...and German too!
THIS software cassette contains two programs. The first illustrates
and gives the text of nine sentences or phrases and requires the
learner to reproduce the sentences exactly.
The program causes the sentence to be shown on screen and requires
him to reproduce the whole sentence. Praise is given when the
sentence is correct. No score is kept.
The above bald description might indicate at first sight an expensive
way of getting children to learn a few sentences. but this does
not take into account the fact that the graphics, though simple,
are extremely motivating and totally relevant to the sentences.
Many are animated, including a little man who enters a hank,
and a Little man who gets into a car. Four colours are used and
the drawings are created on screen out of basic shapes - rectangle,
triangle, circle - and this reveals the second eve of the programming.
The manufacturers supply details for changing the text and for
changing the graphics. The program is, in itself. a rich source
of graphics procedures and means of tying text with pictures,
and could prove of interest to the language teacher interested
in programming or a colleague who could help him.
It is this possibility of extension that makes the program useful.
Here. For reference, is a translation of the nine phrases used.
I give this because a "French Sentence Practice" cassette is also
available, which would appear to have the same graphics.
The sentences are: 1, I'm shopping; 2, The handbag; 3, He has
spent money; 4, He gets into the car; 5, He has to wait 30 minutes;
6, The big man who wanted to be small; 7, I ask for money; 8,
Twenty marks (100 Fr in the French version); 9, He has gone into
the bank.
The sentences come from the same shopping/town situation but
have mixed tenses and persons - I suppose they represent important
constructions, but the reason for the selection is not immediately
clear though the same phrases occur in the second program.
The second program is a cloze type program. The learner is presented
with a 150 word narrative about Mrs Gieselmann shopping (good
"0" Level and CSF material) in the imperfect tense with 20 blank
spaces to fill in. The learner is helped by being given the next
letter if he fails to guess it after three attempts. A percentage
score is given at the end.
Again, this program is on two levels - the text given and the
fact that instructions are given on how to change the text and
decide which words are to be blanked out. This tape can thus he
considered a general purpose cloze-type program. In short, two
programs with potential - motivating and with good use of graphics.
This review first appeared in the November 1983 issue of Language
Monthly.