Eure Meinung - Studenten über ActiLingua Academy
SPRECHEN SIE DEUTSCH?
Language-school vacations allow unique cultural contact.
| von Melody Moser, Center News (USA) |
| Vienna, Austria,
8:15 a.m. I bid Auf Wiedersehen to my roommate Francesca, grab my
notebooks and rush outside. On my way to school I pass Vienna’s
spectacular St. Stephen’s Cathedral, and despite the threat
of April snow, I look forward to this afternooon’s tour of the
city. I hear the clip-clop of a Fiaker, its alabaster horses led by
a bewhiskered fellow who nods his bowler-hatted head at me as he passes
by. A shop owner calls out to me in German as I stop for coffee at
a café on the elegant Kärtner Strasse, and I am able to
respond. I’m not an ordinary tourist who knows just a few words
in German – I am a language tourist.
|
where the equestrian
statue of Prince Schwarzenberg solemnly overlooks one of Vienna’s
grandest squares. At Rennweg, I exit the tram, stepping over a Cocker
Spaniel lying next to a gentleman who is reading Die Presse. I walk
two blocks along a slopping hill beside Johan Lukas von Hildebrandt’s
formal Belvedere Palace gardens to reach Actilingua Academy. |
| The students in
my class range in age from twenty-two to forty-one, and come from
a cornucopia of countries – Mongolia, Kazakhstan, England, Brazil,
New Zealand, Indonesia, Taiwan, and Japan. I am the only American. |
Each morning an
appetizing continental breakfast is graciously served. The residence,
populated by dozens of international students, is clean and safe,
reasonable quiet, and its location, about 35 minutes from the school,
allows me to learn a way around Vienna by tram and U-bahn. ![]() |
| After class, I wander
Vienna’s narrow, cobbled streets and gaze at the Baroque splendor
of The Hofburg; I tour the quirky Uhren Museum, or Clock Museum, and
relive my childhood in the Doll and Toy. I ride the U-bahn to Schönbrunn
Palace and admire the symmetry of the gardens, and one night, I play
dress up, and watch a ballet from the front row balcony seat at Vienna’s
celebrated Opera House. I even venture into the Vienna Woods one day,
when a heavy rain pours down upon the verdant trees that dangle branches
over a babbling brook.
|
The real advantage
of a trip like this, besides the obvious benefit of knowing a few
sentences in the language of the country you’re visiting, is
the opportunity to get off the tourist track and live like the locals.
While most tourists breeze through the city and gawk at the sights,
a language student has a purpose for being there. For students who
stay with a Host Family, the view of Austrian life begins the minute
they arrive at their temporary home. |







