Foreign Language Learning Forum

May 29, 2008

Cell Phone Helps Language Learning Recovery

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — riazhaq @ 5:30 pm

UC-Santa Cruz scientists, led by computer engineer Sri Kurniawan and psychologist Dominic Massaro, plan to use cell phones to deliver low-cost speech therapy to stroke victims in Malaysia. Massaro’s lab has developed a computer program featuring an animated language tutor. The tutor’s “talking head” meticulously demonstrates new words. One feature even lets users peel back the tutor’s skin so they can watch how the tongue hits the palate to form sounds. The tutor, nicknamed Baldi, already has helped autistic and hearing-impaired children learn to talk.

Kurniawan’s team is adapting Baldi to a cell phone screen, and the scientists are programming it to speak Malay. Cell phone networks reach about twice as much of Malaysia as Internet access. The phones will need fairly large screens and the ability to play videos, but most cell phones already have those features, Kurniawan said.

Source: San Jose Mercury News

May 24, 2008

Children Learning Foreign Languages

Azure Warrenfeltz is fluent in Japanese and Spanish. She also can understand bits of French, German, Arabic and Italian, and she soon hopes to learn some Mandarin Chinese.

Azure is 4 years old.

“I’m smarter than my father. He can only speak one language. Muchas gracias!” she says playfully.

In today’s globalized world, Azure is one of many young American children whose parents insist her education include foreign languages.

“It’s such a global environment now, you never know what you might need,” says Azure’s mother, Julie Warrenfeltz, who started schooling her daughter in foreign languages when she was 6 weeks old. “I wanted to make sure she had every tool and every benefit at her disposal.

“She couldn’t hold a violin, she couldn’t stand upright, but I wanted her to do something,” says Warrenfeltz, owner of Petite Ambassadors Language School in Jacksonville.

Not only is learning a foreign language easier for children than it is for adults, but children who are exposed to other languages also do better in school, score higher on standardized tests, are better problem solvers and are more open to diversity, says François Thibaut, who runs The Language Workshop for Children, which has nine schools around the East Coast. Thibaut is a pioneer in foreign languages for babies and children and is the author of Professor Toto, an award-winning home-based foreign-language curriculum for parents and children.

“When I started 35 years ago, very few people believed in this idea. Teaching kids who are 6 months seemed crazy,” Thibaut says.

Today, Thibaut says, his schools can’t keep up with the demand for classes; about 1,000 students are enrolled and even more are on waiting lists. The schools even get requests from expectant parents wanting to reserve a space for when their child is born, he says.

The schools serve students 6 months to 9 years old and offer courses in Spanish, French, Italian and, new this year, Chinese, which Thibaut says is becoming the most requested class.

“More and more people are aware of the importance of teaching another language to their child because we are in a global world,” he says.

Language study for children is based on immersion, he says. Kids sing songs and play games to help develop language comprehension skills. “This is a natural way of learning language.”

When children start learning languages at birth, they have the capacity to learn many languages at once without getting confused — because, as the brain develops, so too does the ability to separate one language from another.

Warrenfeltz says that sometimes when Azure was younger, she would mix up vocabulary words, using the shortest word no matter what the language. But by age 3, everything fell into place.

The word for “elephant” was too long and hard to pronounce in English, so at age 2, Azure would just say Zo, the Japanese word for the animal.

“It was clear to her what the objects were, but it was just so hard to enunciate, she would just pick the words that were the easiest,” Warrenfeltz says.

Warrenfeltz’s school takes students as young as 6 weeks in a course called Baby Boot Camp, which combines foreign language with strength training, balance and coordination exercises. She, too, has seen the demand for language classes grow in the past few years.

One of the reasons Anna Lynn and Stephan Oppenheimer of New York enrolled their daughter, Mireille, in Thibaut’s language classes when she was 6 months old was to help her understand diversity and learn how to see things from different perspectives. They also hoped the language lessons would help their daughter appreciate her heritage; her grandmother is French.

“We both believe that could be a great gift to give our child,” Anna Lynn says. “As Americans, we don’t typically study other languages, and that can make us narrower in our perspective.”

