Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German is the easiest language for a native English speaker to learn.
Not according to the State Deparment Foreign Service Institute, which has ranked languages according to difficulty for native English speakers.
The easiest languages for a native English speaker to learn (category 1) are Danish, Dutch, French, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, Swedish
The next level is German (category 2 in difficulty) plus a few others.
https://www.state.gov/m/fsi/sls/c78549.htm
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German is the easiest language for a native English speaker to learn.
Not according to the State Deparment Foreign Service Institute, which has ranked languages according to difficulty for native English speakers.
The easiest languages for a native English speaker to learn (category 1) are Danish, Dutch, French, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, Swedish
The next level is German (category 2 in difficulty) plus a few others.
https://www.state.gov/m/fsi/sls/c78549.htm
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid had the hardest time with Spanish II & she just couldn't pick up on it. It brought her GPA way down & something needed to be done.
We were against latin because we wanted a language that she'd actually use, so we felt German would probably be out also & with most colleges requiring at least 2 years of a language, we were very nervous.
That's when her guidance counselor suggested sign language!
We were happy to hear this because sign language is something she could always use & she will ALWAYS for the rest of her life be able to use it as her chosen career or as a fall back job, as sign language interpreters are in great demand.
Well, as much as she struggled in Spanish, she's THRIVED in didn language! It's a much smaller class, she gets more individualized attention & she's already had job offers even in high school.
It was truly the greatest decision she could make for herself.
Good luck with your son!
I'm impressed that sign language receives the same exact language credits that Spanish, French, German, etc does.
This is a really interesting alternative and I wish they'd make this option more well known!
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for all of the replies! I suspect he doesn't like Spanish because they are on their third Spanish teacher in 3 years. I think he would enjoy the history that would be part of a Latin class. I just worry that I won't be of any help to him with either language. I *might* be able to help just a little bit with Latin since I know some Spanish. I am wondering how hard it would be to find a Latin or German tutor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German is the easiest language for a native English speaker to learn.
Not according to the State Deparment Foreign Service Institute, which has ranked languages according to difficulty for native English speakers.
The easiest languages for a native English speaker to learn (category 1) are Danish, Dutch, French, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, Swedish
The next level is German (category 2 in difficulty) plus a few others.
https://www.state.gov/m/fsi/sls/c78549.htm
This is interesting. At my high school, they always told us that German was the easiest language for English speakers, and the kids who took it tended to be the less academically focused kids. I admit I just believed what the teachers told us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German is the easiest language for a native English speaker to learn.
Not according to the State Deparment Foreign Service Institute, which has ranked languages according to difficulty for native English speakers.
The easiest languages for a native English speaker to learn (category 1) are Danish, Dutch, French, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, Swedish
The next level is German (category 2 in difficulty) plus a few others.
https://www.state.gov/m/fsi/sls/c78549.htm
Anonymous wrote:My kid had the hardest time with Spanish II & she just couldn't pick up on it. It brought her GPA way down & something needed to be done.
We were against latin because we wanted a language that she'd actually use, so we felt German would probably be out also & with most colleges requiring at least 2 years of a language, we were very nervous.
That's when her guidance counselor suggested sign language!
We were happy to hear this because sign language is something she could always use & she will ALWAYS for the rest of her life be able to use it as her chosen career or as a fall back job, as sign language interpreters are in great demand.
Well, as much as she struggled in Spanish, she's THRIVED in didn language! It's a much smaller class, she gets more individualized attention & she's already had job offers even in high school.
It was truly the greatest decision she could make for herself.
Good luck with your son!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German is the easiest language for a native English speaker to learn.
This is laughably incorrect.
Anonymous wrote:French and German are easy, French will be most familiar to Spanish learner. Latin is not easy. My kids have studies a range of languages and all say Latin was the most difficult.
Anonymous wrote:French and German are easy, French will be most familiar to Spanish learner. Latin is not easy. My kids have studies a range of languages and all say Latin was the most difficult.