Easy Tips to Learn Spanish

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Easy Tips to Learn Spanish

My name is Wayne Cramer My wife and I operate a "non profit" called Andean Aid that provides developmental opportunities to poor children in the Colombian border state of Táchira, Venezuela.

I would certainly recommend RocketSpanish.com to others, in fact I'm doing that right now. This February I'm leading a team of twelve men to build basic block homes for women who are raising their children alone. Most of this men don't speak any Spanish and are asking me about Spanish learning programs.

I tell them to get RocketSpanish.com, why?, because I use it and it's effective. I'm on a continuous quest to achieve fluency in Spanish so I've tried many products and self study programs. All of them have been boring or require a degree of discipline that I just can't manage. Your lessons are interesting and practical, they cover a variety of actual situations that I encounter each time I visit Venezuela, why you even teach me how to argue in Spanish, you just can't beat that. The commute in my car becomes a learning session, the computer games are much better than flashcards and the scoring appeals to those with a competitive nature.

I have many wonderful friends in Venezuela, until now our conversations have been superficial. I can't wait till my next trip to bring this relationships to a new level with my newly acquired skill in speaking Spanish. So if you are looking for a Spanish learning program, get RocketSpanish.com. Quit looking and get learning!

Thanks.

Wayne Cramer
ILLINOIS, U.S.A

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Easy Tips To Learn Spanish 

Learning a foreign language like Spanish has always been considered to be a difficult task, especially by adults who set out to accomplish it. But to tell the truth, it is not as difficult as it is made out to be. THe real question is this: Why does something that seems so natural to us as young children become such an incredibly difficult subject to study in later life? Here are some easy tips to succeed in your studies:

First, ask yourself why you want to study Spanish or any other foreign language. This step is far more important than it might initially sound, but your motives for learning a language, or anything, in fact, play a major role in how well you go about achieving your goal. So, that's the first step: figure out exactly why you want to learn Spanish and focus on the benefits the skill will give you for your particular situation.

Are you interested in studying for professional reasons or for personal ones? Is your goal: career improvement, a desire to travel, or even finding a new romantic partner from a Spanish speaking country? While any of these are valid reasons for wanting to learn Spanish, probably only one of them will be the deciding factor for you.

Second, you need to decide how you are going to study. With the rise of the internet as a great force for learning your old traditional options of taking a class, or hiring a personal tutor have been enhanced by the number of courses you can take with the aid of your computer. Classroom study is definitely not as efficient as hiring a personal tutor, but hiring a tutor is going to cost you a lot. Most times the best option is using your computer; either with the help of CDs, DVDs or an interactive course online. But no matter which you choose you still need to put in a great deal of time studying if you are going to get the best from your studies, and make the experience financially worthwhile.

Hiring a tutor, actually, is probably cost-prohibitive for most people. And is not the only way to learn a language effectively. Once we accept that the language learning process is going to take a lot of personal study anyway, regardless of whether we have a tutor or not, it may be just as efficient, and certainly more cost effective, to opt for a self-study method. One of the major disadvantages involved in choosing this option is the fact that you are going to have to motivate yourself to put in the study hours. This is where your personal motivations in the first step come in. You need a personal reason to use in order to keep up your motivation.

Finally, when you begin to learn, and don't try to bite off more than you can chew. One of the pre-eminent reasons people give up on learning Spanish lies in the fact that they have false expectations of being able to learn the language quickly. They believe, because the results are not always as rapid as they want at first, that they can't succeed and they give up. It just takes some time to learn and process the information you have learned. But the hype and questionable claims made by some language course creators to sell their products are at fault here, not the students.

Start slowly, accept the fact that learning Spanish, just like learning any other new skill will take time and some mental perseverance. A new language is a door to another culture, and the ability to learn one is something that is open to everyone, with the right approach.

Juan Medina grew up in southern California without learning the language of his heritage. He spoke only English as a child but realized as an adult how advantageous it owuld be to be able to speak, read and write Spanish fluently. Juan found that learning Spanish as an adult was much easier than people made it out to be and as a result of his experience publishes http://www.learnbasicspanish.info as a resource site for anyone who wants t learn the beautiful Spanish language. Visit http://www.learnbasicspanish.info for a look at all the great resources to available to learn the Spanish language.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Juan_Medina

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Nice lens gave you 5 stars
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