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7 Reviews
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Close, but no cigar...,
By Steven Cain (Temporal Quantum Pocket) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hallo Peter (includes workbook) [VHS] (VHS Tape)
The overall presentation is good and there is a great deal of useful vocabulary in here. My one beef is that the entire workbook is in German, with absolutely NO translation, explanation or introduction and the video cassette has absolutely no details on the plain white cover.Without a dictionary, you cannot possibly make any real use of this package, even though the quality of the mime is good enough to convey the basic drift of each lesson. As for "Peter", any guys left questioning their sexuality should note that "he" is played by Eve-Marie Forcier. There DEFINITELY should have been an English translation and some kind of rudimentary introduction in English.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Extremely Amateurish,
By "bobdm" (Spokane, WA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hallo Peter (includes workbook) [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This has the production values of a bad home video. The content is so simplistic and stilted that it is painful to watch. Even my 2 year old twins demanded that we turn it off after 2 minutes. My wife, who is German, first asked if there was some way to return it after opening it. She then made me promise to let her buy any German videos in the future.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Show, Not Tell,
By Ed Meers (Calgary, AB, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hallo Peter (includes workbook) [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Peter, in the German language video Hallo Peter, is the best German teacher I've had. I followed him through 20 entertaining lessons and learned a lot of German vocabulary. I even seemed to have picked up some grammar and learned how to formulate different kinds of sentences along the way. Peter doesn't tell me about German, he shows me German. He puts the language into action and I found I could remember it by mentally rehearsing the actions. Almost subconsciously, briefly visualizing Peter's actions, gestures, expressions, and general situations brought the word or phrase to my mind. I did study a little German before and just wanted something to brush up on the basics. I was surprised at how well this video worked for my purpose and then some. Doing the exercises in the student book consolidated the language and prompted me to remember even more. The English translation that accompanies the workbook is a great help, especially because it is not a literal translation. Expressions and idioms with which we are familiar in English are given a German equivalent so it's very practical. I would recommend this to any beginning or 'returning' student of German of any age and I think it would be a wonderful experience for teachers to bring to their students. Well done, Peter. Thanks.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
New Approach,
By Leanna Haythorne (Hull, Quebec, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hallo Peter (includes workbook) [VHS] (VHS Tape)
At last! An educational video designed with the VCR user in mind! This video isn`t just an entertaining group of skits - it has interactive options that you control with the remote. After you've worked your way through a lesson listening and watching - and I shouldn't say work, because it's so easy and rewarding - you can rewind a lesson and practice speaking. To do this, you use a cue on the tape to pause the video while you formulate the sentence that's coming. Once you've spoken out loud and heard the original on the video, you have time to pause and correct yourself, without having to rewind the tape. It's a simple concept but one that I`ve never encountered before and one that is extremely effective. This is certainly better than watching videos that are really just conventional lessons or footage of situations with no chance to get involved. Other features of this video that enhance the learning experience are the variety of background music, the ironic approach, and the practicality of the language. While these aspects all contribute to excellent lessons, the character in the video is certainly the main teacher. It is through the character's actions that you understand the language. He is an affable, but inept mime who goes through a series of ordinary actions while the narrator clearly enunciates instructions, questions, and comments. The actor is so talented that you, the viewer, understand much of the new language you're hearing. The workbook that comes with the video is really well constructed too and gives you a chance to review and extend all that you've learned. All in all, this video package is an exceptional language experience.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Learning a Language with Laughter,
