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Archive for language immersion

Learning Italian in Matera in September! New Google Map! Choose your lodging!

By Melissa · Comments (0)
Thursday, May 16th, 2013

coverimageCheck out our new Google Map! Controllate la nuova mappa di Google per il nostro tour! In September I will be traveling to Matera with Ilaria Navarra, facilitating a week of language classes and cultural activities in the Basilicata. Program details are highlighted on this page Matera/Basilicata 2013 (September 14-21st) 

Ilaria, our Basilicata expert and language instructor, has created a wonderful Google Map for the Studentessa Matta tour for you to visually see the locations we will visit. The map also contains links to the hotels and B&B we have selected for participants to stay during their week with us. You can review the hotels and book your own rooms based on your personal preferences. On the map you can locate the school where we will be studying and you can evaluate the walking distance to the school. The price for all the lodgings we have selected are already included in the trip price. You need only to select the accommodations that you prefer. Below are photos and descriptions of the locations available.

The Studentessa Matta Google Map shows not only the school and lodgings, but also some of the locations we will visit during the week for cartapesta, gelato tasting, as well as the restaurants we will frequent. We will be adding to our map additional highlights and places we will visit during of our tour.


Visualizza Studentessa matta a Matera in una mappa di dimensioni maggiori

Here are available lodgings in Matera.

B&B Residenza dei SuoniPrint

An unforgettable charm that comes from the union of a historic building with the sophisticated design of the interior. Your stay at Residenza Suoni will be an opportunity to enjoy the city to the fullest, with a background of gentle music that comes from the Conservatory, which gave inspiration to the name. Breakfast is served every morning in a bright room with local fresh products.

1 CAMERA DEL SEDILE: A room with a view on the main square

1 CAMERA VERRICELLI: An attic-room with all comforts

• Private Bathroom with shower • air conditioning • balcony • minibar • daily cleaning • extra linen if requested • prodotti per il corpo firmati • hairdryer • slippers • free- wifi

B&B Casa LamannaPrint

Right here was born in 1885 Eustachio Paolo Lamanna, the historian of Philosophy and Rector of the University of Florence. In the ‘70s also the spanish artist Josè Ortega, stayed here.

You can have breakfast on the terrace with a magic view on the Murgia.The Zaccaro Family are welcoming you and will prepare breakfast with local products.

B&B Arco del Duomo

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The house is located at the entrance of Duomo Square, in the middle of the Sassi and on the inside of the medieval walls of the ancient village. The house has been renovated in order to guarantee the guests an harmonious stay reflecting the uniqueness of the place.

Renovated and carefully furnished, by reclaiming original materials and adopting old techniques, the house welcomes its guests by offering them comfort and relax.

One-room flat, with sleeping loft, it is illuminated by four large lamps and has a floor heating system. It is composed of a large common area, which is furnished with two sofas, an evocative and elegant tuff-corniced fireplace, dinner table and console with TV and DVD player. The cooking area with its brickwork has been modeled according to ancient tradition and it is equipped with fridge, oven, sink and cooking nook. A small access room leads to a bathroom that includes a shower. In the sleeping area, located on the mezzanine, you can find a double bed and toilette.

 B&B All’Annunziata vecchia (DUS)
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Every morning, you will find a basket of brioches and freshly baked bread. The fridge, in each room, contains milk, yogurt, butter, marmelade, juices.You can prepare your breakfast in every moment of the morning, with a small kitchen present in each room, with electric piaster, espresso machine for your coffee and kettle for your tea.

Available rooms:
n.1 BARISANO:
Room for 2 people or 1
-window with a view or porch
- double bed
- small kitchen for breakfast
- bathroom with shower
- air conditioning
-TV
-Free Wi-Fi

n.2 VICOLO:
Room for 2/4 people

-window with a view or porch
- double bed
- small kitchen for breakfast
- bathroom with shower
- air conditioning
-TV
-Free Wi-Fi
-climatizzazione
- TV

n.3 CAMPANILE
Room for 2/4 people
-window with a view or porch
- double bed
- small kitchen for breakfast
- bathroom with shower
- air conditioning
-TV
-Free Wi-Fi

Comments (0)
Categories : language learning
Tags : B&B All'Annunziataq Vecchia, B&B Arco del Duomo, Casa Lamanna, language immersion, Matera, Residenza dei suoni

Guest Blog di Halie Rando: Why Study Italian Abroad?

