Two Steps to Language Mastery
First language learning works equally well in any language but a second language is offered in school under very different conditions.
Therefore, it makes sense to teach broad concepts, helpful attitudes and skills before getting into the specifics of a particular target language.
Esperanto, the world's easiest complete and living language, is the ideal "apprenticeship language" because classroom teachers can learn it completely while they teach.
The fun, interactive program of "Talking to the Whole Wide World" equips them to provide a little instruction and practice every day, which is much more effective than weekly or half-weekly lessons.
Learning Esperanto takes about only 100-200 hours and saves the children a similar amount of time in the learning of their second foreign language.
This gives children confidence, motivation and transferable skills to use whenever they might have a need to learn another language.
Esperanto also provides the broadest intercultural perspective, giving access to the most diverse range of cultural contacts imaginable, in dozens of countries in Asia and every populated continent.
See how Esperanto started here.
Therefore, it makes sense to teach broad concepts, helpful attitudes and skills before getting into the specifics of a particular target language.
Esperanto, the world's easiest complete and living language, is the ideal "apprenticeship language" because classroom teachers can learn it completely while they teach.
The fun, interactive program of "Talking to the Whole Wide World" equips them to provide a little instruction and practice every day, which is much more effective than weekly or half-weekly lessons.
Learning Esperanto takes about only 100-200 hours and saves the children a similar amount of time in the learning of their second foreign language.
This gives children confidence, motivation and transferable skills to use whenever they might have a need to learn another language.
Esperanto also provides the broadest intercultural perspective, giving access to the most diverse range of cultural contacts imaginable, in dozens of countries in Asia and every populated continent.
See how Esperanto started here.
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