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What customer say about the Pimsleur
GERMAN audios:
You can *do* this German
thing!
Pimsleur Language Programs products are among the best-selling
audio language courses available. 'Organic learning' seeks to
approximate the conditions in which ordinary language-learning
takes place. The process is almost entirely aural, supplemented
only minimally-or at the student's discretion, not at all-by
reference to reading lessons after each half-hour lesson.
Clearly, Dr. Pimsleur and his disciples-I use the word
advisedly, as a glance at promotional and instructional
materials will demonstrate-have done their pedagogical
homework. Utilizing the spectacular power of the brain for
on-the-hoof language analysis and replication, the Pimsleur
Language Programs lure their listeners into meaning-rich
dialogues, providing only the information required for one to
respond. The closest thing to a grammatical concept that a
student hears is a brief warning that `this is the form used
with feminine words'. Yet with a little effort, the student
intuits her way to the correct and timely use of all that
grammar describes.
This is an extremely productive approach at the level of basic
conversational skills that is the bread and butter of
Pimsleur's products. The course writers have found just the
level at which to challenge the student without
counterproductive frustration. One is encouraged to achieve 80%
control of a unit before moving on. Many students will
accomplish this in most units on the first try. Yet the
approach in these three volumes is never simplistic, reducing
the urge to be somewhere else or engaged in a more advanced
section to the vanishing point.
Pimsleur Language Programs has populated websites with two
highly sellable language-learning concepts: the `principle of
anticipation' and `graduated interval recall'. The former
refers to the interval during which the student is challenged
to retrieve information to which he has been exposed,
occasionally take some small step in the processing of it, and
then utilize that information in a response. PLP has refined
just the right intervals to facilitate prompt but unhurried
responses.
`Graduated interval recall' refers to the time lag between the
initial learning of a language component and its subsequent
reintroduction in a new conversation. Here, too, the Pimsleur
method shows its debt to years of practice and research. By my
lights, they do this perfectly.
Regionally and socially, PLP's German course(s) aim at an
`educated' dialect that will prepare the student to be
conversant throughout Germany, Austria, and Switzerland.
-- David A. Baer, Indianapolis, IN, USA