By Melissa · Comments (0)
Tuesday, October 30th, 2012

Hali Rando is a new friend who like me, is a big fan of studying abroad to learn a foreign language. She is an American from Boston who now lives in England and who works for Education First (EF) Study Abroad. Through EF Study Abroad she helps adults, students and professionals find opportunities to study the language where it is spoken including Italian in Rome. Hali is well educated and has a background in the psychology and
biology of language and social relations; she has an ScB from Brown in Human Biology with honors work in language perception; she has an MPhil from Cambridge with research in the genetic correlates of language diversity in Ethiopia. On the lighter side, she also writes fiction! She has travelled in Italy and above, is a photo of her in Sorrento. Hali tells me that one of her favorite Italian phrase is the surprisingly useful “mi dispiace, pero ho bisogno di studiare / I’m sorry, but I have to study!”

Hali Rando è una nuova amica e come me, è appassionata del concetto di vivere all’estero per imparare una lingua straniera. Lei è americana di Boston e adesso abita in Inghilterra e lavora per Education First (EF) Study Abroad. Attraversa EF Study Abroad lei aiuta adulti, studenti e professionisti a trovare occasioni per studiare lingue dove sono parlate, compreso l’italiano a Roma. Hali è ben istruita e ha una formazione accademica in psicologia e la biologia delle relazioni linguistiche e sociali; ha un ScB da Brown in Biologia Umana e con lode in “lingua e la percezione”; ha un MPhil da Cambridge con la ricerca nelle correlazioni genetiche della diversità linguistica in Etiopia. Sul lato più leggere scrive anche romanzi! Ha viaggiato in Italia e sopra, è una foto di lei a Sorrento. Hali mi dice che uno dei frase italiane preferite è questa perché è molto utile: “mi dispiace, pero ho bisogno di studiare.”

Our Language Immersion friends in Puglia this past August!

In her guest blog Hali explains why it is important to study abroad and immerse yourself in the culture of your target language…and she has the science to back it up! Here is her guest blog:

How important is it to learn a language where it’s spoken? It would be easier, after all, to just curl up on your couch after work, put on your headphones, and start learning Italian with Rosetta Stone. You’ll definitely pick up some Italian this way, but there is a very strong argument to be made for learning Italian in Italy, where you can really experience the language as it functions in daily life. After all, you wouldn’t order in a pizza and call that Italian cultural immersion.

Anyone who ever suffered through a high school language class has an intuitive understanding of the limitations of studying a language in your home country (or anywhere that it’s not spoken natively). It’s hard to commit to a foreign language when your entire life – other than a dreary 40-minute period once every school day – is in English. The same theory applies to your Italian-software-couch-sessions, unfortunately. Your Italian immersion is isolated to a short period every day, which makes it hard to integrate Italian into your life and thoughts.

That’s where the advantage of language immersion comes in. If you’re living in an Italian-speaking country, suddenly everything you do becomes a big Italian adventure. Checking into a hotel? You’ll need to know how to answer autobiographical questions.Want to buy some bread? Suddenly the Italian words for numbers are useful and relevant. Trying to invite a new friend to join you for dinner this weekend? Thank heavens you know the future tense and the days of the week!

While language immersion intuitively makes sense as a language-learning strategy (you’ll get to practice a lot – like all the time– and you won’t be able to hide from the verb tenses or vocabulary that scare you), there is also a strong brain-based argument to be made in favor of learning through immersion. If wandering around a country that speaks a language you’re not fluent in doesn’t quite suit your fancy, you can also study through an accredited school (like EF’s study abroad programs) or head out with a supportive group on one of Melissa’s tours to Venice, la Basilicata and Puglia.

Recently, researchers trained people to learn a simple, made-up language that was carefully designed to function like a real language. Some participants learned this language through classroom-style instruction, while others learned through immersion. Then, they measured electrical currents in the brain while participants responded to sentences, some of which contained errors. The researchers compared these patterns of activation to those found when people perform this task in their native language. While both groups showed more native-like currents as they learned the language, the people who had learned through immersion processed the language more like a native speaker than the other group. Immersion, then, might be better for developing an intuitive sense of a new language – which is going to help you speak it much better than remembering a string of rules would.

There’s more: if you’re in Italy, speaking Italian can help you feel more connected to the people around you. You’ve probably got lots of friends at home, and meeting other travelers is great, but it’s also wonderful to feel connected to other speakers of your new language. Studies in social psychology have shown that people like people who are similar to them, and it doesn’t really matter what that similarity is. In computer game playing, research shows that game participants tend to be more generous towards another player when they feel they have something in common— even if that’s just sharing a birthday. This suggests that “having something in common” is a major way to feel like you’re on the same “team” as someone else – and “having things in common” with fellow Italian speakers is a lot easier if you can actually spend time with them and immerse yourself in Italian culture. If you’d like to get the warm fuzzies and a new sense of community from your Italian studies, you’re probably not going to get them from Rosetta Stone (unless maybe you can convince yourself that you have the same birthday).

