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Muzzy Spanish for Beginners

(20 Posts)
Dingbatgirl Thu 12-Mar-09 09:38:27

My ds age 6 is learning Spanish at school, and he enjoys the language, he counts to 10, says hola and knows his colours. I have seen Muzzy recommended on TV. Has anyone got Muzzy, and is it any good?

Madsometimes Thu 12-Mar-09 10:35:16

We bought Muzzy, but we have not used it very much. We got it on DVD, but I found the sound quality quite poor. Some of the male voices were very deep, which was difficult for us to understand. I was quite disappointed. My dc are also learning Spanish at school, so we may go back to it.

notagrannyyet Thu 12-Mar-09 17:55:39

We had french dvd. Very poor sound quality. I wouldn't bother if I were you.

smartiejake Thu 12-Mar-09 18:40:17

We also had the French one. It is dire. Overpriced, old fashioned, boring. They lose interest very quickly then it stays in a drawer gathering dust until a primary school teacher who doesn't speak French is told she has to teach it to her year 3s... grin

Muzzy es una carga de basura!

Muzzy est une charge de déchets!

Muzzy ist eine Menge Müll!

Or Muzzy is a load of rubbish!

Bloody waste of money that I could have spent on shoes!

amidaiwish Thu 12-Mar-09 18:43:30

does anyone recommend any of the other systems? DD1 is always selecting the foreign language options on her Disney/Baby einstein etc. DVDs - french, spanish and sometimes chinese and dutch. odd ball she is!

We have muzzy and it scared the living daylights out of my 2.

They picked up more from Dora the explorer.

dd is 4 and ds is 2.

ladypinky Thu 12-Mar-09 21:28:38

www.skoldo.com/en/sitemap/default.asp I have tried the french one seems very good and cheap too

Dingbatgirl Thu 12-Mar-09 22:56:14

Thanks mumsnetters for your advice, it seems everyone has been disappointed by Muzzy. I would expect something really good for the money! Thanks for the link Ladypinky, that's really helpful. While I am here, can anybody also recommend a simple introduction to Spanish for adults, a book and CD set maybe? I am learning French, but it would be good to learn some Spanish along with ds.

dilemma456 Fri 13-Mar-09 13:14:09

Thank you for starting this thread, I've been thinking about Muzzy too but having read this I don't think I'll be bothering.

Off to ahve a look at Ladyinky's link.

CoteDAzur Fri 13-Mar-09 13:23:34

My experience learning languages is that it is not enough to hear. You also observe the face and especially the mouth of a native speaker to properly learn a language. (English is my second language, French is my third)

This is not possible when watching a furry gorilla.

Summersoon Fri 13-Mar-09 13:37:21

We didn't like Muzzy either.

We do like Rosetta Stone - expensive but works for our 11-year old. It is a very clever software which uses voice recognition. It is easy to manage for an 11 year old, but the logistics of it might be too much for a six-year old. Content would fine for a young child. Lots of pictures and speaking.

Suggest you try and listen to a demo to see whether you like it - and if it doesn't suit your child now, it might do so in a couple of years. Meanwhile, I would ditch Muzzy!

loobyloos Thu 23-Apr-09 17:06:08

I recently bought Muzzy and yes it is a little old fashioned, but I hardly think that a 3 year old would think that! The sound is not particularly clear,and it is quite expensive.
I speak Spanish and my son's father is South American so he doesn't have to rely on it to learn the language. However, I have watched all of it and think it is a good way for children to learn the basics. (Alphabet, days of the week, numbers, months and alot more. Somebody mentioned that the male voices are very deep and difficult to understand .... that's how alot of them speak! What's the point of learning an unrealistic accent?
Although it's quite expensive, the recent dvds have 4 languages on them, so I think it would be helpful in the future if my son or I wanted to learn Italian/German or French instead.
I'd say give it a go.

Jianning Sun 26-Apr-09 07:34:30

I bought the Chinese one for the kids - sound quality was rubbish and they just wanted to watch the English version. Waste of (a lot of ££). Will I never learn? Also too disorganised to return during 'no qs asked' return period so only myself to blame for this colossal waste of ££. Ever time I see the damn thing I feel guilty - could have had a holiday instead.

hellywobs Wed 06-May-09 18:29:05

If you do buy Muzzy, get it second-hand. It may be ok for your child (my son likes it) but it's too expensive and I paid full price for it like a mug. Maybe even be cheeky and post on your local freecycle site - you never know, someone might even give it to you!

basementbear Wed 06-May-09 18:31:19

Definitely a waste of money - mine got bored of it before they learned anything and the characters all have sill voices so it is quite hard to understand I found. Totally agree with hellywobs!

hellywobs Wed 06-May-09 18:32:12

My son liked the CD and we listened to it in the car. But you can't buy it on its own.

BarkisIsWilling Sat 23-Jan-10 18:47:15

thinking of getting Rosetta Stone, personally...

what do you think?

Tinuviel Sun 24-Jan-10 13:34:46

I have friends who use Rosetta Stone and find it brilliant. We can't afford it sad. For a cheap way of learning French or Spanish, I found Skoldo (recommended by a PP) excellent. We used the Elementary book for both and I've seen the Book 1 French, which is fine (but very similar to the Elementary book. I wouldn't recommend Book 2 at all - it's too muddled and is, at best, a random collection of worksheets. Sadly they only do the Elementary book in Spanish.

BarkisIsWilling Sun 24-Jan-10 15:14:11

Thanks for that, Tinuviel. They are doing some offers and I might take them up on them.

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