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German III, Comprehensive: Learn To Speak And Understand German With Pimsleur Language Programs

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German III, Comprehensive: Learn to Speak and Understand German with Pimsleur Language Programs
 
Manufacturer: Pimsleur
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List Price: $345.00
Sale Price: $230.02
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Product Description

Comprehensive German III includes 30 additional lessons (16 hrs.), plus Readings, which build upon the language skills acquired in Levels I and II. Increased spoken and reading language ability.

Level III will increase your vocabulary and grammatical structures and triple your spoken proficiency. Upon completion of a level III, you will be able to:

* participate in most informal and some formal discussions on practical, social, and some semi-professional topics,

* form longer sentences while maintaining the target language syntax,

* be understood even by native speakers unused to dealing with foreigners,

* handle increasingly difficult grammatical structures,

* enjoy fluent conversations with a variety of strangers,

* have a near-native accent, and the subtleties of the language will be apparent in your speech,

* read at the same level at which you speak.

Note: In order for the Pimsleur Method to work correctly, you must first complete the Level I + II language programs before proceeding to the Level III language program.

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Customer Reviews

It's the best I've found for speaking skills
 
Review Date: August 25, 2007
Reviewer: B. Juul, New Mexico
I studied German as an undergrad quite a few years ago. I've spent quite a bit of money over the years on less expensive programs trying to work on my verbal communication skills and reclaim the skills I had all those years ago (without going to Germany :). This one is fantastic. My profession is teaching others to speak English, so I am aware of some of the techniques they use in this program. Repetition is key, as is 'scaffolding' - or using and then building on prior knowledge. They also use 'backwards buildup' - which has you repeat the end part of the sentence first. The end part is generally the hardest part of a phrase to remember. I have only been using this for one day and am absolutely thrilled with the progress thus far. Most language programs require either sitting at a computer or with a book - or with a finger poised on the rewind button. This is great for just having in the car. I was a little worried about using level 3 - but it's perfect for getting back into speaking German. I haven't used levels 1 or 2, so I can't give an opinion of them. A final note: it is expensive. Check your local library. Mine has a few copies of each level. Viel spass!
Wonderful Tool
 
Review Date: October 19, 2007
Reviewer: Thomas J. Brown, Carlsbad, CA USA
I will probably repeat a lot of what others have said, but here goes. I think the real strength of these courses is that they get you to converse. You practice conversation. You talk, you listen. Will you learn lots of vocabulary? No. Will you learn all the grammar rules? No. Can you learn a language with only these courses? Of course not. You will need other materials, courses, books, whatever. But they are another tool in your toolbox to help you achieve your goal. What they give you is practice at speaking real conversations. And you will pick up some vocabulary and grammar along the way, what you need to succeed in these lessons.

I've been through all 4 levels and found them all great. Including level 4 (German Plus). This one has a bad rap, I think mostly because it's shorter than the rest. And certainly some of the new vocabulary is quite focused on one topic. But I found it added a lot of new conversational situations, and a lot of new grammar. Do you learn words that the average tourist doesn't need? Sure, but if you were just the average tourist, would you be buying these? We are only talking about a dozen or so words, it's not like your being forced to learn hundreds of words you'll never use.

Are they perfect? No, there are inconsistencies, there are silly little things here and there that I would call "editing" mistakes. And I really wish they'd give up the pretension that you only need to do each lesson once. I had to do each one at least 3 times before I could move on. But they are great for what they are. If you want to practice conversations, this is for you.
The weakest of the German offerings, but still an excellent resource.
 
Review Date: June 8, 2009
Reviewer: Eric Andrew,
I've raved for years about how much I love Pimsleur language courses. I truly believe they are the best way for a new learner of a foreign language to speak and understand the spoken word, traditionally the weakest abilities among American language students. The method used in Pimsleur allows a learner to be able to achieve a more "fluent" feeling when conversing, at least for the vocabulary covered in the courses, because one's recall is trained to work much faster than if one had to think out a translation. Those who sell Rosetta Stone like to point out that Pimsleur is an all-audio course and therefore does not teach you how to read and write. This is true, but in my humble opinion, the level of speaking and listening one can attain through Pimsleur makes it worth the money, even alongside whatever other resources a learner wishes to use.

As far as weaknesses go, Pimsleur German III is the weakest of the German offerings, and therefore I give it 4 stars instead of 5. The German I, II, and Plus courses were all produced during this decade with the intent of being distributed on CD or other digital means. Conversely, German III was recorded in the 1990s, and very obviously there was some sort of tape-to-digital transfer in order to make the CDs, and the audio quality is therefore quite medicore in comparison. Some of the speakers (specifically the female German speaker and the German-speaking "teacher") do not speak nearly as clearly as their counterparts on the other courses. And because these lessons are from an older edition than the other courses, there are some continuity issues with phrases that hadn't been learned yet in German II being presented as if they had, as well as phrases that were already taught in German II but are presented here as if they are new. I think German II and German Plus contain the largest amounts of vocabulary, and the use of interval recall isn't as nuanced and mature in German III.

Obviously, all of those problems would be resolved with the production of an updated edition of German III, and I truly hope one is currently in the works, if one isn't already available. However, even with this older edition, learning still happens rapidly and easily.
Dated
 
Review Date: January 14, 2007
Reviewer: A Pohick, near Crystal City
Pimsleur's okay, but diddling around with the least demanding of vocabulary leaves the relic worth less than three hundred dollars (lots of cognates and overuse of "to be"). The sale price looks good. Similar content used to arrive on LP or cassette. The filler music sounds folksy and hokey. Three hundred dollars to learn tourist rant seems pricey. The total play-time adds up to a good deal, but much of it is repetitive--an artifact of the reel-to-reel and LP era. Yet people tenaciously cling to this familiar icon.

It gets four stars because it remains among the best of the lot--but it competes in a league of expensive mediocrity.

Amazon's customers have global accounts and can purchase CD's and DVD's from Germany, so today, Pimsleur pales in comparison to the likes of Bruce Willis, Will Smith, Vin Diesel or even Gregory Peck if that's who makes your socks go up and down (s. Das letzte Ufer). For vocabulary, Hollywood's entertaining translations complete with p-o-p-ular, musical soundtracks win hands down (s. Traumshiff Surprise). For anyone who has disposable income, the Pimsleur tapes add up to a worth-while investment. For regular folk, the three hundred dollars would buy a good, used comprehensive dictionary and a slew of DVD's and CD's (s. Jazzkantine, Ina Müller) that would be fun to play over and over. Subtitles fuer Hoergeschaedigte provide a nice touch too.

The Pimsleur disks gather dust. "Once Upon a Time in the West (Spiel Mir Das Lied Vom Tod)" and "Man unter Feuer" keep on entertaining and teaching.

Pimsleur could do well to take the lead from Destinos. Destinos delivers content through a four-semester long video drama interspersed with grammatical review.

viel Spass! Platt is ook nix uncool.

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