There’s one final reason to study Italian in Italy, and it’s the most obvious: Italy. If you’re interested in learning Italian, it’s probably because you already feel a connection to the food, culture or literature – or maybe your family’s own heritage. Someone who uses an English guidebook and rushes from the Tower of Pisa to Pompeii and eats exclusively in English-friendly restaurants, won’t really experience the true Italy. In the same vein someone, who struggles through La Republicca and Italian language tapes on the morning train ride, surrounded by the English speaking commuters, won’t really experience a true language learning experience. In the latter case, the effort is admirable, but nothing can compare to exploring a language through a culture and a culture through a language.

Grazie Hali! Hai ragione! If you are interested in language immersion & cultural tours please check out the tours I have planned for 2013. We are going to Venice in April, la Basilicata in September and Puglia in September & October. If you are looking for a longer language immersion study abroad program check out Education First (EF) Study Abroad. Buoni studi!


Comments (0)
Categories : language learning
Tags : EF Study Abroad, italian, Italy, language immersion, Study Abroad

Mia sorella Rossella

By Melissa · Comments (15)
Wednesday, April 25th, 2012


Sono appena tornata dall’aeroporto dove ho portato Rossella, un’amica italiana di Lago di Garda che è venuta a trovarmi, e che dopo una settimana favolosa passata insieme, deve ora tornare in Italia. Lei è come una sorella e siamo uguali perché condividiamo una passione reciproca per la lingua dell’altra. Io adoro la lingua italiana e lei la lingua inglese. Ci siamo conosciute attraverso una comune amica del Language Forum Impariamo. La nostra amicizia è nata in internet e poi ci siamo conosciute di persona. Io e mio marito, siamo andati a trovarla la prima volta a Garda, dove lei abita con suo marito e figlio. Loro hanno una pelletteria a Bardolino e Massimo, marito di Rossella, è un artista che crea quadri meravigliosi. Secondo me, fra poco lui sarà molto famoso. Sembra che non passi giorno in cui non ci scambiamo messaggi on-line. Siamo anche uguali nel senso che siamo appassionate d’internet! Abbiamo una grande simpatia da cui è fiorita una bella amicizia. Ora siamo una famiglia.

Rossella è stata chiamata “Rossella” perché sua madre era appassionata del film “Via col vento” (Gone With the Wind). Nella versione italiana, nell’epoca di Mussolini quando il film è uscito, il nome dell’eroina “Scarlette O’Hara” è stato cambiato a “Rossella O’Hara” per cancellare tracce di Americanismo. (Strano che questo film è uscito affatto nell’Italia perché il film racconta un momento storico nella storia americana!) Ad ogni modo, mi raccomando! Dovete pronunciare bene il nome di Rossella, almeno che lei vi corregge con fermezza! Mi ha preso in giro per quasi tutta la settimana dicendo che non lo dicevo bene. Visto che ci sono due “S”, necessario prolungare l’enfasi su di “S”. Non è Roz-ella….invece è Ross-ella! Va bene!

La cosa più bella, oltre ad avere una cara amica con me per una settimana, è che abbiamo parlato sempre in Italiano. Per me è stato molto utile avere una settimana d’immersione. Per lei è stato un sogno perché era immersa nella cultura americana e aveva l’opportunità di fare conversazione con i miei amici americani. Abbiamo fatto tante cose questa settimana. C’erano concerti, wine tastings, ristoranti e gite turistiche. Mentre stavamo facendo tutte queste cose abbiamo chiesto l’una all’altra come pronunciare bene le parole, i significati delle parole e anche le frasi adatte per occasioni varie. Abbiamo guardato i film Americani e ogni due minuti abbiamo fatto piccole pause per parlare del linguaggio usato dagli attori. È stato bene anche per me, perché io ho tradotto le frasi inglese in Italiano per lei. Ogni giorno c’era una specie di “botta e risposta”…uno scambio in lingua di competenza.

Stasera è stato molto difficile lasciare andare Rossella. C’erano le lacrime e i grandi abbracci alla fine. Mi mancherà mia sorella e l’opportunità di avere qualcuno con cui posso comunicare in Italiano ogni giorno. Prima di partire, Rossella mi ha detto che ha imparato più inglese durante la settimana passata con me ed è stato più utile per capire bene le frase colloquiale, che un anno intero trascorso al British School a Verona. Sono d’accordo! Dopo la settimana la mia conoscenza della lingua italiana è stata anche approfondita! Non c’è niente di meglio che sentire i suoni e esercitare le frase con una madrelingua, per migliorare la curva di apprendimento. È stato proprio bello stare insieme per una settimana. Non solo abbiamo approfondito la nostra conoscenza delle lingue, ma abbiamo approfondito la nostra amicizia!

Ti voglio bene Ross-ella! Stammi bene. Mi manchi già!

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Vi invito a venire con me in Puglia quest’estate. Sto programando un Language Immersion Tour. Ecco un link con tutti i dettagli.

Comments (15)
Categories : amici italiani
Tags : italian language, language immersion

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