zulooreports.blogg.se

Utalk language education reviews
Utalk language education reviews








utalk language education reviews
  1. #Utalk language education reviews for android#
  2. #Utalk language education reviews plus#
  3. #Utalk language education reviews free#
  4. #Utalk language education reviews windows#

However, the free version does contain ads and not many texts. The app is free and many of the texts are available for free.

#Utalk language education reviews for android#

This app is available for Android and iOS users. Students can edit the speed of the audio, the size of the text, and can hide the L1 translation of the text. Beelinguapp allows language learners to read and listen to a text in their target language and the L1 at the same time.

utalk language education reviews

A native speaker reads the text in the target language, allowing you to hear the correct pronunciation. This app allows you to read a variety of types of texts in two languages simultaneously. “Courses” typically consist of 11 or so lessons on topics ranging from “Vacations”, “Body”, “Feelings/Attitudes”, “Home”, “The Pronunciation of Vowels” (Danish), “Building Sentences” (Turkish), and “The 100 Most Important Words” (Russian).

#Utalk language education reviews plus#

Like mentioned in the Anki review, vocabulary is presented out of sociolinguistic context (though, interestingly, the English for French speakers did provide some sociolinguistic and lexical context, explaining when to use hello and giving a functional translation plus a literal translation for ‘Good morning’). In Russian, in contrast, the intro lesson also included repeating words (though you can skip if you don’t want to enable your mic), practicing and predicting spelling in Cyrillic, and predicting previously taught words in little dialogues. In Danish, the intro lesson consisted of listening, and reading and matching. Warning – Turkish crashed on me and had to be reloaded. Reviews/suggestions: I checked out Turkish, Russian, Danish, and English for French speakers, and no two intro lessons were the same. Cyrillic), and some languages offer lessons on grammar, syntax, and pronunciation. What language skills it covers: Vocabulary acquisition, learning different alphabets (e.g. Note: I got a couple promo emails for buy 3 months, get 3 months.

#Utalk language education reviews windows#

It does this by means of listen and repeat listen, read and tap-to-match and fill-in-the-blank using jumbled letters or a language-appropriate keyboard.Ĭost/platform/device info: Apple (all devices), Android, Windows – Monthly subscription costs as of 9-24-2014 are: 1 mo =$10.99/mo, 3 mo =$7.33/mo, 6 mo =$6.33/mo, 12mo =$5.42/mo. What it does: Babbel teaches you words and phrases in: Spanish, French, Italian, German, English (for speakers of French, German, Italian, and Portuguese), Swedish, Turkish, Dutch, Polish, Russian, Indonesian, Danish, and Norwegian.

utalk language education reviews

Students may benefit more from developing their own flash card sets as a course project in a way where vocabulary is taught along with a rich linguistic (argument structure and collocations) and sociocultural (associations, indexical meanings) context. It also ignores the role of output, especially output prompted by a meaningful need to communicate in vocabulary acquisition. Such apps assume that a lexical entry consists of just one orthographic form, which is linked to just one meaning or one equivalent L1 word. Reviews/suggestions: Teachers could easily develop a set and send them to all students, but they are subject to all the normal caveats and limits of flash cards in vocabulary acquisition (decision of whether to link L2 word to a picture or L1 word, lack of one-to-one L1-L2 correspondence, lack of argument structure, lack of sociolinguistic context, lack of allophonic detail, eye-tracking paths). What language skills it covers: Vocabulary acquisition How much it costs: It is free and available for all platforms and all devices, as it uses open-source software. What it does: A “flash card” development program, which allows you to work through flash card sets using spaced repetition. Below the table, MALL class participants have evaluated most of these apps for what they do, how much they cost, what platforms they are available for, and suggestions for using them. A learner would probably want to use several different apps, one from each color category below, in order to make progress across various language skills. As you see, vocabulary apps dominate the market. In the following list, you will find apps explicitly designed for language learning or language learners. Apps can either be explicitly designed for language learning, or can be used to support or foster language learning.










Utalk language education reviews