Complete Spanish Learning Suite 2006, from Transparent Language, Inc., is a bundle of five separate programs and five audio CDs that offers beginners an array of effective language-acquisition tools designed to satisfy every type of learning style.
For visual learners, LinguaMatch presents newcomers to Spanish with over two dozen computer-generated virtual spaces simulating various human environments. Restaurants, cities, bars, airports, and so forth are populated with people and the items typically found in such places.
By passing the cursor over the items, you hear a voice name the items. You can also move to various types of activities within these environments to reinforce learning and pronouncing the vocabulary. The architecture and logic is great, but it takes considerable patience, experimentation, and exploration before you can begin to feel comfortable using it all.
Before You Know It is a flashcard program that allows you to not only learn the many lists they provide for beginners through intermediate learners, but also to create your own, and to import and export them. This is a great little program with lots of needed repetition, even if it is a bit hard to navigate. 'll explain that in somewhat more detail later.
Learn Spanish Now!, the most up-to-date component with videos of real people, also has a grammar component. This is one of Transparent Language's traditional strengths for years, due to its depth of dissection, description of words, and its component parts.
The Lexicon is also very good for beginner to intermediate learners and offers a level of detail not often found in other dictionaries of this size designed for beginners. On the other hand, the Global Writer program is a superfluous add-on, since it doesn't do anything but enable a user to type characters in many languages (Chinese, Thai, and so on) and has no direct application to any of the language-learning components. Learning the keystroke combinations of ALT + number pad is faster and far more efficient for producing accents, upside down question marks, exclamation points, and the unique "ñ" of the Spanish alphabet.
Learn Spanish Now!, with its real human actors and the various accessible learning activities in it is by far the most appealing visually, if not also the most pedagogically effective program in the suite.
But LinguaMatch, with its lexical richness and virtual environments, and the quality of its sound (output more than reproduction of input) make it a good tool also. It's a bit more sophisticated than the flashcard program Before You Know It.
All in all, these three distinct programs make the suite a good buy, if you're willing to go through some frustrating moments installing and learning to navigate through them. It is relatively easy to navigate in Learn Spanish Now!, using the toolbar options. With a little practice (and initial frustration), users will learn to navigate in the content and activity-rich immersion environments and take full advantage of all their learning opportunities.
By far, the toughest thing about this suite is keeping straight in your mind the names of programs and where they go as you install and organize the downloads. The programs in the suite were designed for Windows 95 and subsequently tested to ensure they would work on later versions which, happily, they do. Those familiar with the history of downloadable programs will recognize that the shortcomings of older programs (in this case Global Writer, the fifth program in the suite, and Lexicon) is that they load to different folders and are not immediately accessible via a shortcut icon from your desktop. For users, this means having to search for them on the C-drive and move them into a folder on their desktop (where you can place the whole suite).
Transparent Language's tech support person acknowledged that the programs "were not easy to put (download) into one spot" and that this could be "confusing." The most confusing aspect of the download process is that the programs to be downloaded have discrepant names. Whether it's the printed card, the opening screen of the DVD, or the icon names that appear, the names can be different enough to cause users to wonder if they are the same as the ones listed elsewhere. For example, what is called "Spanish Now!" on the printed card is called "Learn Spanish Now" on the DVD, and appears as "Language Now" on the desktop's shortcut icon.
Since this is a suite of previously produced software programs, nothing is new about any of these programs except their availability in one package at a good price to value.