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ITALY – THE LEANING TOWER OF PIZA

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Here we were, with all of the other tourists … looking at one of the Seven Wonders of the World Today … The Leaning Tower of Pisa.  It is located in a city called Pisa in northern Italy.  The day was sunny with blue, blue skies overhead.  We came by car ourselves, but big tour buses were parked all over the parking lot.  There were crowds of people everywhere.  It was hard to take any pictures without having people we did not even know in our pictures.  One of the favorite shots seemed to be people positioning themselves with their arm out as if they were holding the Tower up by their arm, thus saving the Tower from falling over.  It did seem to lean a lot to the side.

It really does look like it is going to fall over because it is leaning too much to the side.  Engineers have built stilts or poles to keep it from falling.  The Tower of Pisa is a freestanding bell tower of the cathedral of the Italian city of Pisa.  It is located right behind the Cathedral and is the third oldest structure in Pisa’s Cathedral Square.

The Tower is 186.02 feet high on the high side and 183.27 feet high on the low side.  That creates a significant lean.  It really does lean a lot.  The lean has been caused by unstable ground.  The width of the walls at the base is 13.42 feet and at the top is 8.14 feet.  Its estimated weight is 16,000 tons.  The Tower has 296 steps, but the seventh floor has two fewer steps on the north facing staircase making that side 294 steps.  Before restoration work in 1990 and 2001 the tower leaned 5.5 degrees.  But today after the restoration was completed it now leans at 3.99 degrees.  This means that today at the 3.99 degree lean the Tower from a horizontal position leans out 12 feet 10 inches from where it would be if the Tower were perfectly vertical.

There were three steps to the construction of the Tower.  It took 177 years to finish.  The marble campanile began on August 8, 1173 during a prosperous period for the military.  The Tower began to sink as construction progressed to the third floor in 1178.  This was due to unstable subsoil and a flawed design from the beginning construction and so construction was stopped for almost 100 years.  This stoppage was caused by all of the military battles Pisa was involved in with Genoa, Lucca and Florence.  This allowed the subsoil to settle.  The seventh floor was finally completed in 1319.  

There are seven bells in the Tower, one for each note of the musical major scale.  The largest one was installed in 1655.  The bell chamber was finally added in 1372.

To see this wonderful edifice was worth the effort and the trip.  It truly is a Wonder of the World.

Tell us about any Wonders you have seen in this world.

ZERMATT, SWITZERLAND – WHAT A PLACE

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International flights into Switzerland usually arrive at either Geneva or Zurich airports.  Geneva is the second most populous city in Switzerland.  It is also a global city, a financial center, and a worldwide center for diplomacy.  As I looked around I could pick out people from Japan, China, India, Italy, France, Germany and many other countries.  Listening to them speak was a real treat … a melody of languages.  Both of these airports are very convenient to traveling to Zermatt, Switzerland, a gateway to the Matterhorn.  But don’t miss taking a little time to visit the azure blue lakes; Lake Geneva and Lake Lucerne with their castles.  Then it’s on to the Matterhorn, Switzerland’s most famous mountain of 14,692 feet; the mountain that movies have been made about.  It is located in the Penninie Alps on the border of Switzerland and Italy.  In German “matte” means “meadow” and “horn” means “peak.”   It is the tenth highest peak in Switzerland.
There were seven of us, four adults with three children, in our Honda Odyssey making our way towards the Swiss Alps.  The morning was sunny with a few white billowy cumulus clouds making their way lazily across the wide expanse of blue.  The road was very straight most of the time with a few curves intermingled.  Looking out the window, we saw green fields dotted here and there with acres of yellow flowers that looked like sunflowers.   The beauty took my breath away.  It was so picturesque, just like in the travel magazines I had seen.
Off in the distance, I could see mountains rising up from the green plains we had been traveling through.  At last I could see them … the Swiss Alps.  This was the home of Heidi, my favorite childhood novel.  I can still remember some of her adventures.  Her grandfather lived here and cared for her in these wondrous mountains.  The Heidi book is among the best known works of Swiss literature and well worth reading to your children.
As we drove into Zermatt, a beautiful, little tourist town at the foot of the Alps, we parked our car on the outskirts and walked from there.  No cars or big tour buses allowed in the village.  The train stops here and goes no further. This is one of the great ski and climbing centers in the world.  This deep valley is nestled between two steep, sculptured mountains.  The air is crisp and clean with an Alpine flavor.  Summer flowers drape themselves from each building along the way.  Its cobblestone streets and pathways take you back in time to a simpler way of life.  It is beautiful.  It is exhilarating.  It is special to be here; to see this great mountain and walk the cobblestone streets of Zermatt.
The Matterhorn is truly a magnificent mountain.  A dream comes true, just to be here.

