
Look Before You Leap Into a Language
You May Have to Put Your Money
Where Your Mouth Is
These are excerpts from an article by reporter Brandon Mitchener on intensive
and full-immersion foreign language training.
The article appeared in the Wall Street Journal Europe Edition,
Friday-Saturday, June 27-28, 1997.
LESSON ONE: Look at language classes like any other investment. After shopping around for a two-week crash course, David Ecklund, a 47-year-old American sales executive living in Brussels, thought he was lucky to get into a group course that a local school was running for another U.S. multinational. It was cheaper than places out of town and so, says Mr. Ecklund, "I figured I’d stay in Brussels."
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He got what he paid for. Instead of building
the little he had learned of the language at high school, Mr. Ecklund
got an intensive exercise in frustration. "In a classroom environment
with seven to 10 people," he says, "you learn at the pace
of the slowest student." Even worse, he was so put off by the
experience he gave up entirely on learning the language for three
years. |
On his second try, Mr. Ecklund found just
what he was looking for: a full-immersion program at DIALOGUE, that
both helped him with his pronunciation and grammar and adapted itself
to his interests - including vocabulary geared to his logistics
business. Mr. Ecklund is commercial director of Caterpillar Logistics
Services Inc., a unit of Caterpillar Inc. |
The article goes on to describe schools for German, Russian and other languages that offer the same intensive learning experience as DialoguE.
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verantwoordelijk uitgever : Richard van Egdom Fribourg 5 B-6500 Beaumont |
pages on learning Dutch : fast and effective language learning through dialogue Full immersion Dutch language weeks What The Wallstreet Journal wrote about us Private one to one Dutch courses for executives
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