Learn German on vacation in Austria
by Melody
Moser, Daily Herald (USA) ,
January 14, 2007 |
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| So
to speak -
Take a language-school vacation in Vienna
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.
I catch the red and white Tram D at the Opera house, switching
at Schwarzenbergplatz, where the equestrian statue of
Prince Schwarzenberg solemnly overlooks one of Vienna’s
grandest squares. |
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At
Rennveg, I exit, carefully stepping over a Cocker Spaniel
lying next to a gentleman who is reading Die Presse. The
school is a two-block walk up a sloping hill, across the
street from the formal formal Belvedere Palace gardens.
In class, our teacher, Barbara, asks me, “Was bist
du von beruf?” What do I do for a living? I have
to think. “Ich bin computerprogrammiererin.”
I stumble over the bulky word. Barbara smiles and asks
Hoi Ping, a Taiwanese girl sitting next to me, “Wie
alt ist Melody?” Hoi Ping gives me a shy smile,
then says, kindly, “Sie ist zwieundzwansig jahre
alt.” Translation: She is twenty-two years old.
We all laugh, then play a game identifying pictures of
Austrian road signs, some real, some not, and joke at
the “usefulness” of learning the German translation
for a road sign that means “here one can photograph
penguins.” |
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students in my class range in age from 22 to 41, and come
from a cornucopia of countries – Mongolia, Kazakhstan,
England, Brazil, New Zealand, Indonesia, Taiwan, and Japan.
I am the only American.
The students’ reasons for learning German in Vienna
are as diverse as their nationalities. Tomohiro, from
Japan, wants to study music at the University of Vienna;
Amara from Mongolia, is adding German to the five languages
she already speaks. Pip, from New Zealand, wants to communicate
with her Austrian relatives. Sarah, a ski-instructor from
London, would like to converse with the family of the
Viennese boyfriend she met on the ski lift in Kitzbühel.
And Svetlana, from Kazakhstan, wants to move to Vienna
to be with the Austrian boyfriend she met while on vacation
in Turkey.
Actilingua Academy offers students of all ages the opportunity
to learn German in historic Vienna, a city renowned for
its music, art and architecture. It is a city where Mozart,
Schubert and Beethoven lived. It is a city where street
musicians play Rimsky-Korsakov's "Flight of the Bumblebee"
on the violin and young people tote cellos on trams.
“Most people who want to study German think of doing
so in Germany rather than Austria,” says Dr. Ernst.
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“But
in Vienna,” he continues, “you not only learn
pure, correct German, but can experience one of the world’s
greatest cities of art, music and culture.”
Actilingua was founded in 1988 after Austrian Barbara
Ernst travelled to Florence, Italy to do her dissertation
and take an Italian language course. She enjoyed the course
so much she decided to start a school in Vienna, which
she runs with her husband, Roland.
For accommodations, I chose to stay in Kolpinghaus, a
student residence off Gentzgasse, an avenue dotted with
shops, cafés and vibrant flower stalls. The residence,
populated by dozens of international students attending
several of the city's schools and universities, is clean
and safe, reasonable quiet and its location, about 35
minutes from the school, allows me to learn my way around
Vienna by tram and U-bahn.
The school’s fee covers daily language classes in
grammar and conversation; activities such as lectures,
volleyball games and pizza parties; and accommodation
with a host family or in a student residence. For a small
cost there are also excursions to Vienna’s cathedrals,
palaces and wine taverns, cycling trips along the banks
of the Danube to Klosterneuburg monastery, or excursions
to Salzburg or Budapest -easy to do on one's own, but
more fun with a group of international classmates.
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| After
class, I ride the trams around around Vienna's Innere
Stadt, practicing my German with people I meet. I wander
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 museum.
I take the U-bahn to Schönbrunn Palace and admire
the symmetry of the gardens. One night, I play dress up,
and go with a Japanese classmate, Mayumi, to Vienna’s
celebrated Opera House where we watch a ballet from a
frontrow balcony seat. 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.
Sometimes, during excursions, I stop at Vienna's renowned
Sacher Cafe and sample sachertorte, an exquisite chocolate
layer cake topped with a layer of apricot jam under a
thick, chocolate coating. At Naschmarkt, Vienna’s
lively open-air market near Karlsplatz, I nosh on fresh
vegetables and the softest dates I’ve had since
visiting Morocco. And when I need to do homework or study,
I relax in Vienna’s legendary coffeehouses, where
a tuxedoed waiter serves me Apfelstrudel and I can linger
as long as I like.
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 continuously practice that language, as well as get
off the tourist track and live like the locals. |
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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, as many of my
classmates chose to do, the view of Austrian life begins
the minute they arrive at their temporary home and are
greeted in German by their new family.
By the second week, Vienna has begun to feel like my home.
Some days, as I walk through the city, I run into my classmates.
I see Mayumi window shopping on the Kartner Strasse. I
see Sarah and her boyfriend at the movies and notice my
guilt at watching the movie in English subside. And to
my surprise, my German is improving. One nippy morning,
at Naschmarkt, I find myself asking for fresh dates in
German without stumbling. It is getting easier.
Suddenly it is the last day of class for Mayumi and me,
the only students leaving after two weeks. Others will
stay for a month or more. As we exchange e-mail addresses
with our classmates, we both feel a bittersweet sadness
at leaving our new companions. I realize that by choosing
a language-study vacation I not only learned about Vienna
fromt he locals, but also made friends from all over the
globe and learned about their cultures and countries as
well.
On the train that carries me away from this magnificient
city, I open my backpack and the picture of the penguin
sign flutters to the floor. The man sitting opposite me
reaches down to pick the paper, smiles and hands it to
me. “Ahh, hier kann man die Pinguine photographieren.”
Translation: “Ahh, here one can photograph penguins.”
I understand him, and we laugh. |
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| Language
vacation in Vienna:
GO: If you prefer
cities and culture to fun in the sun; if you enjoy learning
and making friends from around the world.
NO: If the thought
of doing a little homework makes your cringe.
If you go:
Getting there:
Nonstop flights to Vienna are not available from Chicago,
but many U.S. and foreign airlines offer flieghts with
one connection.
When to go: Vienna
can be enjoyed year-round. The school is busiest in the
summer. Fall and spring are less busy and the weather
is still mild. For ski and snowboard buffs, take a winter
course; the school offers ski day excursions on the weekends. |
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Housing:
Most students find staying with a host family to be the
best way of practicing German and getting to know the
Austrian people. You'll share meals (breakfast only or
breakfast with lunch or dinner), the kitchen, bathroom
and conversation with your new family. You can choose
to have a private room or one with a roommate, whom you'll
meet when you arrive.
For more independence, staying in the ActiLingua Residence
is the way to go. Here again, as in all housing options,
you can choose a single room or one with a roommate. Rooms
have a TV, shared or private bathrooms; students share
a well-equipped kitchen. You'll be able to practice speaking
German with your fellow students, whom you'll join for
breakfast.
Other options: a student residence, which is similar to
a college dorm; a shared apartment; or a three- or four-star
hotel.
What to bring: The
school will provide books and other teaching materials,
but it is recommended that you bring a German-English
dictionary with you. You should also bring a notebook
and some pens and pencils.
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