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Learning a Foreign Language with The Sims
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Tue Jan 04, 2005 09:13 AM
from the no-habla-espaniol dept.
from the no-habla-espaniol dept.
JavaTHut writes "The Journal Language Learning and Technology has a new article describing how The Sims can be modified to teach a foreign language. With this and other efforts at U.S.C. and M.I.T., could simulated immersion within video games become an effective way of acquiring a foreign language? Also of interest in the article are suggestions for using spatialized translation layers in foreign language songs and a Firefox extension for learning foreign vocabulary words."
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Lazy (Score:2, Insightful)
Hold on a minute.... (Score:4, Insightful)
.
To me, this sounds like a way to make it possible for people that don't have regular opportunities to use the language they are trying to learn a new way to get there from here.
The only caveat I can think of is that relative anonymity seems to bring out the a-hole in a lot of us. That is to say, there might be a lot of jerks entering the sim that would try to ruin it for the rest of us just for the amusement of doing so. I guess the sim-world will probably need a cover charge to keep out the riff-raff.
Parent
Re:Hold on a minute.... (Score:2)
It's called reading. Or listening to music as an aid.
I learned english that way when I was a kid. Reading D&D manuals and listening to the radio.
Re:Lazy (Score:3, Interesting)
Two words... (Score:2)
Stupid Simspeak (Score:4, Funny)
Audio narration availible (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.langwidge.com/llt/not_studying.mp3
Sesame Street (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sesame Street (Score:2)
This is actually an interesting idea... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This is actually an interesting idea... (Score:3, Insightful)
I agree. The reason immersion motivates is that you have to communicate and you can't use the language you have. Are there games that are more dependant on actually being able to communicate? Fun games, that is
Re:This is actually an interesting idea... (Score:3, Funny)
Are there games that are more dependant on actually being able to communicate?
What's arabic for "You are in a maze of twisty passages, all alike?"
Re:This is actually an interesting idea... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This is actually an interesting idea... (Score:3, Insightful)
It would really be intriguing to be able to actually hear what the sims are saying and understand it, but I think it'll become boring lis
Grammar? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Grammar? (Score:2)
when I was a kid (Score:5, Interesting)
When they started teaching us English as a second language in primary school, I was way ahead of every other kid, and the English teacher got me to help out the other kids.
Traditional method: (Score:5, Funny)
Learn English from Beatles songs.
Learn French from Asterix comics.
Learn Italian from music scores.
Learn Japanese from Arcade games.
Learn German from pr0n videos.
Parent
Re:Traditional method: (Score:3, Funny)
Shneil. Shneil.
Danke.
Re:Traditional method: (Score:3, Funny)
DU HAST!
Re:when I was a kid (Score:5, Informative)
Pretty much anything aimed not at children is subtitled in the Netherlands.
Its great to have the original audio together with the translation.
Another great way once you know the basics is watching the BBC with teletext page 888 on. (subtitles for the deaf) You also learn some spelling and sometimes its actually clearer than some guy talking with a terrible accent.
Although re-synched can also be great if it is not your own language... I learned to understand german pretty well by watching an our of StarTrek each day.
Jeroen
Parent
Another way to do it... (Score:4, Interesting)
This probably wouldn't work too well with languages with different character sets where you couldn't even begin to guess how to pronounce the words, but English -> Spanish worked quite well.
Re:Another way to do it... (Score:2)
Also works with mobile phones. My phone offers german, english, french, turkish, isizulu (?) and sesotho (???). You should remember how to reach this menu, however, or you should know the code how to reset this setting
Re:Another way to do it... (Score:2)
Re:Another way to do it... (Score:2, Informative)
It could work... (Score:4, Interesting)
But they would have to change the content of the Sims to make it useful. There's only so much I can do in a foreign country when all I can say is "take out the garbage", "Go to work", and "Eat some food". The game play would have to be changed to allow me to actually do something aside from mundane chores over, and over and over again.
In theory, I think this could work. Remember the Speak and Spell from back in the 80's? I had one, and loved playing with it and making it say bad words (when my mom wasn't watching) while I was doing the exercises that came with the thing. Foreign language video games seems a logical progression from the days of old.
Halo 2 in French? (Score:5, Funny)
Children learn English this way now (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Children learn English this way now (Score:5, Interesting)
The 10 and 13 year-olds could also speak German and French. Needless to say I felt like a stupid/ethnocentric American the whole week.
Parent
Re:Children learn English this way now (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Children learn English this way now (Score:4, Insightful)
I told a colleague at work that I was planning on learning French. He ERUPTED at me and told me how useless anything French was... He hates France because they wouldn't help us in Iraq. They wouldn't help because they had a pretty good feeling that there weren't any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and they turned out to be right. Apparently being correct is good reason to hate a country... I don't see the logic but oh well.
