Rosetta Stone Homeschool features a foreign language curriculum specifically designed to provide homeschool students with a rich, fully interactive and engaging language-learning experience, while giving parents the tools and resources needed to manage student progress without extensive planning or supervision. Rosetta Stone Homeschool is self-paced and designed to make it easy for parents to offer language learning even if they don't speak the language their students are studying. Students are instantly captivated by Rosetta Stone so they stay engaged. Plus, with positive reinforcement and quick results, their language-learning confidence soars!
D**N
Challenging but Useful
I've studied several languages, and used RosettaStone to study Spanish and Swedish.This version is useful, and I'm glad it used Thai script. I was pleased to be able to read and recognize Thai script after the first lesson. The software presents the script along with speech with enough repetition to make it learnable. It is good to be able to learn the sounds of the script as it is used in speech. Online compilations of Thai script can be used as a supplement for the sounds of individual characters, but the product doesn't teach characters individually.As of lesson 10, this version has avoided the problem of gender specific word endings, and I wonder how they will be handled.This version didn't use the microphone that comes with the included USB headset to compare my speech with a native speaker. Thai uses sounds that are not used in English. This is a negative.I sometimes wonder who chose the content for RosettaStone. There are certain phrases that are essential for a person trying to learn a language while living in a foreign country, and they are absent for all the versions of RosettaStone I have used.Finally, the home school version requires installation of the SMS administrator first, which is cumbersome, but the person I got when calling RosettaStone tech support was excellent.
S**Y
Rosetta stone level 1 Thai
It's terrible- needs a password to get into the actual lessons ! Not provided! When we call the Rosetta stone number supplied for help- we get passed around & then cut off. In 2 months of trying we have only been able to access the 'trial lesson' & no one at RS seems to know what to do! Don't buy from Amazon- I'll have to go to the company site to get one that WORKS! What a waste of $$$!
B**R
Try L-Lingo, avoid Rosetta Stone, or try other method
There are many different ideas on the best way for adults to learn a foreign language. Much depends on the student, their goals, and their self-discipline. Dealing with a tonal language, like Thai, or a language with a different type of script, also like Thai, the student need make some big decisions about how they want to learn, and how much.I learned Spanish as an adult. I am now fluent at a professional/business level.I learned to read Thai. I can write some, but my vocabulary is very small. 90% of my Thai came from taking private one-on-one classes while living in Thailand for 6 months.I studied some Tagalog, some Korean, and some Thai using Rosetta Stone.If you just want to learn some Thai to get around as a tourist, you probably want to use Romanized phonetics. Learning the script is not really worth your time. An immersion product, like Rosetta Stone, is probably not as useful because much of the vocabulary and context is not related to what you will want to know (do you really need to say the boy is under the soccer ball?).If you want to seriously learn the language to be able to carry on casual or business conversations, commit early and realize there is far more work.For me, I first needed to learn the alphabet. You CANNOT consistently pronounce Thai correctly using Romanized phonetics. T one rules are only consistent in Thai script. Among other challenges, the Romanization is wildly inconsistent. You learn it one way, and then another source using different phonetics mires you in confusion. The same is probably also true of Korean, as it is also a phonetic language. Learning Chinese will likely be different.Second, I realized for me, I need to take notes. As adults we want to take notes to help remember key points. If you take the notes in English, you are handicapping yourself. Learn the alphabet and take notes in Thai. Again, I think this is true for phonetic languages like Korean, or even Hirigana and Katakana for Japanese. I doubt this is viable for Chinese.Third, again for me, I knew learning translation would create a permanent handicap. Early on, translation is easier, later on translation must be unlearned as it stilts actual conversation and thinking. You just can't translate fast enough. Even now, being fluent in Spanish, translating gives me a headache and frustrates me. I either have a conversation