I’m able to teach from beginners to professionals. I work at Rosetta Stone part time and my lesson starts for beginners using pictures to describe simple situations like having a dog or cat. Also, I teach professionals where the content can vary such as the first day of a new job, visiting another country, the medical insurance in your country, having issues in your job with others employees, con...
I’m able to teach from beginners to professionals. I work at Rosetta Stone part time and my lesson starts for beginners using pictures to describe simple situations like having a dog or cat. Also, I teach professionals where the content can vary such as the first day of a new job, visiting another country, the medical insurance in your country, having issues in your job with others employees, conversation with the boss, etc.
Usually, I start the session with questions about the class that the learner will study. For example the class is “Viviendo en Madrid”
Question 1: What do you know about Madrid?
Then, the student will read the lecture about some information about Madrid, after reading, I will ask questions about what he red.
For beginners, it’s different, i start showing them pictures for example a cup of coffee, learners should say the word in Spanish and then I’ll ask them; Do you like coffee? How do you like coffee, then another picture like a Dog; do you have a dog? How is the dog? What color? Big or small.
I think it should have a combination of conversation and grammar to be successful and be able to be fluent but conversation is the most important with real situations of the life day by day.
In conclusion, the immersion is the most important point to learn a language and that only can be achieved talking with a native or be in the country where the target language is spoken.
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