Reminds me of the book of Jeremiah in the bible. Jeremiah was a prophet, he told people what was coming, they didn't listen, and when he turned out to be correct, they killed him. I guess people hate the phrase "I told ya so."
Parent
French can be Useful (Score:3, Interesting)
While the number of people speaking French as a primary language aren't really all that huge, I understand that the number of people speaking French as a second language is second only to those speaking English as a second language. If this is true (I've had it quoted at me a few times, but I've never found a cite), I suspect it's a lingering effect from the days when French wa
Re:French can be Useful (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Children learn English this way now (Score:3, Insightful)
Warning: US centric post
Part of the problem is the fact that we teach foreign languages too late in the education cycle -- high school and junior high. If we really want to teach children to be multilingual, we need to start in the elementary years when their minds are more adept at learning language. By the time kids are in high school, this learning advantage is gone, and they have to learn languages the hard way.
Once you learn one other language, it becomes much easier to pick up additional languages
Re:Children learn English this way now (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Children learn English this way now (Score:2)
I like to think that being hooked on these games at such an early age provided a good starting p
Portugese (Score:2)
Re:Portugese (Score:2)
No thanks... (Score:3, Funny)
Rely on computer too much (Score:2, Interesting)
How about some cons? (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't think the Sims could provide a sufficient language portion that would allow anyone to get by. Most Sims events occur within the house, when any foreign language use would be required mostly outside of it in public places, which the Sims wouldn't cover.
In addition to that, the Sims would not really provide any kind of advancement since the progression in the storyline does not imply progression in the complexity of the language. As a result the gamer would dive right into the same language level as he will be playing from that point on. Language is difficult to learn when there is no sense of accomplishment and progression which can't exist in a paceless learning.
Lastly, the Sims is quite an addictive game (speaking from experience) and encouraging that from an educational standpoint is kind of like encouraging smoking because its cool while disregarding its health implications (a slight exageration but you get the point).
Re:How about some cons? (Score:2)
And all of this was to supplement -- not replace -- classroom learning. The Sims was intended to rein
Learning by Tech Immersion (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course I can get around most menus without reading at all, since I knew where everything was by heart. However if I go into Browse or Settings, I have to translate.
Setting my computer's main language to Japanese could be next... but I think that will be a way bigger challenge.
Indicentally, I am also using the Pimsleur course this guy recommends. I'm on level 1 lesson 21, and so far it has been great. My friends' eyes bug out when I start speaking Japanese to them. Now if only I had some Japanese friends to practice on...:P
Justin
Re:Learning by Tech Immersion (Score:2)
Pimsleur is the best!
I studied conversational Russian 5 years ago before making 2 trips to the Former Soviet Union (Moscow-1999, Kiev-2000).
I was by no means fluent, but was able to function for weeks on my own, with the help of a good English/Russian dictionary...
Two problems (Score:2)
Maybe new for Americans (Score:5, Interesting)
While this "concept" might be new to alot of Americans, alot of Europeans, Asians and whoever have used this to aqcuire English and maybe another language.
For instance, every child in Belgium is accostumed to read subtitles with some cartoons. (lately it seems they started dubbing cartoons for the younger children though. I remember being 8 watching He-man or Ji-Joe with subs.) Cause we don't "dub" (I personally find it really annoying in German dubbed movies, it just doesn't feel right.) And think about all the "imported" series, games, movies, and what not. They are all subtitled or even aren't (games and such). So teens overhere have a very good understanding about English (unless they are just into RAP and R&B music :P) cause they pick it up while being entertained.
My German knowledge mostly came from watching German childrens programs, and later German books or even comics as well.
I think it's super to be educated while playing, without ruining the fun of the game; Pick something up while you're entertaining yourself, it's not like you were going to pick up a book and study a language instead. But it seems supercool to go into a foreign country, and notice you actually understand some things and eventually will be able to communicate in a language not your own, as a result of playing a game you like which was going to be "dead time" anyhow.
They could expand this further, beyond just "language".
Re:Maybe new for Americans (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:for the new generation (Score:2, Informative)
> as well? Any recommendations?
Another article in the same Journal deals with that:
http://llt.msu.edu/vol9num1/emerging/default.ht
Re:for the new generation (Score:2, Informative)
Here are some German Language sites from a site I set up for a German class at my university. Most of the sites have other languages also. (Would link to it, but don't want to get slashdotted, so I just copied the code over.)
German Language Web Sites
leo.org [leo.org] German-English dictionary. Just enter a German or English word in the Search Term box. Note the 3 symbols following the word entered:Press the1stfor grammar information, the
Re:for the new generation (Score:3, Informative)