MURFREESBORO — What
better way to spend a few weeks this summer than learning a new language and
expanding the world around you?
Monday, July 1, is the deadline to sign up for the July
session of the 2013 Summer Language Institute at MTSU’s Center for Accelerated
Language Acquisition.
The university’s 11th annual institute, which began earlier
this month, is offering weeklong courses in multiple languages, including
Arabic, Chinese and Latin classes along with Spanish and French instruction.
Beginning Arabic, French and Spanish will be offered July
15-19 along with an introductory language course in Chinese. Advanced courses
in all four are set July 22-26. Classes are open to anyone 13 and older.
Training also will be offered in methodology, which helps
teachers of young students learning English as a foreign or second language.
The classes require only a week for beginners to grasp and
use a new vocabulary, thanks to unique methods designed to teach students a
second language the same way they learned their first — by relating vocabulary
to movement and learning grammar through storytelling.
“We take about 150 words that students can touch, see, act
out,” said Dr. Shelley Thomas, founder of the institute. Examples include
numbers, colors, foods, clothing and places inside a home. “We don’t use any
words that they don’t actually experience in class.”
Nashville resident Winston Joffrion, a speech language
pathologist, took Spanish classes in college years ago, but didn’t become
fluent and decided a refresher was in order.
“Spanish is becoming more and more important in the U.S.,”
said Joffrion during a class break this week inside the Paul W. Martin Sr. Honors
Building. “I enjoy languages and wanted to increase my fluency. I feel like I
have sort of a Swiss cheese effect in Spanish … I can’t use it very well.
“That’s why I like this class so much, because you’re
speaking the whole time and it has more of a natural feel to it.”
At the end of four days of classes, students should be able
to read the first chapter of a novel written in their new language and are
given online resources to continue practicing, Thomas said.
The morning language classes are set from 9 a.m. to 12:30
p.m., and afternoon teachers’ workshops will be held from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. All
will be held in Room 106 of the Honors Building.
The methodology course can be taken for graduate credit for
those who register through MTSU. Those not needing university credit can
register through the Center for Accelerated Language Acquisition for a much
lower price; the first class is $300, and additional courses are $150 each.
Participants may register at the center’s website at www.acceleratedacquisition.com. You also can watch video clips and read reviews of past classes at the site, and Thomas offers some background on the classes in a brief video at http://youtu.be/-js5kDleuWk.
No comments:
Post a Comment