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Learn
Arabic Abroad
Travelling
to Arabic speaking countries to learn Arabic abroad can be
an exciting, adventurous, and an immensely rewarding and
beneficial experience. Alternatively, it can be a complete disaster.
As
Shakespeare put it, 'The readiness is all.' If you're going to
benefit from your time in an Arabic speaking country, you need to be
prepared linguistically, and know a little about the country you're
travelling to.
If
you haven't spent learning basic
Arabic grammar before going, you will simply be wasting your time
as you're taught, very slowly and inefficiently, what you could have
learnt
in the comfort of your own home in a fraction of the time.
The
fact is, Arabic schools and institutes are generally not that good at
teaching Arabic to complete beginners. For one thing, they almost all
use Immersion Textbooks (see the article How
to Study Arabic in the
Section About Arabic).
Secondly, they are attended by students from all over the world, who in
many cases haven't been fortunate enough to have had the level of
education offered in the West. The pace of the classroom can
therefore be grindingly slow.
The main benefit to be
derived from
studying at an Arabic school is the exposure you will gain to
spoken Arabic, the opportunity to practice your own spoken Arabic with
teachers and other students, and perhaps to formally study some Arabic
texts. This is only possible if you've taken some time to study Arabic
at home, before engaging in the much more difficult task of trying to
learn Arabic abroad (see our online courses in the Section
Arabic Courses).
You
also need to know a little bit about the Arabic speaking country you
want to study in, such as accommodation information, political
situation, visa requirements etc. These particular details can change
very quickly, so it's best to try and get in touch with someone
currently
studying in the Arabic speaking country you wish to travel to.
Below,
we have provided links and reviews to Arabic schools and
institutions which offer Arabic courses to foreigners. To repeat, the
advice given here is predicated on your already having
done as much as you can in you own time, before travelling.

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