JAPANESE RELIEF EFFORT – FREE LANGUAGE COURSE

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Japanese Flag - Free Pimsleur Japanese
 

Japanese Relief - For a limited time, Pimsleur Method will offer free downloads of 8 hours of its Japanese language learning program to support agencies and volunteers helping the millions affected by the devastating earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear crisis in Japan.

By providing these Japanese language learning programs, Pimsleur Method hopes to ease relief and recovery efforts in communities affected by the crisis by giving aid workers an easy way to begin communicating in Japanese. This is especially critical in more remote areas where English is not widely spoken.

Read more about the Free Japanese download….

I LOVE CHINA TOWN

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Have you ever been to Polish Town, Czech Town or Korean Village? 

Sounds strange, doesn’t it.  So why are there so many China Towns around the world?  How about a nice Danish Roll, a French pastry or some Baklava? 

Speaking of Baklava, I can almost taste the thin layers of phyllo dough, with chopped nuts in between those paper thin layers, with a little honey added.  I love Middle Eastern pastries and the Balkan cuisine.  Let’s have some Chocolate Bavarian from the Normandie Café, one of my favorite French pastry shops.   Is it any wonder my weight keeps going up?  If I add “rich buttery flaky dough that Chania Townturns pastries into a sinful delight,” my Danish for breakfast doesn’t help my weight a bit.

Sauerkraut, Danish meatballs, pizza, Thai noodles, Kung Pao chicken, sesame oil chicken wings, stir-fry, bok choy, Moo Goo Gai Pan to name a few more favorite foods that keep me thinking about food.    

Don’t’ you just love to eat?  When I go out for the evening or even for lunch, I seem to choose German, Italian, Chinese, French, Thai, Indian/Hindi, or a Japanese restaurant.  We have any and all kinds to choose from.  We can pick different countries, different foods and all within a few miles from where we live.  I don’t have to go far to feel like I am in a different country clear across the world.

Every restaurant has something special about it.  Different restaurants have interwoven within their walls different foods, colors, languages, customs and some great people. 

Developing their recipes has taken eons of time.  We now experience the best a country had to offer in taste and drink.  It is like having our very own “Sunday Dinner” with them.  They offer us the best they have. 

I have wandered through China Townes across the world from San Francisco to New York and from Singapore to Yokohama.  What an experience: the sites, the smells, the people, the food.   As we walk down a narrow street together in Shanghai we look through the window and start salivating as we see some of the best food we have ever laid our eyes on.  Look at those bright greens, heaps of snow white sticky rice, bowls of steaming soup and those pieces of chicken and beef, browned to perfection.  I can’t   contain myself.  How about you?  Of course we go in … are we stupid?

We would do the same thing, if it had been a Polish Town, Czech Town or a Korean Village.  It is just that most of the time it is a China Town, Italian Village or a Thai restaurants.  Each culture has its culinary delights; we just need to find them.  So let’s just keep looking.   

Lunch time … see you later!

ORDER PLEASE

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The other day at lunch I ran into a friend at McDonalds’s.  As we were waiting in the order line, he said, “I feel like you need to know Spanish just to make an order.”  As I looked at the pretty girl at the cash register she looked like she could be Mexican.  As we got closer, she sounded just like the two of us and I could detect no accent.  She sounded like a plain, old Utahan.    Her English was perfect … according to anyone from Utah.

As I have reflected on the statement of my friend, I realize that I have frequented many fast food businesses that hire a lot of Spanish people, some with heavy Spanish accents.  This also includes hotel, resorts, restaurants and many other service related businesses.  Years ago I read an article about a person who hired a lot of people and he commented that he found his best employees were immigrants.  He said they worked much harder and were more loyal than the people born in the United States.  So when he was looking to hire, his preference was to find someone wanting to work that came from another country.

A few years ago, a man from Mexico worked for me.  He was well educated, loyal, honest, resourceful and a very hard worker.  Whenever I gave him a job he did it fast and he did it well.  I just pointed him in the right direction and let him go at it.  He could do construction work; painting, electrical and you name it.  He could do it all.  As we worked together I found he could even repair my automobile whenever I had a problem.  I found he could do anything and everything I needed done. 

One day I asked him how he had learned to do so many things.  He told me his father owned an auto repair business and he had learned to repair engines and do body work as he was growing up.   Then he went to a University in Mexico City and received a Civil Engineering Degree.  I found he could do almost anything I needed done.  He was an invaluable employee.  It took me about a year to find out who he really was.

