پستها: 12
زبان: English
erinja (نمایش مشخصات) 28 ژانویهٔ 2010، 20:28:14
If there is user interest, we will publish this study plan on the site, and beginners who want a little more structure can use it to guide their studies.
This is a draft version of the study plan to be used by the course:
http://vikio.lernu.net/Planoj/LaborPlanoj/2010/D...
Feel free to take a look and make comments! We are actively soliciting user comments, both from experienced users (regarding the order of the courses, amount of time given for each topic, etc) and also from beginners (regarding what you'd like to see in a study plan, how fast you think you'd like to move, etc)
Miland (نمایش مشخصات) 28 ژانویهٔ 2010، 21:47:45
The scheme doesn't include Ana Renkontas; are the other courses sufficient to compensate?
I would be inclined to suggest that someone work through Gerda Malaperis! before attempting the examination, to be sure of having a sufficient vocabulary.
1Guy1 (نمایش مشخصات) 29 ژانویهٔ 2010، 12:40:50
erinja:Feel free to take a look and make comments! We are actively soliciting user comments, both from experienced users (regarding the order of the courses, amount of time given for each topic, etc) and also from beginners (regarding what you'd like to see in a study plan, how fast you think you'd like to move, etc)As still quite a beginner, and one who has fallen very much 'by the wayside' with his Esperanto studies I think this is a very good idea.
Lernu offers a lot of great stuff, but after finishing Ana Pana I found it hard to decide what to do next, tried two or three things, then stopped. This syllabus looks like it would have been really helpful in propelling me to some level of competence and may be a good way for me to get back in to learning Esperanto.
erinja (نمایش مشخصات) 29 ژانویهٔ 2010، 16:00:23
Does anyone have any comment about that?
I will add that no one is forcing anyone to take 20 weeks to go through the courses. Anyone could study according to the plan at their own pace, of course!
As a personal comment, 1Guy1, your Ana Pana tutor is there to help you. Feel free to ask your tutor for assistance not only in the language, but also in deciding where to go next at lernu. You can also e-mail to lingvohelpanto_en@lernu.net at any time to ask for advice on the language or on using the site.
linkmaster03 (نمایش مشخصات) 30 ژانویهٔ 2010، 1:59:06
I do think that 20 weeks is a bit long, though. Maybe the program could be shortened to 10-15 weeks, or more material could be added into the 20-week plan. I think that would keep study consistent and still allow time to review tough parts.
erinja (نمایش مشخصات) 30 ژانویهٔ 2010، 17:09:12
For those with an incomplete grasp of Esperanto, the note at the top says that the learner is expected to spend about an hour per day studying, preferably broken up throughout the day; for example, 20 minutes in the morning, 20 minutes in the afternoon, 20 minutes in the evening, etc.
The new 15-week plan
ceigered (نمایش مشخصات) 30 ژانویهٔ 2010، 17:54:41
(1hr/day ~ same work load of an idealistic (possibly utopian ) first year undergraduate homeworkless part time uni course, 15 wks =~ 5 months =~ a bit longer than a university semester)
Regarding Miland's concern, I never actually read Gerda Malaperis! and passed the exam on my second try, however that was roughly a year or longer after I started... Then again, I only got 12% through all the courses on this site (things seem to have changed and I can't find the list of courses like Ana Pana with completed ones highlighted).
erinja (نمایش مشخصات) 30 ژانویهٔ 2010، 23:04:16
It looks skimpy on paper but there is additional interaction with the teacher that isn't marked on the syllabus. Also, time that should be spent studying is also not listed - practicing vocabulary, practicing writing and grammar, etc.
ceigered (نمایش مشخصات) 31 ژانویهٔ 2010، 11:53:27
I wonder what kind of assignments there would be for an EO course at a university - or maybe they aren't needed?
qwertz (نمایش مشخصات) 31 ژانویهٔ 2010، 15:31:36
ceigered:Cheers for clearing that up for me Erinja - with the student-teacher interaction and other minor things that aren't on the syllabus, I can imagine that it would be an excellent course (I hope the language courses I'm doing this year are similar at least ).In Hungary every student only can pass with 2x foreign languages. Lot's of the students choose esperanto for that. That's no joke. An hungarian esperantisto told me that unfortunately the esperanto teacher at hungarian universities border themselves from the "normal" european esperanto folks/culture. So, there are a lot of hungarian folks who never join the "normal" esperanto folks. Furthermore, most german esperantistoj learn esperanto at a german university course.
I wonder what kind of assignments there would be for an EO course at a university - or maybe they aren't needed?