anthemtour blog

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Saturday, 13 October 2012

Learn Spanish Reading Fairy Tales

Posted on 09:12 by the khali
This site is an account of my personal experiences with various Spanish acquisition resources and techniques that lie scattered all over the Internet in overwhelming numbers. In the last few posts we have discussed the effectiveness of some of the key immersion techniques that helped me with my Spanish. Today, we’ll elaborate on one of them with a twist. We already know how reading helps build our vocabulary but what to read is often the biggest dilemma someone learning Spanish often faces. This article explains where to find children’s books and fairy tales that are one’s best bets when it comes to learning any language.

Why fairy tales and fables?


Light to read, easy to absorb!
Light to read, easy to absorb!
Photo credit: Jetske19 licensed CC BY-SA 2.0
While I have often talked about how reading Spanish comics, books, novels, or newspapers help create an inexpensive immersion environment for the learners, today I will discuss one of my favorite recommendations when it comes to reading as a rookie learner. What I am referring to are children’s materials, i.e., cartoon shows, short stories, anecdotes, fables, etc. Even better if the reading material is one of the graded classroom readers meant for elementary-school students.

One big reason why these materials are so effective for the uninitiated is the extremely lightweight texture and limited range of vocabulary. These graded readers require the learner to have a very basic knowledge of grammar and a limited vocabulary in order to be understood and enjoyed. They are quick and light to read, easy to understand, and fun to relate and provide one of the most enjoyable means of absorbing the bare essentials of Spanish. The Spanish absorbed this way is more often than not what’s required in day-to-day conversations and for basic survival in a Spanish-only ecosystem. In a nutshell, these readers are the zero-calorie meals of your Spanish diet-plan – light and easy to consume and quick to absorb!

Your world is filled with wonderful free resources


Fairytales are the easiest reads for new Spanish learners
Fairytales are the easiest reads for new Spanish learners
Photo credit: GettysGirl4260 licensed CC BY-SA 2.0
So where can we find good-quality resources for children’s Spanish? Since I am a big fan of all things free, I would talk about only online resources. In case you are willing to spill some dough, you have everything you can imagine on sites like Amazon® and Flipkart® if not your local bookstore. In fact, Amazon would easily beat your neighborhood bookstore when it comes to variety and maybe even pricing. If you own a Kindle® (Amazon’s® e-book reader), things just couldn’t get any easier given the quick and effortless downloads and inexpensive titles.

Now coming back to free resources, there are quite a few hidden gems online that could satisfy the most discerning of readers. No matter how rapidly you devour, you can never run out of titles with such websites offering you countless options in portable document format (PDF). Depending on your preference, you could either print them off your computer and enjoy the feeling of reading off a real book, or you could just read them right off your tablet or computer screen if you are not too fussy about the screen’s glare. Personally, I prefer the idea of printing them because learning Spanish should be as stress-free as it gets and not having to expose my eyes to the computer screen’s radiation for extended periods of time is one less thing to worry about.

Best free online resources


ChildrensLibrary.org – I strongly urge all Spanish enthusiasts to check out this one and bookmark it without fail. With hundreds of digitized children’s books in Spanish available for you to devour for free, there couldn’t be a better treat for those who wish to just drown themselves in Spanish.

BookBox.com – This site is a visual delight for Spanish learners. Dozens of videos, animated versions of common children’s stories in several languages including Spanish can be found here. All videos come with subtitles to make viewing less stressful.

GrimmStories.com – This is where one can find plenty of fairy tales and fables written by brothers, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, in English, Dutch, Danish, Italian, German, French, and Spanish. Needless to say, you need to select the first option in the list of languages if you are a Spanish learner.

No matter what you read, read often
No matter what you read, read often!
Photo credit: Harald Groven licensed CC BY-SA 2.0
AndersenStories.com – This one shares an uncanny resemblance to GrimmStories.com in format and presentation with the only difference being that the writer on this site is Hans Christian Andersen. This site too has stories in half a dozen languages including, of course, Spanish. Both GrimmStories and AndersenStories offer the incredibly useful option to print your favorite stories as PDF. Most traditional readers who are not terribly fond of reading off the glare of their screens should find this option quite handy.

