18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
The
best of its kind, January 25, 2004
First, a brief description of this reviewer. I took two semesters of
elementary Arabic at a university one year ago. I was fortunate to have very
good professors, who went beyond the textbook to teach a lot of stuff that
wouldn't be covered until later (for example, verb conjugations and
negation). However, all this was in modern standard Arabic. This dialect is
used in the Quran and in writing, but generally not in speaking. I was a
little disillusioned of the lack of conversational Arabic in the university
courses available to me. A reviewer of a modern standard textbook wrote on
Amazon that others said he sounded like the Quran or an ancient author.
While I do not know whether it is that extreme, I think it is important to
learn a conversation dialect for speaking with native speakers.
I was serious about learning conversational Arabic, and the Pimsleur
comprehensive courses seem to have a good reputation and methodology, so I
bought the Egyptian Arabic I comprehensive course. I chose Egyptian because
Egypt is the most populous Arabic country, and the Egyptian dialect (each
country or region has a dialect with its own twist on vocabulary) is widely
understood in the Arab world due to the prevalence of Egyptian films.
It certainly made it easier that I had already studied Arabic for two
semesters. I was used to the sounds and some of the basic vocabulary. Note
however that much of the vocabulary is different from modern standard. While
"street" is the same, for instance, "car" and "this" are different. So a
person who has studied modern standard will have an easier time with the
phonetics than the complete beginner, but one is not immune from learning
new vocabulary--and lots of it.
I was afraid that a self-guided, completely audio course would use
repetition as its main weapon, and repetition doesn't work great with me as
my brain just fills up to the brim quickly, leaving me unable to recall
anything quickly. However, Pimsleur uses a totally different methodology.
Instead of a linear process, ("learn these words and their conjugations"),
Pimsleur takes a more random approach. You might learn "you understand" for
a lady in lesson 1 and "you understand" for a man in lesson 3. For each new
word or phrase, especially in the first few lessons, each syllable is
sounded out in reverse order. The Pimsleur program uses anticipation rather
than repetition throughout the course. You are prompted in English to say
something in Arabic, then there is a pause to allow you to answer out loud.
Then the Arabic speakers say it, and your brain can compare the two,
correcting if necessary. At the beginning of each lesson there is a
conversation to listen to, I think to soften up your ears for Arabic. It
also serves as a review to recall previous lessons' vocabulary. For the bulk
of the lesson, the prompt-pause-answer format is used. At the end of some
lessons, one participates in a mock conversation.
Each lesson has both review of previous material and new material in good
measure. The Pimsleur program does not teach grammar rules at all. But it
does teach words, phrases, and then asks you to string them together to make
whole, useful sentences. From these you infer the grammar rules. Instead of
learning rules by wrote, the program lets you build a gradual intuitive
understanding of how the puzzle pieces of nouns, verbs, prepositions,
conjunctions, and phrases fit together in grammatically correct sentences.
The Pimsleur program is based on 15 lesson CD's, each with two 30-minute
lessons. There is an additional CD which, along with a small booklet,
introduces you to Arabic writing.
I have gone through the 30 lessons, and am now in the process of going
through them again. The result is that I have a basic knowledge of Egyptian
Arabic. I find that I can really impress my new Arabic instructor. Just last
class she asked whether I had been to Egypt, which I have not.
I only can think of three negative things to say about this program.
First, there should be a level II course like Pimsleur has with other
languages. Second, due to the random structure of the course, you don't
learn all the verb conjugations. There is virtually no third-person verb
conjugations introduced, for instance, you learn "I go", "you go", but not
"she goes". This is why a level II course is so needed. Third, some people
may be turned off by the price. Clearly the Pimsleur comprehensive programs
are for serious learners. But really one gets what one pays for. I would
encourage those who are interested in this product to shop around on price
comparison sites or on popular auction sites (wink, wink), as shopping
around will yield significant savings.
In conclusion, this was money well-spent. |