Learning Spanish Centre - http://learningspanishcentre.com
How I Learned Spanish
http://learningspanishcentre.com/articles/2/1/How-I-Learned-Spanish-/Page1.html
Neal Walters

 
By Neal Walters
Published on 01/1/2009
 
From Spanish in high school, to college, to a career using Spanish.

After a year of Latin in high school, my parents and I moved to a new town for us, Seminole, Texas - about as far West Texas as you can get, without being in New Mexico.  Since I enjoyed Latin, I signed-up for Spanish, since that was the only language offerred.  We had a great teacher, and I took Spanish my sophomore through senior years.

I talk to people all the time that took a language in high-school, but they still graduate without being able to speak the language.  Often, a person can read and write the language, but cannot teach it.  Our teacher emphasized conversation and actually speaking the language.
 
In high school, I had part time jobs at a fast food place, and as a janitor.  In both of these jobs, I was surrounded by Spanish speaking co-workers; so I picked up some Spanish that I cannot repeat in mixed company.  But in general, it did help enforce the "proper" Spanish that I was learning in school.

At the end of my junior year in high-school, I went on the Spanish Club's trip to Mexico.  Travelling to a Spanish-speaking country is obviously a great way to boost your skills.  I created an audio-scrapbook for the trip, and got 3 hours of transferrable college credit from a junior college.

When I went to college, I took CLEP tests - advanced placement tests for Spanish.  They actually awarded me 14 college credits from my test results.  Wow - that saved me one entire semester in college.

In college, I didn't major in Spanish, but almost got a minor.  If I remember correctly, I had one class in conversational Spanish, and two classes in Spanish literature.  I was also involved with Spanish Clubs and Honor Society on campus.

Then, back in the early 1980s, I tried some French, Portuguese, and Hebrew, using the Pimsleur system.  After trying other courses that didn't work, I was very impressed with how easy Pimsleur was.  I made two trips to Brazil, in which I was able to "convert" my Spanish into Portuguese by learning a few additional words.

Finally, in 1995 I got to live and work in a Spanish-speaking destination, San Juan, Puerto Rico. While I could have used English on the job, I tried when possible to use Spanish, and the co-workers were encouraging. I was there about nine months, and often found myself starting to "think" in Spanish instead of English.  I would have learned even more if I had stayed in someone's home, instead of living by mself.

After studying a few more languages, I have learned what works and what doesn't.  I decided to create my own Spanish online learning community.  We have several native Spanish speakers supporting our forum and creating short lessons.