German
Language Course
German
Language Course
From
Wikibooks
,
the open-content textbooks collection
Contents
•
[004] Introduction
•
[009] Lessons
•
[010] Level one lessons (Introductory lessons)
•
[103] Level two lessons (Grundlegende lektionen)
•
[147] Level three lessons (Zwischenlektionen)
•
[170] Level four lessons (Erweitertelektionen)
•
[172] Level five lessons (Review lessons)
•
[174] Grammar
•
[178] Appendices (Anhänge)
•
[204] About
•
[205] Authors
•
[206] GNU Free Documentation License
First Edition
Published:
May 01, 2006
PDF created by
Hagindaz
Österreich
Deutschland
The current version of this book can be found at
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German
Vorwort
Introduction
How to Study German Using This Textbook
A Textbook on Five Levels
The question arose early in the development of this textbook as to precisely who
would be the target audience. Although intended to be a "beginning" textbook on
German, many felt that the early lessons were too difficult for younger students
with very limited or no experience with German and, perhaps more importantly,
limited skills in English grammar. For this reason a textbook on three levels was
conceived.
Beginning German
(
Level I
) puts more emphasis on building
vocabulary around subject matter interesting and useful to young students.
Basic
German
(
Level II
) emphasises grammar, and assumes a greater knowledge of
English grammar more typical of an older high school or a college student. If you
are just beginning to learn German or attempting to teach yourself, you may wish to
try both approaches and see which works better for you, since some people require
a strong structural approach to learning a new language while others find this
"structure" only impedes progress by adding another layer of complexity.
Intermediate German
(
Level III
), which requires even more knowledge of English,
is for college students, preferably for sophomores or juniors. With even more
complex lessons, grammar and vocabulary comes
Advanced German
(
Level IV
),
which with the most complex and difficult parts of the German language, is for late
college students (Seniors) and college graduates. The last level, which is a review
level, but also has cultural facts and the history of the German language, is
Reviewed German
. (
Level V
). An existing, separate text,
German Grammar
, may
eventually be merged into the lesson modules or developed into useful appendices
as a grammar reference. At present, however, German Grammar is an expanding,
significant contribution to the textbook; it provides an important reference on
German language grammar rules useful to the student working through any of the
three levels.
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