By Catherine Langston, writer and teacher (Montreal, Quebec, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hallo Peter (includes workbook) [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Hello Teachers. Hello Students. Do you have the classroom blahs? Do you need new learning activities? Do you have Hallo Peter? You don't? Don't buy another activity book. Don't videotape another TV program. Don't record more radio newscasts. Instead, use Hallo Peter. You'll like it. You'll learn a lot. Designed for beginner to low intermediate language learners, this language kit is a pedagogical delight. It's breezy, cheeky and funny. The themes and situations are universal, the writing is simple and energetic, the lesson delivery is professional and accessible. And it's available in four languages: English, French, Spanish and German. I began using the English version, Follow Francis, about two years ago with my immigrant classes at an adult education centre in Montreal. It was an instant winner with those students. Since then, I have been using it regularly and successfully with all my basic education students.The multimedia instructional kit contains four teaching components: a video, a printed student exercise book, a cassette tape, and a teacher's guide. (Teacher guide and audio cassette available separately). All materials smoothly integrate the four language elements, then spice them up with hits of light-hearted humor. Students particularly like the video's strong visual and verbal components. The cute but perpetually confused main character, Peter, plays a klutzy "everyman" character to great effect.Our laughter dissolves classroom cultural barriers faster than March sunshine melts snow. Children also respond enthusiastically to the highly graphic skits and lively action. I have lent the video to a French Canadian neighbor whose 5-year-old loves the sad-eyed, silly mime. Used together or alone, each component contributes to the overall effectiveness of this learning resource. Both the video and the tapecassette have the same 20 vignettes about familiar themes; the sketches follow a pedagogical progression from listening comprehension to speaking.The writers built up the themes using controlled grammar and high frequency vocabulary and expressions designed to help learners develop a native-like language base. Each of the approximately 4-minute sketches is different and all of them can be used to reinforce grammar or theme-based curricula. The sketches explore universal subjects in ways that stimulate thought and discussion. The Teacher's guide and the student exercise book, have been designed to encourage student participation by extending the theme ideas and bringing in other vocabulary and grammar structures. Repitition, imitation, roleplay, cued responses, trivia questions, skits and dialogues are some of the guide's suggested activities. The professional production standards of this kit make viewing and using a pleasure. Peter is an appealing character, played with zest and sympathy by a skilled mime artist. The male and female narrators enunciate clearly, the background music dramatizes the action, the pacingand sequencing enable learners to both repeat and anticipate lines.This learning resource delivers the goods in a way that allows teachers to focus on their students' needs and that helps students to learn more easily. Individual learners can use this language aid to learn at their own pace. And it's a lot of fun for everyone.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointed,
By
This review is from: Hallo Peter (includes workbook) [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Since my aim is to learn to speak German well, I was disappointed because the video itself has a visual problem; there are streaks throughout, not to the point of being totally unclear (which explains why I'm not returning it), but enough to distort the picture. Too, and most disappointing of all is that the German words come across muffled. Also, since no English translation workbook came with the package, it is very difficult for me to know the meanings of words of which I am unfamiliar. Trying to find these unfamiliar words in the German dictionary is equally problematic because generally the words used in the video are either in the future tense or past tense (i.e., Peter ist verliebt), which the dictiornary in most cases does not recognize. In any case, I'm struggling to find an English translation workbook to help me through the unfamiliar words. How can I learn the language if I don't know what's being said??? I need to see at least some of it in English. Help!
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Getting Active with Peter,
By Barbara McKay (Victoria, British Columbia, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hallo Peter (includes workbook) [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Everybody knows that learning by doing is the best way to learn. Doing something is better than just hearing about it or watching it. Many language learning resources use tapes that you listen to and a few use videos that you watch. Like these other resources, this video has you listening and watching too, but it goes a step further and has you actually doing - doing actions and speaking the language of what you're doing. It seems to me that when I started Lesson 1, my mind reverted to some younger, receptive mode and automatically began to put together whole phrases and sentences. And the sentences weren't just statements - they were questions, commands, and exclamations as well - structures that I had studied with no small amount of frustration before. As I worked my way through to Lesson 20, I didn't always jump up and do all the actions (my two young boys sure did), but my body simply took my mind through them while I sat on the couch. Then, later, when I reviewed the lesson, my body not only responded to the language but actually prompted my memory of the words. It's all rather magical but it seems to me that it's also the way we learn our first language - by doing it, by matching actions and words, and by sometimes using those actions to prompt the words. I wish I'd had this video years ago and I wouldn't have wasted so much time and experienced so much frustration. Although I'm still focusing on my French, I know that this video is available in three other languages - Spanish, German, and English - and I must say that I'm curious to experience it in these languages too.
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Hallo Peter (includes workbook) [VHS] by Lorna Jamison (VHS Tape - 1993)
$29.95
In Stock | ||