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Language holidays
‘A Skiing plus city VIENNA
Combine the horsectrawn carsages,
rich chocolate cake and Hapsburg elegance
of Vienna with the slopes at Kitebuhel,
Cactus Languages (01273 687697;
wonwcactuslanguage com) offers wo
‘weeks’ German tuition inthe Austrian
‘capital: 25 lessons per week for £289 and
fortnight's B&B with 3 host family
for £300. Then take train ride into
the Tyrolean mountains for skiing and
snowboarding. Return rail ticket, transfers,
seven night’ B&B threestar guesthouse
accommodation and six-day lift pass is £299,
8 Myths MOUNT oLYMeUS
Pipers Language Centre (0030 42 023 3874:
‘wwe xplperis gr) aters one, two-and
three-week language courses by the ea
{in central Greece atthe foot of Mount
‘Olympus from May to September: Modern
Greek, Ancient Greek history and Greek
mythology are all on offer. You can stay
inahotel ora caravan. The course includes
Shoursa week Greek tutoring traditional
dances, evenings with Greek food and wine,
musical events, optional excursions to
historical and archeological sits of central
‘Greece, and accommodation, from
'$700-8900 per week.
© Wine tasting TUSCANY
‘his course allows the budding talian
speaker fo practise other skillsin the
cultural centre of Tuscany, and all within
the family home. Practical cookery, wine
tasting, art design and/or painting are
all on offer. Cactus Languages offers
stays witha family who will aso be
‘your tutors. One week's standard,
full-board, transfers, excursions and
20 formal lessons cats £729,
tuition tiu'yfn_ lessons
fortnight ‘font two weeks (literally
“fourten nights’)
BBB bed and breakfast (normally ina
home or family hotel)
host family a family youstay with
‘when you are on holiday or on a course
D Culture Vultures ST PETERSBURG
‘While brushing up your Russian,
enjoy the world’s greatest shrine to
selFimprovement. Catherine the Great's
Hermitage, which she filled with the
‘nest works of art available, Cactus
Languages offers a week's course in the
former capital cy of Rusia, including
20 hours of tution, excursions and
Activities, for €168.4 week's halboard
accommodation with a host family staying
in the city’s histori centre costs £180,
E Salsa HAVANA
earn to communicate verbally and
‘through dance inthe salsacrazy Cuban
capita. Cac Languages offers atwo:week
course, including four morning Spanish
Jessons and two afternoon salss lessons per
day, arranged seminars, ours and evenings
out for £427. Two weeks' halEboard with
4 host family costs €336,
F Riviera Affair ST RAPHAEL
With its abundance of sporting and cultural
activities, the Riviera isa great place to
practise your French in the morning and
relaxin the afternoon. This course includes
a busy leisure programme - watersports,
golfing, checking out art, eating barbecues
to fil time after lessons at the France
langue and Culture school in St Raphael.
Tanguage Holidays (00 46 8 350608
‘wwvrfrenchlanguageholidays.com)
offers seven levels of tuition, from kids
‘to language teachers and from three tO
ight hours a day. Prices start at €480
{or two weeks’ morning tuition course
fees, or €800 fora forznights tution
and half-board witha host family,
transfers transport from the aport or
station fo your accommodation and back
‘catavan mobile home pulled by a car
and used for camping.
full-board accommodation including
‘three meals a day (breakfast inch,
dinner)
PHOTOCOPIABLE © OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
G Turtle conservation COSTA RICA
This long-stay course (two months
‘minimum) combines learning Spanish,
\with the conservation of endangered sea
Turtles in Costa Rica: joining coast patrls,
Dbserving, investigating and reporting their
‘behaviour. The trip starts with a month's
Spanish course in coastal Paya Flamingo or
Monteverde jin the cloud forest) to prepare
you for between one and five months"
‘conservation work a either Gandoca or
Manzanillo beach. Cactus Fanguages offers
a four week language course followed by
‘ fourweek placement, eight weeks’ fk
board accommodation with ahost family
and social programme for £1,329,
H Scuba diving TENERIFE
Plunge deep into the Atlantic acean on
this course combining seuba diving with
Spanish, offthe Tenerife coast. In two
‘weeks, you get four hours Spanish
teaching per day, two swimming-pool
jmmersions and three ocean immersions
before the finalday test in the Atlantic
Don Quijote UK (020.8786 808i:
‘wurw.donquijete co.uk) ofer this course,
including insurance and equipment,
for €649. Two weeks half board with
a host family costs an extra €372.
