Publisher : |
Anglia Curriculum Library |
Age Group : |
10 - 12 |
Curriculum Area : |
German Language Software |
Year of Publication : |
1998 |
Mac, PC or other : |
PC |
Introducing German is a
colourful package designed around four interactive islands, namely the adventure island,
the musical jungle, the techno island and the info centre.
Users can explore in any order they choose. Five
fish in the sea compliment the themes by providing different games to reinforce the
vocabulary e.g. crossword, jigsaw puzzle, memory, matching.
The games represent the most attractive feature of the package. They are short, interactive and can be played
individually or in pairs. The stories on the
islands are best used with primary pupils who have at least one year of German yet are of
a young
age (9- 1 0).
Overview of
Teaching with this Title |
Listening, reading and speaking
activities are all included although the main emphasis is on listening to spoken German. Vocabulary is based on animals, musical
instruments, food, school, numbers, time and places.
Some grammar is addressed such as prepositions, verbs and sentence construction.
The majority of features in this title would be frustrating for the weaker student with a
poor grasp of German vocabulary because the main character "the frog" gives
lengthy introductions to all activities in quite complex German. It doesn't support the use of the keyboard instead
of the mouse. Icons are generally quite
small. There appears to be no means of
slowing the speech or adjusting levels of difficulty.
The software contains stories in native
German that would be extremely useful to expose the pupils to German storytelling and
promote an opportunity to develop listening and comprehension skills. The teacher could use the story as a means to
provide unknown text to the pupils or the teacher could prepare certain vocabulary key
words in the story and then allow the children to listen to and watch the story unfold.The
pupils played the games section in pairs.
The "story" elements require intervention from the teacher. Key words should be introduced and then the
pupils can play the stories individually.
The short interactive games such as memory, crossword puzzle, jigsaw puzzle, matching etc.
could be played on an individual basis or in pairs. A
barometer displays the scores as each game is completed so motivation can be harnessed
through playful competition. Certain
vocabulary can be learnt quickly however it is limited.
The written word is not adequately associated with the picture therefore the
pupils learn to pronounce and recognise words but don't learn their meaning.
The main islands presented difficulty. They
seem to require teacher intervention. Using
an LCD panel, the storytelling component could be successfully utilised in a whole class
situation. On an individual level, the pupils
could then practise the story recording their voices.
The content is accurate reliable
however the thematic approach is not well structured.The software title does not appear to
be culturally or racially biased although it doesn't actively seek to address such issues
of equality. The characters are animals or
robots. In the case of gender, two male
characters appear; a man and a boy, and almost all the voices are male.
The language presented many difficulties. Unnecessarily
long and difficult sentences are used to introduce the activities and explain the
background or give instructions on how to play the game.
These sentences are not supported by written text although an English help
is available which would be useful to decipher the foreign language.
There are no prompts to guide the procedure e.g. a flashing icon. As a result the pupils were frustrated and found
the voices of the characters irritating and distracting.
The user depends on understanding the more difficult German to play that
section. The language to be learnt in the
activity is then reduced to single nouns and is far more basic that the preceding
introduction.
There appears to be little inherent structure in promoting and guiding different levels of
difficulty and challenge although the games are definitely easier than the material
presented on the islands. In the
storytelling, each line can be heard separately and the user can scroll up or down the
story.
The user has no control over the level of difficulty or the rate of delivery. The complicated introductions cannot be bypassed.
The information is poorly structured to support learning.
The nouns selected are not necessarily the most useful to a beginner and the
themes are not sufficiently developed.
The software does tap a variety of learning modes i.e. visual and aural and incorporates a
good variety of interactivity.
The on-screen help is available at all
times and constitutes the only English being used in the title, but it is not particularly
helpful.
The software relies heavily on aural skills and does not contain any features to make it
readily tailored to individual special needs.
The interface is simple to navigate. Many
icons are large and easy to click.
No record is kept of a pupil's name, their progress or their use of the title. Users cannot bookmark where they've been. Certain scenes can be printed however they hold
little function for language reinforcement, as there is no German text on these scenes.
One's voice can be recorded and played back in the story section. In the grammar parts, the positive and negative
feedback is encouraging. During the game
sections a score is kept and displayed on a barometer, indicating progress.
There is no record keeping or record management system.
The product needs to be manually
installed.
This product launches quickly for classroom use. It
brings you straight to the "main menu" or attractive opening scene.
When the frog is introducing each activity, it is not possible to click on until he is
finished. It responds slowly to the user
clicking on icons. There are possibly too
many icons and some appear redundant in certain scenes, although they are attractive
childfriendly.
To my knowledge there is no network version of this program.
This software was used on one PC.
There was no supporting documentation
with this software title, other than the blurb on the back of the box and the CDROM cover
which explains the main icons and details the installation instructions and minimum system
requirements.
It is very difficult to know what is contained in the software. A list of vocabulary and
topics should be provided, as the content of the package is not self-explanatory from the
pictures or screen.