Jose escribió:1 - Exactly, if the teacher can not explain profoundly to each student, for obvious reasons, then I see unnecessary, when it is obligatorily for a career, it is contradictory, because that study is superficial for this reason.
That seems to be a problem everywhere. Teaching a foreign language to a big group of students is at best hard, as each one of you has a different level, despite all of you being in the same class, and there's only so much time you've got for the lesson.
Jose escribió:2 - I speak of the university. In high school general knowledge is fine.
Ahh ok... well, that also was the case when I took my degree: they used to teach the same subjects to every student during the first three years of the Philology degree at the University of Valencia, no matter whether you were gonna take English, French or Spanish later on. It was a complete waste of time, as we could have spent those years learning more things related to our own degrees.
Ariel escribió:Ekey (ok) I was Wondering, whatever, llou ave to improve llour ESpeaking
Yep, that sounds like the typical Spanish accent in English xD However, you can count yourself lucky if she can say as much as that in English...
Jose escribió:My teacher knows just say "hello"
you see Ariel?? I rest my case... xD
It's such a shame that there are so many qualified people on the dole, and still you get teachers that, not only do they not teach you correctly, but they also put you off that particular subject...