haltboord accommodation including
breakfast and dinner but not lunch
fees the money you pay for lessons ora
course
placement & period of temporary work
‘experience (also called an internship)1,1 reading
1 activating a Tick v the ways you have tried to learn English or another language.
acioxound knoiecde staying in a formal classroom envisonment (at school, university. in a
language school, ei.)
studying by yourself (with books, cassettes, multi-media packs, etc)
hhaving individual lessons with a teacher
going on a course in a country where the language is spoken
oooo
spending time in an envionment (country, social group, workplace) where
the language is spoken and just trying to ‘pick it up”
(1 doing a crash course in one month.
What are the advantages and disadvantages of the ways you have tried?
b Agree on a combination of ways that would provide an excellent environment
for learning a language.
2 understanding Sometimes we read for very specific information and ignore much of the rest of the
specific information text. We usually have an idea ofthe specific words we are looking forsa i's a good
idea to keep these in mind and nat be cistracted by the rest ofthe text. This kind
of reading is often called scanning.
a Read the short descriptions of language holidays. How many different
languages can you study?
b Are these statements about the language holidays TRUE (T) 0: FALSE(F)?
Holiday
‘A These are three-week holidays.
B Trips are not included in the price.
C Teachers come to the house where you are staying. Qa
D This holiday includes lessons on art oO
E This holiday has a varied socal programme oO
F These courses are only for advanced students o
G You study Spanish for two months on this course. Oo
H_ You go diving every day on this holiday. o
3. reading for details 4 Read the adverts and suggest a suitable holiday for the people below.
Sometimes more than one answer is possible,
1 Peter is 52 years old and enjoys city sightseeing. He only hasa week's holiday.
2 Phil and Sabrina are both 34. They would lke a hotiday that offers a mixture
of language, culture and fun, They do not want to stay with a host family
3 Dawnis 26. She would like to get to know plenty of other people and have fun
and keep fit on her language holiday.
4 Zafreen is 22 and is training to be a chef, He'd like to develop his language and
professional skills on his holiday.
5. Emma wants to take a year off between school anid university to learn a
language, travel around and ideally learn some new skills
6 Dick and Jennifer are a couple in their 40s with two children aged 10 and 14.
‘They are hoping to have a family holiday in the summer where they can all
have fun as well as improve their language skills,
b Now recommend a holiday for the people below. Give reasons for your choices.
+ your parents
+ your teacher
+ your bestfriend
+ yourself
6 PHOTOCOPIABLE © OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
= eCpeels)
The best way to learn a language is
to eat, sleep, live and breathe it
4 Istill have bad dreams about my school French exchange.
‘And when I decided in later life that it might actualy be
ite nice to master another language, opted for a clean
breake Spanish.
© Three years of half-finished evening classes later, I could
orderin restaurant and ask directions, but my
conversational sills were limited to asking everybody
how many brothers and sisters they had.
‘The only true way to master a language isto live and
10 breathe it for aperiod of time, but one little word always
stopped me: homestay. Then I saw that tour operator
Journey Latin America had started offering Spanish
«courses in Peru. The opportunity to realise two long-held
ambitions in one holiday to improve my Spanish and to
15 see Machu Picchu — proved irresistible.
My misgivings evaporate the moment I am met by my
‘surrogate’ family the Rojas, at Cusco airport. They greet
sme warmly, like an old friend. Carlos is an optician and.
Carmucha owns restaurant, and they live ina
2 comfortable house right in the centre of town. They have
four children, ranging in age from 18 to nine years old.
‘Onarrival at the house I'm given coca tea to counteract
the effects of Cusco’ high altitude and shown to my
bedroom. Garmucha gives me a set of keys and the
2% youngest child, Robert, solemnly ends me his Mickey
Monse keyring to use forthe week.
Tam whisked off to family friend’s birthday party,
where I understand no one and nothing apart from the bit
‘where they sing Happy Biethday. By the end of the
38 evening my face aches from holding an expression of
polite, but uncomprehending interest for six hours, and 1
fall into bed wondering what ve let myself infor.
