your Group
We offer customized programs for small groups for business, social, religious and educational groups of all kinds. Participants may select the day, time and frequency of class meetings. Classes may be held at our facility or at your location.
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StudySpanish.com
We are happy to announce that Spanish International has been selected as the recommended company to offer Spanish language services in the metro Detroit area by the most popular website to learn Spanish. Check
Muchas gracias a nuestros estudiantes y amigos,
Joaquin
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great schools
Why Learn a Second Language?
Ask an American adult about whether she speaks a language other than English, and you’re likely to get an answer something like this: “I took French in school, but I can’t speak it.”
That’s no longer an acceptable response. Not to government leaders worried about the lack of Chinese or Arabic speakers in a post-9/11 world. Not to business leaders concerned about America’s ability to compete in the global marketplace. And not to the parents and students who understand the competitive advantage that knowledge of another language and culture provides.
The 5 C’s
In the 1990s, a coalition of national language organizations developed voluntary national standards for instruction in a second language. These standardsreflect best practices, rather than the reality of language education in most schools and are meant to be used in conjunction with a state’s content standards. They’re organized around 5 goals:
- Communication. This is at the heart of language study, whether it is face to face, in writing or across the centuries through literature.
- Cultures. Students can’t master a language without mastering the cultural contexts in which it is used.
- Connections. Learning languages provides connections to bodies of knowledge that are otherwise not available.
- Comparisons. Comparing and contrasting two languages helps students develop insight into the nature of language and culture, and realize there are multiple ways to view the world.
- Communities. These elements enable students to use the language beyond the school setting.
This pressure to teach students to communicate in a second language has drastically changed methods of instruction in the best language programs.
“What a lot of Americans remember is language as an academic pursuit,” says Marty Abbott, director of education for the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages. “They learned a lot about a language, how to conjugate every irregular verb. Today, the emphasis is on developing students’ communications skills – what they can do with a language. That’s a radical departure.”
But lots of students still aren’t getting this kind of language instruction. In most states, language class is an elective not required for graduation. Language teachers are in short supply nationwide. Language programs are in continual peril of being cut in financially strapped districts concerned about students’ test scores in reading, math or science – the subjects required to be tested under the No Child Left Behind law.
“It’s still seen as an extra,” says veteran teacher Michele Stemler, who teaches Spanish in Portland, Ore.
Parents have a key role to play in advocating for expanded language programs, pressing for better instruction and supporting their children’s efforts to learn a language, language educators say.
How Language Programs Have Changed
Historically, language classes were taken only by college-bound students, and many took the minimum of two years that colleges required. They learned to conjugate verbs in Spanish, French or German, and most graduated from high school with just enough knowledge to pass written tests but not enough to carry on a conversation.
That is starting to change, as the need for fluency in more languages has increased, as technology has made more tools available to teach them and as researchers gain new insights into how children learn.
“We’re talking now about what is it we really want our students to do,” says Paula Patrick, foreign language coordinator for the Fairfax County, Va., public schools. “It’s no longer a check-off to college admission. It’s a tool for communication.”
“We have to think completely differently,” she says. “It’s proficiency, rather than just ‘seat time.’”
Who Should Take Language Classes?
Students with below-average test scores have often been excluded from language study. But research about the way language is learned contradicts that view.
Michael Bacon coordinates language immersion programs for public schools in Portland, Ore. Portland has a nationally recognized program in Japanese, as well as programs in Spanish and Chinese, with one beginning in the fall in Russian.
“Learning a second language should be for all children,” he says. “There is an assumption that it’s only the CEO or businessman who flies around the world needs it.”
“There is a well-documented cognitive benefit for learning a second language,” he says. “It’s not just about language. It’s about making a person a better thinker.”
Language skills are useful to people who never leave home. Police officers, teachers, nurses, business owners and many others will find language skills useful, whether they want to sell products overseas or work in U.S. communities that are increasingly multiethnic.
Research supports the practices of many European nations: Children learn a second language more easily when they are young. As a result, language immersion programs have increased in elementary schools. In these classes, children learn the content of subjects such as math or science in the second language.
But that doesn’t mean it’s too late for older kids to benefit from language instruction.
Learning a second language has been correlated with improved reading ability in sixth-graders, to improved scores on the ACT and SAT, and academic success in college for high school students.
Students who take classical languages, like Latin and Greek, benefit, too. Rachel Gordon, a sophomore at Barnard College, started taking Latin as a high school freshman after taking Spanish in middle school.
Gordon says she took Latin because she heard it was one of the best courses offered at her high school, Berkeley High School in California.
“It actually was helpful to me on the SATs,” Gordon says. “If I didn’t know the words, I could find the root. We learned Greek and Roman history, and that’s the basis of Western civilization.”
Gordon says this knowledge has been helpful in college. “In philosophy, architecture, the myths – it just always pops up. It’s not like you can use Latin when you go to the drug store. But I get a lot of references that other people don’t.”
Students With Learning Difficulties
Learning a second language can be quite difficult for students with some language disabilities.
American Sign Language, which is taught at many community colleges, is a visual, rather than written language that may be a good option. It’s increasingly become accepted for high school graduation and college admission requirements, but it’s important to check with your child’s counselor to find out if he’ll get credit for it.
Students with strong listening and speaking skills may find that Spanish with its predictable sound system is an option.
