Pages

i nostri siti | our sites:
Parola del Giorno | ILGUR | Italy in Literature

Monday, May 10, 2010

L'Italiano in famiglia


L'Italiano in famiglia


Today, I learned about this Italian resource from the blog, The Smiling Eggplant -- a TV show centered around a family living in Brescia that helps you to learn Italian. It is called "L'Italiano in famiglia," and it follows the daily life of the Frappani family. It was designed to help Italians living in South Africa retain their Italian and most probably was designed for young children or young adults who might lose some of their language skills living in a country where Italian is not the official language.

I listened and watched the latest episode and was pleasantly surprised and impressed. After watching the video, there are exercises, grammar explanations, a listing of some important vocabulary in which you can click the pictures and hear them pronounced (again), games to play to practice the language, as well as a recap of lessons learned from the two teachers, Manuel and Patrizia, which not only will help you learn new words and understand the language better but also understand the key points of the episode watched.

You can also download the episodes as podcasts as well as get a print out of the dialogue.

One of the things that I like most about the site is how well it works. It's a Flash driven site that has pop-ups which contain pdf's and games and other useful tools. Currently, there are 20 episodes! Hopefully, they will be producing more of them!

My own criticism is that sometimes the dialog seemed odd and a bit forced, but if you can get past that little bit of "corniness" of the dialog, it really can be useful in improving your listening comprehension. The actors speak at a fairly slow pace by Italian standards, and even I thought that they spoke slower than normal.

If you use the program, leave a comment and let me know what you think!

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Keith-

Thanks for highlighting this important resource. However, it was not expressly designed for Italians in South Africa- this is just a use they found after the fact. There are now many immigrants in Italy, and the course was developed by the local government of Lombardy for these immigrants. Thus, it will not have the typical tourist approach of most courses (restaurants, hotels, shopping etc.)

Cynthia

Kitto said...

Thanks for the clarification, Cynthia! :) I wasn't sure if the site had a specific audience, but it seems it does.

Keith

Anonymous said...

I am trying to improve my Italian and I find this site very helpful! But where can I find the answers to the workbook questions? I am not sure how accurate my answers are

Kitto said...

Which workbook questions did you mean?