The one thing I have not told you is that he spoke hardly any English and I spoke hardly any Spanish.  We made a great team.  We resorted to the use of sign language, pointing, drawing and things like that to communicate and sometimes an interpreter.  I found he could read English if I gave him something written down.  He could follow diagrams but he couldn’t speak the language.  The very sad thing is that I paid him a menial wage and no one would pay him anymore because he could not speak English

Eventually he went back to Mexico feeling he could make a better living.  What a disservice we, as a country, are doing to these immigrants that come to our country looking for the American Dream.  These bright, motivated, industrious people could be valuable assets to us … if only we would require them to learn English so they could be more functional.  We have wonderful ESL language courses that are easy to us and cover many different languages for people coming here to find their American Dream.

How Long Does it Take to Learn a New Language?: Part 3

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The Pimsleur Language Teaching Methodology

As noted earlier these FSI learning rates and achievement levels for easy and hard languages are based on learners being trained with a particular FSI Intensive Language Training Program. It is revealing to compare these results with results based on learners using the Pimsleur Self–instructional Language Comprehensive Programs, which consist of three coordinated levels containing 30 audio lessons in each level. Under the Pimsleur Methodology, learners accomplish one 30–minute lesson each and every day.

The Pimsleur method of language training is based upon the assumption that every natural language contains within itself all of the keys to unlock the code of that language. Therefore Pimsleur introduces the learner to any new language by exposing him to spoken language in use i.e. in actual communication. This practice permits the learner to actually “hear” precisely what he needs to hear in order to identify and to understand who is doing what to whom, when, why, and how. In this type of training the learner gains the most powerful aspect of language, which is to be able to hear statements, to understand the situation, and eventually to respond with his own choices.

In short, he will be using all of the meaning–carrying elements human languages have developed over generations to become the incredible tool it has become! What more does a learner of a language need in order to behave as a normal human being and engage in spoken communication with his language community? Teaching him the rules of grammar in English is not an asset he can afford to waste his time on at this stage of his language learning!

All of this essential learning can happen — and be acquired as language–in–use only if the learner is allowed to concentrate on being “exposed” directly to the target language while it is actually–in–use! This means the adult learner can “do his own thing” and having previously developed his linguistic skills, will acquire gradual control of this new language as he did his mother tongue. It will be as natural as talking! And we have made no mention here of the part that learning to re–apply and re–use the same sort of previously acquired linguistic skills will mean to learners. It will also mean they will learn faster and easier and their success will give them the confidence and assurance they need to stay the course of learning!

The important principle in the development of adult spoken–language communication skills training is that learners progress from a compound linguistic system, in which the items of the second language are added to the native language to form a coordinate system. In this coordinate system the two languages can function independently, as appears to be the case with pure bilinguals.

Concerning language acquisition itself, with the exception of those with severe pathologies, everyone who has acquired his native tongue, can, under appropriate conditions, learn to understand, to speak and communicate effectively in additional languages.

A second language will be acquired by a normal human being if and only if particular, whole instances of the language are modeled for him and if his own particular acts of using the language are selectively reinforced. The critical point is that unless a learner has learned them as language–in–use, he has not learned them as language, and that if he has learned enough such instances, he will be able to understand and to effectively communicate in the foreign language.

In second language learning, instructional procedures have a considerable effect in determining the way in which the two languages coexist psychologically. The objective of spoken proficiency levels — effective communication — depends upon the instructional methodology of the teaching/learning Program.

In the space of each Pimsleur lesson of approximately 30 intensive minutes a day, the adult learner will experience real–language use. As he does this, each individual learner builds his own tapestry of language, whether it be in one, or several additional languages, after the first one. Pimsleur learners know they have the power to use languages in real life!

Pimsleur learner’s who follow the schedule of Pimsleur training, will test out as follows, on the ACTFL as well as the FSI Proficiency Scales. The ACTFL (The American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages) has developed their own official Proficiency Scale as a statement of the general aims and goals for the foreign language teaching profession. ACTFL and the FSI have published equivalencies between the two Scales.

Level I Pimsleur Instruction 30–lessons, after only 15 cumulative hours, you will be at the ACTFL Intermediate–low spoken proficiency, (a FSI –1 rating), able to survive and cope in country; able to ask and answer questions dealing with everyday situations, and as well earn respect and cooperation for your fluency, your pronunciation, and courtesy.

Level II Pimsleur Instruction 30 more lessons, after the second 15 cumulative hours, you will be at the ACTFL Intermediate–mid spoken proficiency, (a FSI –1 rating), able to exchange information about yourself, your family, or associates, and avoid basic cultural errors .

