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Imserba Webstore - Rosetta Stone Version 3: Spanish (Latin America) Level 1,2,3,4 & 5 Set with Audio Companion

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List Price: $699.00
Our Price: $629.10
Your Save: $ 69.90 ( 10% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Rosetta Stone
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: CD-ROM Brand: Rosetta Stone EAN: 9781608292592 Feature: Rosetta Stone teaches you a new language naturally, by getting you to think, live and breathe the language. Format: CD-ROM ISBN: 1608292592 Label: Rosetta Stone Manufacturer: Rosetta Stone Model: 24002 Platform: Windows Vista Publisher: Rosetta Stone Release Date: 2009-05-27 Studio: Rosetta Stone
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Features
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Rosetta Stone teaches you a new language naturally, by getting you to think, live and breathe the language. Innovative solutions get you speaking new words, right from the start. Rosetta Stone moves forward only when you're ready. You drive the pace. You set the schedule. With Rosetta Stone, you'll discover a foundation of key vocabulary that you'll use to build into a whole new language. Audio Companion lets you take the Rosetta Stone experience anywhere: in the car, at the gym, or on-the-go!
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Editorial Reviews:
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Develop command of the language as you master conversational language skills across five levels. Gain the confidence to share your ideas and opinions. Develop conversational skills to plan adventures, care for your health and move abroad. Talk about government, work, movies and citizenship. Discuss family and traditions. And celebrate success.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Good So Far Comment: I am still on the first disc but so far I have learned more with this system than anything else I have tried. Expensive but worth it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: no me gusto Rosetta Stone Comment: Agreed, Rosetta Stone is a waste of time and money. Using the program for about 3 hours a day, 2 weeks into the program and I got a little curious because my spanish friends had no clue what I was attempting to say. I skipped ahead to to last unit and realized that I will never learn in this way because the program doesn't even give you any "I" or "You" reference! How are you going to have a personal conversation with anyone. The verb endings are completely different. I got soooo sick of learning about and speaking of the ninos/ninas, mujeres and hombres. How ridiculous!
I've since opted to get some books from the library and all is going very well. For me, I need to know how to conjugate verbs and be able to make a statement about myself or you. Rosetta Stone does not have that option. Try for one day to only talk about "he, she, or it" and see how far you get. You won't get very far at all. It's impossible. People talk about themselves mostly.
How dissapointing!
Customer Rating:      Summary: learn some spanish, impress your friends! Comment: I rated this program five stars, and that rating is based solely on the quality of the product. Rosetta Stone is really fun, and it's wayyyyyyy more useful than most of the Spanish classes you'll come across. As far as helping you remember words and pronounce them correctly, Rosetta Stone is awesome. I am currently taking a Spanish class at my college, because I figured if I doubled up I'd have the best chance at learning how to speak (and write, ug ug ug) Spanish. The class is a good time, and my professor is a riot, but I must admit that the computer program is more effective. My feeble brain doesn't want to deal with verb tenses and formal and informal usage of words, and all that stuff that makes my attention wander away until I'm gazing out the window and not paying attention at all and writing really long run on sentences that end in ellipses... You see my point. The Stone is also cool because it makes me think of Sesame Street, which makes me feel sort of nostalgic and happy. Clicking on the brightly colored pictures takes me back to simpler times, sigh. And yeah, it is an expensive product, but pay for a college course and a Spanish book and guess what- you end up spending even more money, and maybe you'll get stuck with an unattractive professor who rants, and waves his arms around, and throws pieces of chalk at your head when you are gazing out of the window, and not paying attention. There are cheaper computer programs for learning Spanish, and you guessed it, they totally blow. I ought to know because I wasted upwards of forty-five dollars on such junky products. I would like to know how Rosetta compares to that other popular language program... Pilsner or Plodner or Pimsleur or whatever.
Rosetta Stone is also known for having crappy customer service, and apparently if you try to resell one of their programs they will hunt you down like a dog and there will be a public stoning. Sometimes greed is so shameful that it becomes hilarious. This is the case with Rosetta Stone, and I guess that's too bad, but it gives people a chance to one-up the greedy buggers! Share the product with as many people as possible and then it will be as cheap as free! After all, it seems that many folks are just in a tiff because they can't get any money for a used product. For shame, you are being just as greedy. Give your copy of Rosetta Stone to some poor, sick kid who has always wanted to learn a bit of Spanish but never had the means.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great!!!!!!!!!!!!! Comment: I knew it was expensive but it is great program and it was cheaper here than anywhere else I looked,
Customer Rating:      Summary: Berlitz rehashed - the concept has been disproved Comment: Don't be fooled by this software. The basic concept is the Berlitz method: "Learn a new language the way you learned your first language."
The idea was first proposed by Charles Berlitz more than 100 years ago. I majored in languages in college and spent a year in a Ph.D. program in linguistics. The problem is linguists have proved that fundamental changes occur in a human brain as the result of puberty. Once a person hits around the age of puberty, the human brain loses the ability to learn a new language (fairly well) just by "osmosis" like we learn our native language.
The neuronal paths in the brain become hard-wired to the person's language. That is why full amnesia victims still can speak, read, and understand. It also means that we perceive the world through our language. If your native language is Russian (Latin, etc.) you perceive language as a bunch of grammatical "cases" where you put one ending on a word if it is the subject, a different ending if it is the direct object, different for indirect object, etc. If your native language is English, your brain doesn't perceive language that way. Hearing and repeating sentences won't "rewire" your brain.
Yes, you may learn some conversational sentences useful for tourists. But try reading a newspaper article or writing a short letter. Or try getting directions more difficult than "Go down three blocks and turn left, then go two more blocks." Make a list of 10 things you'll need that aren't "Buy newspaper" or similar and see how far you get in trying to understand the answer.
In language learning, there's no substitute for just plain rote memorization of rules and vocabulary PLUS practice. If there were, universities would be using it.
As far as using this product in coordination with a standard language course, standard courses already have audio practice materials. What the author of the glowing review fails to realize is that no matter WHAT method you use, the more you practice the better you will get. If he was using these materials IN ADDITION TO his class and his classmates were only using the class materials, of course he would advance faster--he's spending more time studying. Regarding being able to write a few sentences in Arabic or Chinese in a short time, big deal. Anyone can learn a few sentences with a little practice. But "a few sentences" is far short of useful knowledge of a language.
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