Stronger readers may find that Latin helps build English vocabulary and doesn’t require as much verbal communication. For more information about language learning and learning disabilities, check LDOnline.
What Colleges Require
Many colleges require two years of a second language. But as the College Board notes, taking more language shows that a student is willing to go beyond the basics so they may prefer more. Check with your child’s counselor and the colleges he is interested in for more information.
If your student is interested in studying abroad while in college, he should research these programs as part of his college search. But the good news is that most colleges allow students to participate in other institutions’ study abroad programs, so most students enjoy a wide variety of options for foreign study.
How to Evaluate a Language Class
A visitor to a high-quality language class is likely to see students working in pairs or small groups, using the target language. They might be asked to take turns composing a phone message they would leave if they were going to be late to meet a Spanish friend. Or they may be discussing an article they read on a Spanish newspaper’s Web site. The point is to give kids a lot of time speaking the language and using it for real-life purposes. The communication is more student-directed with lessons drawn from the Internet or real-life experience. The teacher speaks very little English in class.
Veteran teacher Stemler asks students to make up skits to illustrate knowledge of the parts of the body, uses puppets in warm-up exercises to get students talking, teaches a rap to remember the months of the year and asks her more advanced students to interview native Spanish-speaking students at the school. Her most advanced students do day care for Spanish-speaking so they can attend meetings at the local middle school.
“Students are given a lot of speaking time,” she says. “That means I have a lot less control of accuracy. It’s not about perfection, but can you say something comprehensible? I correct, but I correct by repeating back in the correct form.”
That doesn’t mean grammar gets left behind. Says Bacon: “Grammar is embedded within the lessons, rather than saying we’re going to conjugate Spanish verbs.”
Students no longer memorize artificial dialogues that come from a textbook but use the target language to learn lessons taken from real life.
For example, many nations use the 24-hour clock to tell time, rather than the 12-hour clock commonly used in the United States. Incorporating this into a discussion about telling time gives students cultural information, as well as speaking practice.
Students’ oral and written skills are regularly tested, but the tests aren’t the fill-in-the-blank type. That’s like having a piano teacher ask a child to play one note of a song, says Patrick. Better to ask students to talk or write about a real situation or a character in a story, educators say.
Students learn a second language best through context, research has shown. Seeing posters, newspapers or magazines in the second language; talking about the food; and listening to the music of a particular culture gives them that context. Video clips of native speakers can familiarize students with the gestures and other nonverbal communication clues commonly used in a particular culture.
Resources Beyond the Classroom
It takes a creative teacher to break through teen-age inhibitions, particularly for students who are getting their first experience trying out a new language.
“Think about how young kids learn,” Patrick says. “They love to babble and try out new things. When you’re an adolescent, you don’t get to babble or you sound silly. They don’t want to sound silly.”
Fortunately, there is a wealth of resources on the Web to help teachers and engage students, from anime (animation) and manga (comics) to teach Japanese to free daily podcasts from sites like www.chinesepod.com that students can use at school or at home.
Tom Welch is a former French teacher – and Kentucky Teacher of the Year – school principal and “director of seeding innovation” for the state’s Department of Education. Currently a consultant, he sees himself as a revolutionary who wants to redesign the learning process. He says teachers have to be willing to expand their horizons, to capitalize on the enthusiasm of the kids. And parents may need to push them to do so.
“Folks need to remember that it’s 2007,” says Tom Welch. “The Internet is an unbelievable resource. It’s not used much except to support a traditional classroom approach. The teacher needs to focus on learning a language for the students’ purpose, not the teacher’s purpose.”
“If you’re studying Mandarin and need help in biology, we have lots of ways of finding a tutor in China,” he says. “And you know what? It’s exactly 12 hours’ difference between where I’m sitting and China. If you want to work at 12 p.m. or 12 a.m., we can do that.”
“I see the teacher’s responsibility as being a ‘learning broker’ roping in as many people from around the world into that effort that I can find.”
Web safety is certainly an issue, Welch says, but he argues that it’s up to schools to teach responsible use of the Web not try to block it out of classrooms.
The Bottom Line
Still not sure how to tell if your child is really learning to communicate in his language class? Patrick recommends you visit the classroom and try this:
“Watch a child with a stopwatch,” she says. “In 50 minutes, how much did the child get to say? Ten seconds of speaking a day isn’t enough.”
Challenges Language Programs Face
The College Board started offering AP classes in Mandarin and the federal government is offering grants to increase the study of critical languages. Portland schools and the University of Oregon, for example, are developing the nation’s first Chinese language immersion program from kindergarten through college. But other districts are eliminating language programs to boost funding for subjects targeted by high-stakes tests.
It’s difficult to build and maintain language programs without grants and the strong commitment of school officials, parents and community leaders. There’s also a shortage of teachers, even in the languages most commonly spoken in the United States.
“Yes, a lot of people know Spanish,” Bacon says. “But we need highly qualified teachers who can teach to standards.”
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Fall Spanish Program at the Community House, Birmingham, MI
Conversational Spanish
An introduction to the Spanish language through practical, real life conversations. Lessons will be taught through speaking, listening, reading and writing. Text: “Easy Spanish Step by Step” by Barbara Bregstein.
Tuesday, September 8 to November 3. No class October 13. From 7 pm to 8:30 pm.
8 sessions $138
REGISTER BY PHONE 248.644.5832
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mango languages at baldwin public library
If you have access to BPL, check this language training online from home and for free.
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