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(Hardcover - Book & CD-ROM)
The fun, easy, and natural way to get kids started in learning Spanish
Young children have an amazing capacity for picking up new languages, and
every parent is a natural-born language teacher. Now Play and Learn Spanish introduces a unique approach to getting kids started in Spanish that is as fun as it is easy.
Instead of drills and boring grammar exercises, you get loads of fun games, activities, and songs that let you seamlessly integrate the Spanish language into your everyday life. From taking a bath to going shopping, making lunch to driving in the car, Play and Learn Spanish turns daily routines into fun learning adventures for you and your child to enjoy together. No need to set aside extra time in your busy schedulewith this program, you learn as you live. And you’ll be amazed at how quickly you see results.
Play and Learn Spanish is packed with lively color illustrations and features:
•Songs, games, and activities that make language learning natural and fun
•Key-word illustrations to help with the retention of important words and phrases
•Whimsical comic strips that put Spanish in a real-world context
•Sidebars with fun cultural information about everyday life in Spanish-speaking countries
•English translations for all activities
•A sixty-minute audio CD containing all of the book's songs, games, and expressions
With Play and Learn Spanish, it won’t be long before you hear your child say he or she wants to give you un beso muy grande de buenas noches (a big good-night kiss).
More Reviews and RecommendationsAna Lomba is the founder and director of Sueños de Colores, an early language learning program for children from birth to seven years old. Marcella Summerville is the founder and director of the Spanish Workshop for Children.
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June 28, 2008: This book does give good examples of conversations in Spanish. The conversations are supposed to be between a mother and her child, but the 'child' is an adult trying to sound like a child. The speaker is from Spain, so her Spanish is different than Latin American Spanish. I tried using this with my Spanish class (grades 1-6), and it didn't really keep their interest. Also, without lots of teacher or parent support, I don't think children would be able to comprehend much of what the narrator is saying or trying to teach. The songs, games, and activities were all integrated into the same tracks, so finding a particular game or song is somewhat difficult. It might be useful with middle or high schoolers.
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January 24, 2007: I brought it last summer, and I haven't stopped using it yet. It covers almost every thing in a child's day. Conversations include getting up, eating meals, hide and go seek, playing pirates, princess, cleaning up, building a snowman...and on and on and on!