Level III Pimsleur Instruction 30 more Lessons, after the final 15 hours of the Comprehensive Program — for a total of 45 hours of training, you will be at the ACTFL Intermediate–high proficiency, (a FSI –1+ rating), able to participate in casual conversations and conduct everyday transactions with success and pleasure in your achievements.

The use of the ACTFL Proficiency Scale in this publication does not constitute endorsement of any private Enterprise or product by The American Counsel On the Teaching of Foreign Language.

You can see our full line of discounted Pimsleur Method CDs & Downloads at PimsleurMethod.com.

Where in the World Do They Speak Spanish?

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If you speak Spanish, you are not alone.  Spanish is the first language of close to 352 million people and a second language to over 65 million people.

 Spanish is the official language of 22 countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Equatorial Guinea, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Spain, Uruguay, Venezuela, and Western Sahara.

With close to 106 million first-language speakers, Mexico has the largest population of Spanish-speakers in the world. The four next largest populations reside in Colombia (44 million), Spain (43 million), Argentina (39 million) and U.S. (28 million).

Are you ready to learn Spanish?  Visit PimsleurMethod.com to order your Spanish CDs or Downloads at discounted prices.

How Do You Spell Pimsleur?

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How do You Spell Pimsleur?

We do have people spelling it Pimsler, Pimslor, Pimslur and Pimslir. But these spellings are all wrong. The right way to spell Pimsleur is P-I-M-S-L-E-U-R.

We all like to have our names spelled correctly and this is especially true for the internet. Google helps us with spelling when we spell a word incorrectly. It asks us: Did you mean: pimsleur

You get better results on the internet if you spell the word correctly.

Pimsleur Language Courses were developed by Dr. Paul Pimsleur. He taught at the University of California in Los Angles (UCLA), Columbia University, Ohio State University, State University of New York at Albany, and lectured at Ruprecht Karl University of Heidelberg as a Fulbright lecturer. He was instrumental in developing the Pimsleur Language Aptitude Battery (PLAB) which is used to calculate language aptitude by measuring verbal intelligence, auditory ability and motivation. PLAB is used today to determine a person’s language learning aptitude or even a language learning disability among secondary school students.

What does this do for you in learning a language?

The Pimsleur Courses are the best courses available to help you learn to Speak a Language. Many courses teach you endless vocabulary and a lot about a language. But there is none better in teaching you how to Speak a Language.

If your objective is learning to speak in a foreign tongue then you want to use a Pimsleur Course. Many people have tried learning to speak a new language and have failed until they come across a Pimsleur Course.

To see a full list of discounted Pimsleur Method language courses, visit  PimsleurMethod.com.

How Long Does it Take to Learn a New Language? : Part 2

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The FSI (Foreign Service Institute) Rating Scale

Most U.S. government agencies use the FSI Absolute Language Proficiency Ratings to measure a prospective employee’s ability to use a foreign language in his work. Once employed, he periodically undergoes the same type of rating as a basis for promotion. The person to be rated is interviewed by one or more trained testers, who are always native speakers. They converse with him for ten to twenty minutes, probing his command of pronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary. Then they pool their judgments to assign him a rating. The lowest rating is 1, the highest 5, and any rating can be modified by a plus or minus.

Each rating designates a particular degree of mastery of the language for business and social purposes:

  1. Elementary proficiency. The person is able to satisfy routine travel needs and minimum courtesy requirements.
  2. Limited working proficiency. The person is able to satisfy routine social demands and limited work requirements.
  3. Minimum professional proficiency. The person can speak the language with sufficient structural accuracy and vocabulary to participate effectively in most formal and informal conversations on practical, social, and professional topics.
  4. Full professional proficiency. The person uses the language fluently and accurately on all levels normally pertinent to professional needs.
  5. Native or bilingual proficiency. The person has speaking proficiency equivalent to that of an educated native speaker.

How long, one wonders, does it take a person to achieve the minimum 1, and how much longer after that to reach a 2 or a 3?

FSI researchers studied the performance of all their students during a three–year period, noting the ratings they received after various periods of training. Table 1 shows the results for the “easy” languages and for the “hard” languages. Incidentally, the definition of “easy” and “hard” were arrived at by including only Group 1 languages — for the most part the “Romance” languages —under the “easy” languages, while “hard” languages included Groups 2,3, and 4.languages — all other languages — as listed in the second part of the Table below. Whether this is the most valid, or even useful definition of easy and hard to learn languages, depends to a large degree upon whether one feels that language instruction, regardless of learner or teacher preference, must start with each individual learner gradually acquiring an increasing control of the spoken language, before adding written skills, or with the current standard academic approach to avoid language as a spoken skill at first, and work with an eclectic, mixed approach using a written grammar– translation and oral–drill combination, perhaps with a language laboratory, or combinations of film, CD–ROM and/or other equipment. There are advocates on both sides.

