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Language Plan - Spanish

  Tags: Study Plan | Spanish
 Language Learning Forum : Questions About Your Target Languages Post Reply
nazehner
Newbie
United States
Joined 4946 days ago

9 posts - 12 votes
Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish

 
 Message 1 of 6
28 March 2012 at 5:02am | IP Logged 
I am intermediate Spanish speaker roughly around a 6 or 7 out of 10. I live in the
Dominican Republic and work as a Peace Corps Volunteer. I would like to be a 9 or a
9.5 by the time I leave, in roughly one year. My plan:

Finish Michel Thomas:

Vocabulary
Advanced Course
Language Builder


Penton Spanish Vocabulary Course

Finish Breaking out of Beginner's Spanish

and Finish all of Platiquemos


What do you think? Where would this probably get me?

Thanks for your advice!
1 person has voted this message useful



Superking
Diglot
Groupie
United States
polyglutwastaken.blo
Joined 6647 days ago

87 posts - 194 votes 
Speaks: English*, Spanish
Studies: Mandarin

 
 Message 2 of 6
29 March 2012 at 3:28pm | IP Logged 
I won't tell you what to do, but if I were in the same situation as you, here is my plan:

Talk to as many Dominicans as possible on a daily basis
Listen closely to their conversations to hone my listening skills

Repeat x100000

Take advantage of being in a Spanish-speaking country; those books will be there when you get back to the US, the people will not.

That's not to say you shouldn't use them at all, they'd be a good supplement to reconcile what you're hearing with what you already know and build upon it. But I'm a 9 out of 10 in Spanish and trust me, it would have happened a lot faster if my immersion had come sooner and been more complete like it can be for you in this situation. The books can only get you so far, and in fact, the immersion will be a really good indicator of where you really are. Five years ago, I THOUGHT I was an 8/9 in Spanish until I had to speak it and realized I was maybe a 6, tops.
7 persons have voted this message useful



iguanamon
Pentaglot
Senior Member
Virgin Islands
Speaks: Ladino
Joined 5266 days ago

2241 posts - 6731 votes 
Speaks: English*, Spanish, Portuguese, Haitian Creole, Creole (French)

 
 Message 3 of 6
29 March 2012 at 3:49pm | IP Logged 
Superking wrote:
Talk to as many Dominicans as possible on a daily basis
Listen closely to their conversations to hone my listening skills

Repeat x100000

Take advantage of being in a Spanish-speaking country; those books will be there when you get back to the US, the people will not.


1,000% agree! The books and study materials are your supplements. Your main resource should be the Dominican people. Instead of listening to Michael Thomas, you should be talking to Miguel and Tomás. That's how the author of "Breaking Out of Beginner's Spanish" learned his Spanish whilst living in Mexico- then, afterwards, he wrote a book about it.

Speak as often as you can whilst you're there. Ask for corrections. Avoid English as much as possible. You're in a great situation for language learning.



Edited by iguanamon on 29 March 2012 at 3:50pm

7 persons have voted this message useful



sam88
Newbie
India
Joined 4621 days ago

1 posts - 1 votes

 
 Message 4 of 6
04 April 2012 at 4:19pm | IP Logged 
Hi,
there are lot of sites that provide the source for learning the new language,they provide the basic,intermediate and advance course for study.
--------------
Debra Fine
1 person has voted this message useful



Merv
Bilingual Diglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5277 days ago

414 posts - 749 votes 
Speaks: English*, Serbo-Croatian*
Studies: Spanish, French

 
 Message 5 of 6
07 April 2012 at 7:35pm | IP Logged 
1.) Talk to a lot of native speakers, especially monolinguals who can't handhold you with English.

2.) Drop the course materials and move onto native literature: magazines, news articles, TV, radio, novels, short
stories, poems, etc. Everything can teach you new syntax, stylistics, and vocabulary. Practice what you read in
written language in an oral context to see if it sounds natural or too formal, and then shift to more colloquial forms
while retaining the formal forms in your reading/writing inventory.

3.) Good luck! 1 year is more than enough time for fluency in Spanish given immersion. It may be enough even for a
language as hard as Chinese, but for Spanish it is certainly more than enough.
4 persons have voted this message useful



luke
Diglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 7209 days ago

3133 posts - 4351 votes 
Speaks: English*, Spanish
Studies: Esperanto, French

 
 Message 6 of 6
08 April 2012 at 12:51am | IP Logged 
I agree with everyone else about taking advantage of your immersion situation. I do think you might get some benefit out of the FSI Basic Spanish course as a supplement. It's available for free at http://fsi-language-courses.org/.


2 persons have voted this message useful



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