The following morning, [am woken by Carmuchs, who
snnounces that she is going to take me to schocl. Not only
3 does she walk meto school, but she also insists on waiting
‘outside the classroom as sit my placement test. feel 13
years old again,
‘While waiting to be assigned a teacher, I get to know
‘my new school chums, We are from England, America,
4 New Zealand, Holland, and Sweden. We are aged between
19 and 48, and spending an average of two weeks 10a
Immerses involves deeply surrounds tally
Irresistible something you can't refuse
misgivings mis grnz doubts feelings of uncertainty
«Joanne O'Connor immerses herself in the language in Cusco
Surrogate ‘saragat something that is used in place of something else
‘month studying Spanish here before spending some time
travelling around,
The director ofthe Academia Latinosmericana de
Espaftol gives us an introductory briefing. From flights
‘0 Inca Teal tours, to extra blankets at aight, it seems
there isnothing the school cannot fx fr us.
‘We ate assigned a teacher forthe week and, asit is not
yet high season, we ae all impressed / alarmed to learn
that tuition wil be one-to-one, though even in high
season the maximum class size swells to only four pupils.
As the week unfolds, Islip into a routine, Four hours
‘of classes in the morning (broken up by pop songs, video
clips, a coffee break, and lots of conversational practice),
55 back home fora huge lunch with the family, and
afternoons free for sightseeing or to oia in on the
excellent extracurricular activities laid on by the school.
‘As the week wears on, a strange thing stats to
happen: the dinner-table chatter, whic at frst was
60 so much ‘white noise starts to have some meaning
and, miraculously, I can follow the thread of the
conversation. may not be able to make a profound
and interesting contribution, but at lest [know when
to laugh now.
© Theend of the week comes too quickly and Thave
not seen all ofthe sights I wanted to see but [have
started to dream in Spanish, Carlos tells me Iwill have
to come back next year, and we will ll walk the Inca Trail
together. I don't know if e is serious or not, but it's
2» anice thought
‘whisked off taken immediately
Fy opted fora clean break decided to do something completely diferent assigned given
‘chums an old-fashioned word for fiends
unfolds/wears on passes or develops
thread of the conversation main message ofthe conversation
PHOTOCOPIABLE © OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESSSPEC}
1 activating
background knowledge
2 reading for
Read this anecdote told by someone who had a bad experience on a language
exchange holiday. What is your reaction to it?
You've never really experienced true misery unless you ve had to empty your bath water with
the lid ofa shampoo bole and throw it down the sink Because you can't work out how to get
she bath plug out and you are 13 and staying with a French family and are too scared to ask
Read the article and complete this ‘fact file’ about Joanne’s trip.
specific information
GENERAL senor STUDENT POPULATION
Traveler's ame o_ Jone Onna Name 7 Counties ofergin 12
Tour operator 1 locaton 5 Alt Young eae 18
Language 2 lassie 9 Reasons ir sting 16 =
County 3 Hours auton 10
Accommadation “Homestay Hoe / ther
cyan Subs
Ful-board Habeas
ar activites 1
3. inferring the
writer’s meaning
Writers often suggest ideas na text without actually stating them directly. Itis the |
reader's job to ‘read between the lines’ on these occasions and try to guess what the
‘writer means from the words he/she uses
What does Joanne really mean when she says the following?
1 amy conversational skills were limited to asking everybody how many brothers and sisters
they had. (lines 6-8)
a She didn’t like talking about families in Spanish,
She could only ask one question in Spanish.
© She was frustrated because she couldn't have a teal conversation in Spanish
2 ...one litle word always stopped me: homestay. (lines 10-11)
a She didn't want to repeat a bad experience.
b She couldn't afford to stay with a family.
She didn't like the sound of the two words
3. feel 13 years old again. (lines 36-37)
a She feels angry because Carmucha is treating her like a child,
b She appreciates Carmucha’s kindness and support.
¢ She doesn’t want to be left alone.
4... Tslip into a routine, (line 52)
a The days become rather boring,
b Things become comfortable and familiar.
© There is not much variety on the course.
5. Imay not be able to make a profeund and interesting contribution, but at least I know
when to laugh now: (lines 62-64)
a. She realises she has made some progress.
b Sheis sill dissatisfied with her Spanish.
She feels happier now.
6 ...but I have started to dream in Spanish. (lines 66-67)
a She has bad dreams about Spanish,
bb She feels tis time to leave because she has achieved her aim,
© Shes pleased because Spanish has become more natural for her.
PHOTOCOPIABLE © OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 9