There are many more sources tucked away in the riches of the Internet still wanting to be discovered. While the sites listed above will more than quench your thirst for reading, you can surely scavenge the Web for richer or better resources and share your findings with our community here. No matter what you read, the trick is to read often and read regularly. Even if you find opening the dictionary way too often annoying, don’t give up. Given you stay consistent, you will soon notice a significant drop in the number of times you have to look up something in the dictionary for every story. It has worked for me and for many more all over the world who are learning Spanish on their own.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in Resources | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • 23 Local Names For “Bus” In Spanish
    From Bogotá to Barcelona and from Guadalajara to Granada, the streets of the Spanish-speaking world are a familiar sight and buses must, un...
  • Mexican Spanish – Órale, Híjole, And Others
    It’s almost impossible to spend some time in Mexico and yet never get to hear some of those exceptionally Mexican words that typically end ...
  • Some Costa Rican Words For Your Private Organs
    Regardless of who you are and how you are learning Spanish, one of the first things that strike you as irresistibly interesting is the glos...
  • Fresas And Nacos: The Preppies And The White-Trash Of Mexico
    No linguistic study of any human culture can ever be complete without a fair understanding of that culture’s social stereotypes. Yankees, re...
  • Jacket Vs. Hand-Job!
    Like all other tongues, the Spanish language too has its own share of regional quirkiness and the one from Mexico, in particular, is no di...
  • 111 Spanish Slangs From The Streets Of Peru
    The Spanish language takes a whole new dimension in the pueblos of Peru where the indigenous tongues, such as Quechua, have had a profound ...
  • Top 25 Telenovelas From 5 Spanish-Speaking Countries
    When it comes to nailing the Spanish language, it’s no secret that television is the most entertaining way to maximize immersion and, conse...
  • Taking A Bath Or Taking A Shower?
    Two words one picks up pretty early in their Spanish-learning program are ducharse and bañarse . If you are one of them, you already know ...
  • How To Remember The Conjugations For Ir Using Mnemonics
    It’s one thing to acquire Spanish vocabulary effortlessly using mnemonic devices and flashcards and quite another to memorize the conjugati...
  • 32 Spanish Verbs In Your Kitchen In Under 10 Minutes
    However eccentric one’s tastes, the allure of good food can hardly be denied. How about adding a little gastronomical twist to our mundane ...

Categories

  • Deconstruction
  • General
  • Immersion
  • Movies and Shows
  • Music
  • Resources
  • Street Spanish
  • Tips and Tricks
  • Vocabulary

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (1)
    • ►  February (1)
  • ►  2013 (23)
    • ►  July (3)
    • ►  May (3)
    • ►  April (6)
    • ►  March (4)
    • ►  February (7)
  • ▼  2012 (70)
    • ►  December (9)
    • ►  November (19)
    • ▼  October (31)
      • Stay Silent And Get Fluent...Quickly!
      • 22 Things A Smart-Ass Would Do Learning Spanish
      • Jacket Vs. Hand-Job!
      • Taking A Bath Or Taking A Shower?
      • Of Pinky Swears And Middle Fingers
      • A Bird In Hand Is Good Spanish
      • Pick Your Flick And Acquire Spanish
      • The Laziest Way To Conquer Spanish
      • Learn Spanish In A Sentence
      • Does Messi Speak The Spanish Of The Illiterate?
      • Forget Boring Word-Lists
      • 2 Ways To Weave More Spanish Around You
      • Che Beyond Guevara
      • 23 Local Names For “Bus” In Spanish
      • Learn Spanish Reading Fairy Tales
      • Learn 13 Bathroom Words In Spanish In Less Than 4 ...
      • 15 Spanish Tongue Twisters To Exercise Your Mouth
      • 111 Spanish Slangs From The Streets Of Peru
      • Spanish In The Streets – Local Words For “Boy”
      • 7 Bands No Spanish Learner Must Ignore
      • 7 Sites Spanish Learners Must Bookmark
      • Bitching In Spanish Like A Latino
      • Whackiest Ways Of Building Spanish Around You
      • Spanish Reading – Aloud Or Silent?
      • Spanish Trips Through Comic Strips
      • Use Twitter, Learn Better
      • Top 25 Telenovelas From 5 Spanish-Speaking Countries
      • Flash Your Cards And Absorb Spanish
      • Spanish Everyday, Spanish Everywhere
      • Streets Of Puerto Rico
      • Spanish Vs. Spanish
    • ►  September (11)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

the khali
View my complete profile