HOME
Sponsorship
School Store
NET PRIMARY
Internet Lessons
PRIMARY SCHOOL
Main
Student's Corner
Teacher's Lounge
Parent's Corner
DEPARTMENTS
Art
English
Electives
ESL
Foreign Languages
Mathematics
Physical Education
ROTC
Science
Social Studies
Special Education
Teacher's Lounge
Parent's Corner 
RESOURCES
Colleges
Distance Learning
Expert Sites
Education Sites
Fun Room
Guidance
Homework Helpers
Home School
Lesson Plans
Library
Non-profits
Commercial Sites
Security 
Skills Center
School Evaluations
Tutors
Worksheets
Site problem 
Tell a Friend 
Submit a Link
Contact Us
Add To Favorites

Search this site or the web powered by FreeFind

Site search
Web search

Some graphics reproduced using Print Shop Deluxe, Broderbund Software, Inc. All Rights Reserved used by permission.
The Classroom does not claim all descriptions of sites to be their own words.

The Classroom  makes no promises or representations about the gadgets on this site as to quality. content or  performance

 
The Classroom
“Those who know nothing of foreign languages know nothing of their own.”
 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
High School Foreign Languages
How To Teach.......

Teacher Resources"A foreign language is a language not spoken by the people of a certain place. It is also a language not spoken in the native country of the person referred to, i.e. an English speaker living in Japan can say that Japanese is a foreign language to him or her. These two characterizations do not exhaust the possible definitions, however, and the label is occasionally applied in ways that are variously misleading or factually inaccurate...... Most schools around the world teach at least one foreign language. By 1998 nearly all students in Europe studied at least one foreign language as part of their compulsory education, the only exception being Ireland, where primary and secondary schoolchildren learn both Irish and English, but neither is considered a foreign language (although Irish pupils do study a third European language).... In some countries, learners have lessons taken entirely in a foreign language: for example, more than half of European countries with a minority/regional language community use partial immersion to teach both the minority and the state language....Some children learn more than one language from birth or from a very young age: they are bilingual or multilingual. These children can be said to have two or more mother tongues: neither language is foreign to that child, even if one language is a foreign language for the vast majority of people in the child's birth country." Source: Wikipedia

 


Classroom Foreign Language
 Teaching


Foreign Language Learning Series Reviews


Learning
Foreign Language

 

Back To Top!