Warrenfeltz’s two younger children, Indigo, 2, and Raymond, 1, also are learning foreign languages.

“It’s amazing; you never know what is going to come out of their mouths,” she says. “You’ll see them walking down the road counting in Chinese or pointing to things in Arabic.

“I would hope that they would become ambassadors to Japan and all those wonderful things,” but whatever Azure decides to do, languages will be an asset, Warrenfeltz says. “I’m just providing an opportunity so they can do whatever they want, wherever they want. They won’t be bound by language.”

Source: USA Today

May 15, 2008

Modern Language Learning Technology

Filed under: Software, Tools & Technology, Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — riazhaq @ 11:06 pm

Information Technology, Digital Media, the Internet, Cyberspace, e-Learning Software, Online Learning

Anyone who has access to any form of media has heard some or all of the above terms. No matter where we turn, we are barraged with evidence that digital technology is affecting virtually every aspect of our lives. For example, 1994 saw a computer market that surpassed television sales for the first time ever. Even television is on its way to become totally digital by 2009 with the latest HDTV technology. Not even the wildest dreamers of the early days of the computer industry would have predicted that such a possibility could become reality so rapidly. It is clear that most sectors of our society have experienced phenomenal growth in the implementation of digital technologies.

A lot of content including books, magazines, speeches, educational materials, music and movies are being digitized or created in digital form for distribution via CDs, DVDs and the Internet. Apple’s iTunes and Google’s YouTube have become household words.

Language Learning is no exception. New speech recognition technology, intuitive sequential learning, and real-life simulations provide the right context to help you learn and understand foreign languages effectively. With modern language learning software, you can learn to read a foreign language, write it and speak it quickly! Technology allows you to experience virtual immersion and that helps accelerate learning.

Advanced language learning software on the market has rich and varied content that includes hundreds of hours of learning and dozens of types of activities. It covers all the skills to learn a language: reading and writing, listening and speaking, grammar, vocabulary, and culture. The latest software also features cutting-edge speech recognition technology that allows you to assess your pronunciation and to improve it through detailed graphs and 3D animation.

The success of technology application to language learning is evident from the fact that it is being embraced by dozens of governments, hundreds of big multi-national corporations, thousands of educational institutions and millions of individual users around the world. The technology allows you learn languages at your own pace and it is available both online and off-line.

The advances in language learning are welcome news for more world trade and commerce. It is also helpful in creating a friendly, peaceful, globalized and secure world.

May 14, 2008

Why Learn A Foreign Language?

Why learn a foreign language? After all, English is almost a lingua franca. Well, there’s a grain of truth in this argument, but the reality is more complex.  There are many powerful reasons for learning a foreign language:

Personal Development
By learning a foreign language, you gain new horizons, but at the same time you you develop a sense of your own identity, and therefore also your self-confidence. A foreign language can contribute to a stronger personality.

Cultural Reasons
It is a fundamental truth that language is the most important characteristic of a culture. A foreign language gives you access to another culture. It gives you the ability to communicate and to exchange views with people all over the world that you would otherwise not have the chance to know. Without the knowledge of the language of a foreign culture, a lot is lost in translation.

Educational Reasons
The Renaissance in Europe had its roots in early Greek society where Socrates and Plato developed the concepts of Logic and Reason. If the early Greek works had not been translated into Arabic, Latin, English and other languages, the Renaissance would not have rescued us from the Dark Ages. Learning a foreign language opens up a whole new dimension. It has a positive effect on intellectual growth and it enriches and enhances mental development. Learning a foreign language is especially effective at an early age. It greatly benefits reading and writing in one’s own language; there’s evidence that, like musical education, it contributes significantly to the development of individual intelligence.

Economic Reasons
In a globalized world characterized by international links and intercultural connections, linguistic skills are crucial for business, employment and career. The knowledge of foreign languages increases job opportunities in many careers where knowing another language is a real asset.

Modern language learning techniques have been revolutionized by the use of software and computer technology. It is now possible to achieve virtual immersion and learn new languages more completely rapidly. There are many tools and software programs available to do just that.

Source: Rosetta Stone

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