French for Children (Book + Audio CD) (Language for Children Series) |  | Author: Catherine Bruzzone Publisher: McGraw-Hill
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $18.66 as of 11/22/2009 06:00 CST details You Save: $11.29 (38%)
New (24) Used (13) from $15.41
Seller: sbd- Rating: 12 reviews Sales Rank: 54143
Media: Audio CD Edition: 2 Reading Level: Ages 4-8 Number Of Items: 3 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 11.3 x 8.7 x 1.7
ISBN: 0071407677 UPC: 639785410867 EAN: 9780071407670 ASIN: 0071407677
Publication Date: February 5, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Already a proven home-study program, the Language for Children series is making noise with this updated, integrated book-plus-audio edition. Along with its charming visuals and lively activities, the series now provides in CD format the stimulating sounds of language to entice preschoolers through primary graders into learning a second language. Cute, catchy songs and the humorous, serial adventures of SuperCat are sure to captivate the imagination and foster language acquisition. Each set in the series contains an 80-page full-color activity book coordinated with two 60-minute CDs as well as a Parent/Instructor CD packed with helpful tips. Together children and parents can master basic language skills, including making introductions, counting from 1 to 20, and describing objects. The perfect package for parents and teachers who want to familiarize three- to nine-year olds with foreign languages and cultures.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 12
Is this French or German? September 14, 2009 S. Sanders (Houston, TX) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I seem to have a newer version than most of the reviewers. I have an activity book and three CDs. However, when I opened the book, the title page says "German for Children". There are German pages interspersed with the French. This was very disappointing because I intended to immediately begin the lessons with my children but have to send it back. I am concerned that all of the guides were printed the same way. Has anyone else experienced this?
Fun songs and children's voices May 12, 2008 Little Tree (PA, USA) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
The songs have catchy melodies so it's easy to learn them and join in. I like the fact that the delivery is fast, imitating native French speakers. Also a plus is that children's voices are used in the conversations which is more fun. Drawbacks are that the songs are imbedded in the middle of the instructional tracks on the CD. It would be better if they had their own designated tracks - because already my kids want to hear the songs but don't want to hear the narrator's explanation and translation.
A fun and effective way to get started April 28, 2008 amanooensis (Flyover Country) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
One of many advantages of this program is that it blends listening/speaking skills with reading/writing skills. For the very youngest child that might be an issue, but I think it's an advantage for kids at the "early reader" level in English (probably age 5-7 and up). It will appeal to older kids, too, although at a certain age they might be better off working at a more rigorous pace than is offered here.
As for the reading part -- sure, words like "monsieur" can be confusing to see in print, since they do not sound the way they look. But that's something you have to get used to sooner or later, if you're going to use the language at all, so why put off learning it? Anyway, for most words that's not an issue. So it is great that the child is getting both parts of the language experience simultaneously.
Some folks believe that it's more important just to get the child accustomed to the spoken language. Whether or not that's really true, it's going to be very hard for most parents unless they are fluent in the new language. This program does not require the parent/teacher to know any more than the child -- and you can learn together for that matter!
For the record, I speak French well enough to know that the text is accurate and that the speakers are mostly native French -- and in fact, speak with a more "natural" cadence than the way we used to learn in school.
I was pleased to see that the "course" is in fact carefully planned to progress logically, and that it is broken down to reasonable 8-12 minute lessons. Working through one unit gives the child a feeling of accomplishment without having to struggle for a long time. It also allows the parent/teacher to replay specific segments for review, without making an individual lesson overly long.
The audio program works interactively with the workbook -- but it is not always clear when the book has material that can read along with the narration, as opposed to those segments that are being done purely by ear. Thankfully, from time to time the narrator refers to specific pages, so you find your place eventually. It's not that big a deal, and the book is generally quite wortwhile as an adjunct to the main lesson content.
A very cute component that some children may like (ours does!) is that there is a silly little cartoon storyline that progresses, three frames at a time, at the end of each unit in the book. Each new episode uses a few new vocabulary words from the latest lesson. We have not completed the course yet, so I don't know whether the story will be all that great, but that's not the point. I can see that after each lesson, our child is enjoying the experience of being able to read a bit of this comic strip, out loud, in French! It's a great confidence builder and adds fun to cap off each lesson.
The program comes with a separate CD with instructions for parents/teachers. It's a bit long to listen to (one could just read a manual!) but the disk also contains songs and other items that are compiled from the lesson disks, into one convenient place.
For parents whose school districts do not offer world languages in the early elementary years, this course is a reasonable way to introduce a younger child to French language (and to some extent, French culture) so that they get at least a little foundation while their minds are still growing. It won't be enough all by itself to replace a year's worth of school-based study, but it provides an easy-to-follow, well-planned lesson structure that can get you started.
It's not Rosetta Stone or the like, but since it has a much more modest price, it's probably worth 5 stars in comparitive terms of bang-for-buck.
OK, but bland. February 9, 2008 J. Beliveau For my kids, the audio part wasn't very engaging. The lady's voice was a bit dull. The information in the program was useful though.
Cute, lots of colors, but... September 10, 2007 Senora Gose (Bryan, Texas) 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
I'm a bilingual language teacher (Spanish) and am attempting to introduce French and German to our own four children (as well as Spanish). We just finished the project Flip Flop French: Ages 3-5: Level 1, so we use that daily, and I'm so pleased with it, but always like to supplement so the children are never bored with language learning.
This is great, but... it doesn't flow too well, and is a bit overwhelming - there is so much information on the page, I like to break it down into two or three days, but the kids reply, "We already did that page." So... it's cute, but not a great "curriculum" really.... just a good add-on, from my perspective.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 12
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