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Polish teacher required in Warsaw! (Need to stop being lazy)
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simon_porter00



Joined: 09 Nov 2005
Posts: 505
Location: Warsaw, Poland

PostPosted: Tue May 05, 2009 4:31 am    Post subject: Polish teacher required in Warsaw! (Need to stop being lazy) Reply with quote

Hello,
After living in Poland for 4 years and being married for almost 1 year, I suddenly am beginning to feel the shame of not being able to communicate other than to say the basics. I guess I'm around B1 on the CEF scale and I've been there for donkey's years. I've got ALL the resources promising myself that THIS next book/set of flash cards/whatever will be the thing that motivates me, but its appeal turns out to be limited.

So, before I throw myself on the mercy of gumtree, does anyone know, or can anyone recommend a Polish teacher who can invoice in the Warsaw area?

Ta kindly.
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justflyingin



Joined: 30 Apr 2009
Posts: 100

PostPosted: Tue May 05, 2009 3:39 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

There's a language school here in Jozefow that would be glad to get you a Polish teacher. They will also give you an invoice. Smile www.platon.edu.pl

Unfortunately my Polish teacher now lives in the town of Wisla. If she still lived here, I'd recommend her.
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Scawie



Joined: 24 Apr 2006
Posts: 44

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 11:01 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'd recommend going on a course, see what your local uni has to offer. I went on one at Uniwersitet Śląski in Katowice and enjoyed learning in a group (the size varied from 2 to 8 students depending on who showed up, class transfers etc.). As long as the groups are small enough for you to get some individual attention, I think it's a much more interesting way of learning. Oh, and it's probably much cheaper too.
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dynow



Joined: 07 Nov 2006
Posts: 1080

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 11:31 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

i disagree.

i'd never pay to go to a polish course of 6-8 students, especially at a beginner to advanced beginner level. the teacher is going to spend 90% of the time correcting students' case endings and before you know it, the class is over.

i've been looking into taking a polish course this summer as well and if possible i'm going to get a 1 to 1. i'm pre-intermediate i'd say, have good control of most cases, i am communicative, but my vocabulary is limited. if i was sitting in on a large class that struggled with case endings (which nearly everybody will) i would get nothing out of the class besides a constant reminder that polish grammar was designed somewhere adjacent to hell.

if you got the dough mr. porter, i'd do private lessons. it's going to be difficult to find others that are at your level because 99% of all polish learners are bare bones beginners, and 99% of all bare bones beginners stop coming to class when they find out how difficult the language is. i've seen it first hand time and time again at my school over the past 2+ years.

good luck.
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hrvatski



Joined: 16 Nov 2008
Posts: 270

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 12:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I never could bring myself to pay for lessons when I'm surrounded by potential teachers. When I was learning I got through the grammar books, read my favourite authors in Polish, watched TV and talked to Poles / noted down questions to ask Poles who could give me reliable answers (teachers at school usually). No i proszę, polski za friko.
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maniak



Joined: 06 Feb 2008
Posts: 194

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 12:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I know it doesnt work as well as with English, but hows your immersion? Do you read, watch tv, hang out with Poles and try to only use polish?
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Scawie



Joined: 24 Apr 2006
Posts: 44

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 2:35 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

dynow wrote:
i disagree.

i'd never pay to go to a polish course of 6-8 students, especially at a beginner to advanced beginner level. the teacher is going to spend 90% of the time correcting students' case endings and before you know it, the class is over.

i've been looking into taking a polish course this summer as well and if possible i'm going to get a 1 to 1. i'm pre-intermediate i'd say, have good control of most cases, i am communicative, but my vocabulary is limited. if i was sitting in on a large class that struggled with case endings (which nearly everybody will) i would get nothing out of the class besides a constant reminder that polish grammar was designed somewhere adjacent to hell.

if you got the dough mr. porter, i'd do private lessons. it's going to be difficult to find others that are at your level because 99% of all polish learners are bare bones beginners, and 99% of all bare bones beginners stop coming to class when they find out how difficult the language is. i've seen it first hand time and time again at my school over the past 2+ years.

good luck.

A B1 class will be quite communicative, and not struggling with case endings (other than the odd mistake of course). Certainly no bare bones beginners. It's only one step below FCE equivalent (B2).
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dynow



Joined: 07 Nov 2006
Posts: 1080

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 4:38 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

i looked into a course recently, it was ranked "pre-intermediate"........B1? it was a reputable Polish school in Wroclaw. when i asked about what course book they use, it ended up being the same book my school uses to teach their polish students.......a book I finished a year and a half ago. i finished this book and have almost finished the second edition, and I can honestly say that when I think of past English FCE students of mine, they were WAY ahead of what I'm capable of producing, and understanding, in Polish.

Mr. Porter ranks himself as B1, and also says that he is not able to communicate beyond saying the basics. Is that a step below FCE level? I don't know, maybe it's me that doesn't understand rankings and proficiency levels well.

in a perfect world, the school would tell you that the class will be comprised of pre-FCE level students, but of all the students I've seen go through my school trying to learn polish, those that stuck with it never achieved anything more than basic nouns, basic verbs, and when sitting in on a polish conversation, they're completely lost. and that's not FCE, or anywhere near it.

for your sake Mr. Porter, I hope you find yourself a good course, or a good private teacher. Out of curiosity, you've been with a Polish girl for a long time......have you ever tried studying with her?
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Glenlivet



Joined: 21 Mar 2009
Posts: 179
Location: Poland

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 4:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

dynow wrote:


for your sake Mr. Porter, I hope you find yourself a good course, or a good private teacher. Out of curiosity, you've been with a Polish girl for a long time......have you ever tried studying with her?