in Spanish, thinking in Spanish, or I have a conversation in English thinking in English. If I know a word in one language and not the other, my whole train of thought is derailed. Avoiding learning translation is where Rosetta Stone shines.I like the idea of Rosetta Stone. If you are disciplined and do the lessons, you will expand your spoken vocabulary rapidly. You will remember what you learn. I doubt it will do much for reading and writing with non-Roman scripts. Like any learning tool, disciplined study will yield results.Rosetta Stone is very expensive. Competing products like L-Lingo or products using different methods like Pimsleur, TellMeMore.com, Assimil, or Fluenz (supposedly the best, but only in a few languages) are a fraction of the cost of Rosetta Stone. Many of the different methods will work better for some people than others. Assimil is translation based. Pimsleur is hard to describe, but has a very good fluency success rate (supposedly). Look up Fluenz also, as the method and reviews suggest it is very effective in the few languages they offer.Besides cost, what is the other drawback to Rosetta Stone?The drawbacks are legion.Version 2 is good. Version 2 is how Rosetta Stone grew into a powerhouse. Version 3 is a refinement of version 2 with improved continuity, a smoother interface, better quizzes, and the ability to get rid of the stupid "must have CD with you at all times" limitation.The real problem is Rosetta Stone dropped support for version 2. Even though they were selling version 2 from their own website in 2012, they dropped support. Mac users are especially impacted as Mac OSX Lion will no longer run PPC apps, and Rosetta Stone never ported the Version 2 application to Intel. So, if you bought version 2 in 2012 to use on a Mac, you were ripped off by Rosetta Stone. Join the crowd.Windows users should not be too smug about the situation, as the end of Version 2 support means your product will have all sorts of issues too, unless you downgrade to WinXP.Version 3 (never made for Thai) does run on current platforms, and is at least somewhat supported (to the extent Rosetta Stone supports any product). Given so many users prefer version 3 to version 4 though, don't be surprised if they pull a Microsoft and force you to their new product nobody wants.Total 4e (not an option for Thai), is a horrible retrograde of Rosetta Stone. The pinnacle is by far version 3. To be fair, if you are always connected -- literally 100% of the time -- and live your life via social media, Total 4e might be effective. Don't expect to use the highly touted iOS apps on your iPhone or iPad though unless you are connected either. The whole idea of quickly practicing while in line or waiting in an office...yeah, that doesn't conform to the Rosetta Stone licensing model.Speaking of which, Rosetta Stone now has two components and two licensing models. There is the online social media part, and the software application. The first is now on a subscription basis. You pay for every month you learn. You can still use the app on your computer, but you just paid a premium for online access you aren't using. Therein lies the reason so many people look at Total 4e and then try to find version 3 before supplies run out.How about another suggestion?Try L-Lingo. L-Lingo uses a substantially identical learning model as Rosetta Stone. The interface actually has more features than Rosetta Stone and you can customize the interface to use Roman phonetics or native script. They have a Thai program. They have iPad and iPhone/IPod Touch iOS apps which you can use on a plane or anywhere else, with or without Internet access. Best of all, all of their programs together (Win or Mac desktop, iPad, iPhone/iPod Touch) for Thai are less than half the cost of Rosetta Stone Level I Thai.L-Lingo specializes in Asian languages. They are probably a superior option to Rosetta Stone Total 4e for most users. L-Lingo offers a free trial for their desktop application, and also for their iOS applicastions for some languages.There are other good options listed above, particularly Fluenz and Pimsleur. Be sure to check them out before buying anything made by Rosetta Stone.
M**D
Don't Waste you money on this one
If you can read this, then the software may work for you.ËÒ¡¤Ø³ÊÒÁÒöÍèÒ¹¹ÕéáÅéǫͿµìáÇÃì·ÕèÊÒÁÒö·Ó§Ò¹ÊÓËÃѺ¤Ø³.If you can not read the line above, then don't waste your hard earned money.The software is written in traditional Thai, with only a few english words in the whole thing. There was no way I could use this product.Many Thai language books offer something like this "Swadee-krab" Greating - HelloWhere this package would only say the words in THAI and present you with ËÒ¡¤Ø³ÊÒÁÒöAs a non-thai speaker or reader, how can I learn?
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