“Easy” Languages: (Ratings of FSI students speaking a Group 1 language after specified Periods of training.)

8 weeks (240 hours) 1/1+
16 weeks (480 hours) 2
24 weeks (720 hours) 2+

“Hard” Languages: (Ratings of FSI students speaking a Group 2–4 language after specified Periods of training.)

12 weeks (360 hours) 1/1+
24 weeks (720 hours) 1+ /2
44 weeks (1320 hours) 2/2+ /3

Which Are the “Easy” and “Hard” Languages?

Group 1: French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, Swahili

Group 2: Bulgarian, Burmese, Greek, Hindi, Persian, Urdu

Group 3: Amharic, Cambodian, Czech, Finnish, Hebrew, Hungarian, Lao, Polish, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, Thai, Turkish, Vietnamese

Group 4: Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean

In reality, these time estimates are a little lower than they at first appear; holidays and other lost time reduce them by about 10 percent. Nevertheless, the meaning is clear. If you are a language learner of average ability, and you undertake an “easy” language, it will probably take you about 240 hours to get to the first level of mastery in speaking it, and double that to get to Level 2. If you are slower than average at learning languages, allow 50 percent more time, if faster, 50 percent less.

These figures are based on a particular type of instruction: the FSI intensive course where one studies a language for six hours a day, five days a week, in a class of no more than 10 students, led by an experienced linguist and a well–trained native drillmaster. The school is a language–learning paradise, the students are highly motivated, and optimum results are achieved. Yet these estimates are reasonably valid for people who, like most of us, have no choice but to attend a conventional course that meets forty–five minutes a day or a couple of evenings a week.

Human attention is limited. No one can absorb knowledge steadily for six hours a day, week after week; some of the time in intensive courses is necessarily “wasted” in relaxing, clearing one’s mind, or plain daydreaming. Moreover, things that seem confusing one day sometimes clear up by the next, after they have settled into place in one’s mind. This “incubation” factor favors a non–intensive learning schedule. In short, it is not certain that people who spread their language learning over a longer period necessarily require more total hours than those who concentrate. They may even require fewer.

The overriding message is that anyone can learn a foreign language, but some people are quicker at it than others. Still, language learning is a serious commitment, and if one’s aim is to speak it comfortably (say, 2+ on the FSI scale), this is likely to take the equivalent of six months of full–time study.

If your objective is to master the language fully in speech and writing, then you may have to devote at least a year and a half, most of it spent in the foreign country, to reach this objective. A good plan would be to study the language for three to six months at home, and then go to the foreign country for at least a year, during which time you must speak only the foreign language. At the end of this time, you would understand most people and even television and movies, read almost any written matter without a dictionary, and perhaps write with a modicum of style. Adults who go abroad to live find that after several months of getting adjusted to speaking and understanding in everyday situations, they can then begin to penetrate the language and participate in the life of the country.

Some people are dismayed by time estimates that run to hundreds of hours. They feel that this is more time than they are willing to commit. They should reflect on the fact that one year from today they will be one year older whether they undertake this learning task or not. The only question is, whether on that day, they are going to be well along toward mastering the language they have dreamed of knowing, or whether it will still be only a dream.

Here a free Pimsleur Method lesson at www.PimsleurMethod.com.

How Long Does it Take to Learn a New Language?: Part 1

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The question of how long it takes to learn a language is not asked as frequently as the question, Can I really learn to speak a language? Some people would be very glad if they could say even a few phrases in a foreign language with a passable accent. Others mainly want to read great works of literature. And still others may aspire to speak and write another language as fluently as their mother tongue.

Before travel abroad became common, foreign languages were associated in this country with educated people and immigrants. The former were often interested only in reading and writing a particular language, while the latter could speak their native language, but had little occasion to read or write it after coming to the United States. Some educated people resembled the upper class British gentlemen of the nineteenth century, who typically “knew” French, but were disinclined to imitate the “peculiar” sounds a Frenchman makes when speaking.

In today’s world, many people who study a foreign language chiefly desire to speak it. It is important, therefore, to estimate how well a person can expect to speak a language after studying it for a certain number of hours — and conversely, how many hours it may take him to reach the fluency he has in mind. Several estimates follow on how long it takes to achieve various sorts of mastery, based on FSI data, and personal research.

Visit PimsleurMethod.com to listen to a free lesson.