Showing posts with label Vienna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vienna. Show all posts

Saturday, 21 July 2018

Residential Activity: Language Course in Austria

As part of my qualifications for the Teaching Council, I needed to complete one week of a residential experience in a German-speaking country, which could either be studying at a university, work or a language course. I knew I would learn the most if I undertook a language course. I set about researching different language courses in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, but was unsure about where to go. It was only after doing a cultural class about Vienna with my Transition Year German class, that I realised I really wanted to go there.

I had been to Vienna once before when I was very young, meaning I remember very little of my experience there, so I really wanted to go back to experience (and hopefully remember!) it again. There are so many language courses available, but after looking at the helpful reviews online, I decided on Actilingua. For more information here is their website: https://www.actilingua.com/


As part of the residential activity for the Gaisce, I also requested to stay with a host family, and I am so glad that I did. My host was an 82-year-old local from Vienna, who is so enthusiastic about her home, culture and infinitely more sociable than I will ever be.

On the first evening I arrived, she brought me to a concert at the Rathaus, or city hall, with her grandson too. We sat out under the stars to watch a projection of a Beethoven concert conducted by Leonard Bernstein in the 60s.

The following day was the first day of my course. I had already completed a written placement test online before arriving, but on the first morning of the course you also have to complete a short oral test. Following this, I was placed in the C1 class, which took place every day from 2.15-5.30. The classes were excellent, and really suitable to the level of everyone in the group. I really appreciated how difficult it must be to teach on such a summer course, because no two students in my group had the same mother tongue, meaning that everyone had had very different experiences of learning German.

While I wasn't in class, I probably spent most of my time eating (on my return, my grandmother said "you've got stout", so maybe I overdid it on the Wienerschnitzel), and walking around the different parts of Vienna. In the mornings, I had great discussions with my host, about everything from her experiences of the Berlin Wall, to Austrian and German politics, history, religion and education.

The course itself was brilliant, and I loved getting to experience Vienna again, but what really made the trip so special was the residential aspect, which gave me such an immersive experience, enabling me to learn about the culture and history from someone who had actually experienced it all.