Dos mundos Student Edition with Online Learning Center Bind-in Passcode (McGraw-Hill World Languages) | 
enlarge | Authors: Tracy D Terrell, Magdalena Andrade, Jeanne Egasse, Elias Miguel Munoz Publisher: McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages Category: Book
Buy New: $90.82
New (18) Used (26) from $89.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 718
Media: Hardcover Edition: 6 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3 Dimensions (in): 10 x 8 x 1.1
ISBN: 0073046078 Dewey Decimal Number: 468.2421 EAN: 9780073046075 ASIN: 0073046078
Publication Date: June 28, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description Based on the Natural Approach, Dos mundos stresses the use of engaging activities and interesting readings in a natural and spontaneous classroom atmosphere. In this comprehension-based approach to learning language, the development of communicative language skills is the central goal, with formal grammar presentation and grammar practice at the service of communication. The text is designed so that class time can be devoted to exposing students to Spanish through creative activities and readings, allowing grammar explanations and exercises to be studied outside the classroom.
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| Customer Reviews:
One of the best text books July 24, 2008 This is a great book to learn from, the workbook is also very helpful. This is one of the few college text books that I refused to sell back.
Thumbs up! November 18, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I've been using Dos Mundos in my Spanish III class this fall and it's been a quite positive experience. I'm a former English teacher, and a long time psychologist, so I have some feel for the teaching/learning dynamic of a text. I'm finding DM to be intelligently written and organized, with many different kinds of activities that build on and integrate what you're learning. I like the way history, art, pop culture, geography, politics, music, literature, etc. are interspersed throughout DM. There's cartoons, color, and a reasonably unstilted, good-hearted consciousness in the book. For those of us used to American textbooks which have been reduced to squirmy blandness by pressure groups leaning on state textbook purchasing agencies, it's a bit refreshing to encounter occasional perspectives on economic and political injustice, environmental exploitation, etc. Not that this is a particularly political book, it's just that these things are usually soooooo sanitized. Some people have complained about the lack of an English to Spanish dictionary in this book. Face it---you need to buy a little dictionary to have when you're reading DM and learning Spanish. No added-on dictionary section is going to be complete enough to meet your needs. You'll only be wasting time using it, since half the time the word you're looking for won't be there anyway. You might as well go to the dictionary in the first place. To sum it up: I like this book and I'm in the process of reading the seven chapters which were previously covered in Spanish I and II, which I didn't take in this sequence.
A good book that did the job May 23, 2007 I needed this book for my spanish class and it provided me with the step by step instruction I needed.
Best text on the market for Spanish Instruction September 24, 2006 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
I teach college Spanish and I love this text. It is thoughtfully constructed and provides numerous activities for communication in the target language. Dos mundos also provides very useful ideas for instructors. The pages are colorful and the content engaging. My students love all the activities I use from this text. I wish more Spanish instructors would embrace the methodology presented in Dos mundos. My level one Spanish students actually speak Spanish (albeit low-level Spanish). I don't know if I would recommend this text for independent study, however. I believe it would be most effective if used in conjunction with a dynamic instructor. I do agree that the authors should include a separate English-Spanish dictionary section. I also find the video segments to be very poor (and why are they exactly the same as the ones for Puntos de partida when they both have such different approaches to language acquisition?)
pretty good February 24, 2006 11 out of 11 found this review helpful
this is not a bad spanish book. i don't know if i would say it is great. lots of group activities that are helpful, but they are pretty simple and repetitive. they need to be a little more thoughtful and put in lots of DIFFERENT activities. one last, quite frustrating thing, there is only a spanish-english dictionary in the back. extremely irritating because this is a spanish 1-2 book, and anytime you want to look up a word, you'll need to consult another dictionary.
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