I was wondering this. Why not designate 2 or 3 days a week as Polish only at home?
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simon_porter00



Joined: 09 Nov 2005
Posts: 505
Location: Warsaw, Poland

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 7:38 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Did type a lengthy response, but the pc binned it, so I shall summarise:

For reasons I don't want to go into, learning at home with the wife and wife's family doesn't work.

I believe that in order to learn there must be professional distance between student and teacher.

A teacher who can be like a sergeant major would be great as I need motivating and generally my arse kicking. That's not to say I'm not motivated generally, I did the Nike fun run achieving my goals by only training very hard for one month and I'm going full steam ahead on a business line that I hope will be very profitable. But, for some reason, although I have a library of resources I can't follow through on any motivation I develop to learn the language, therefore I need some expert outside assistance.

Yes, I know people may judge but quite frankly I can admit I can't do it by myself and as has been mentioned before on this forum just by being in Poland for a length of time doesn't automatically mean you'll take up the language.

I did a year course in Krakow a few years ago, but that turned into a one year drinking holiday, so I need this to be individual tuition - that way I can't hide.
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spiral78



Joined: 05 Apr 2004
Posts: 11534
Location: On a Short Leash

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 7:55 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have to agree that the significant other can't necessarily be very useful. Mine has such great English that I was NEVER going to learn Czech...

(yeah, not Polish, but close enough - in fact, technically harder Evil or Very Mad Believe it or not - statistically true).

I found studying with a small group quite useful (who wants to be the dunce of the class?) and, best of all, spending many months on my own in a small town where no one speaks English. When you've got to do daily stuff...you learn. I'm about B2+/- these days...minus on the writing, + on the spoken communication. Yeah, I need a good grammar course and some vocab expansion, but now I'm lazy because I can do everything from buying a flat to getting insurance and citizenship in Czech...who cares if all the words and their endings are exact??

Well, actually I do care...but haven't had the time to do much about it to date.
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dynow



Joined: 07 Nov 2006
Posts: 1080

PostPosted: Thu May 07, 2009 9:05 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
(yeah, not Polish, but close enough - in fact, technically harder Believe it or not - statistically true).


yeah, and we've all been waiting for those promised statistics for months...... Wink
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dynow



Joined: 07 Nov 2006
Posts: 1080

PostPosted: Thu May 07, 2009 10:31 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
I believe that in order to learn there must be professional distance between student and teacher.


absolutely, Mr. Porter. i speak polish with my girlfriend every night, but when it comes to learning more, asking questions, expanding on something.....it simply doesn't work and all too often turns into an argument.

when i speak to her friends, i can immediately feel the difference and I learn new words and sentence structures naturally.
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Blasphemer



Joined: 03 Dec 2008
Posts: 199
Location: NYC/Warszawa

PostPosted: Sat May 09, 2009 8:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

yea... I must agree, significant others.... bad choice. Dynow, yer not alone... any attempt at trying to teach my wife Polish, usually turns into an argument... I don't even know why to be quite honest.
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dynow



Joined: 07 Nov 2006
Posts: 1080

PostPosted: Sun May 10, 2009 7:28 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Dynow, yer not alone... any attempt at trying to teach my wife Polish, usually turns into an argument... I don't even know why to be quite honest.


for the most part, I know "why", and I think i can speak for some others as well on this one. the answer is not a complicated one. especially for someone that has studied other languages before studying Polish, it can be especially frustrating, because chances are, the other language(s) the person has studied were WAY easier than Polish and so Polish not only seems unreasonably difficult, but it's extreme difficulty is unexpected.

i studied Spanish in high school and a few semesters in college, and if i fell asleep for half the class, i'd still learn. spanish, along with all the romance languages, are a piece of cake to learn and can absolutely be learned by immersion. as pointed out on this thread already, Polish simply can't be learned this way, i.e., the several people on this forum who have been here for 3 years, 5 years, 8 years........and are still beginner level speakers. someone that has been speaking Polish since birth has no way of feeling these troubles with the language.

Polish is not impossible to learn, but it takes a heck of a lot of effort and determination because you have to learn every step of the way by the sweat of your brow, not just through passive absorption through time, and this is extremely frustrating.

Not only is it going to be more difficult for your wife to live outside of America, let alone Poland, but the constant language barrier that will surely be there for years to come adds to the tension and this = arguments.

just think of it this way......spending month after month, year after year trying to speak a language and after all that time, you still have to listen to your spouse correcting you by saying, "well, it's kogo/co......it's komu/czemu........you need miescownik here........" and so on and so forth.

learning polish feels like learning to walk again, only this time with lots of exercises and training sessions that seem completely useless just to simply get you on your feet to start walking by yourself.

if you brought your wife to any other country in europe west of Poland, she'd be speaking decently in a year's time, and well in two years with minimal effort. yet again, why your wife may get sick of hearing you say, "well, it's because it's a different case......"

just trying to paint the picture for you.
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