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The 13-digit and 10-digit formats both work. Please try again.Please try again.Please try again. All series’ volumes have been developed in accordance with performance-based principles and methodology?contextualization, learner-centeredness, use of authentic materials, usage-orientedness, balance between skill getting and skill using, and integration of speaking, listening, reading, writing, and culture. Grammar points are systematically introduced in simple but adequate explanations and abundant examples and exercises. In response to comments from hundreds of students and instructors of the first edition, this new edition features a more attractive two-color design with all new photos and drawings and an additional lesson and vocabulary exercises. Lessons are now organized into two main sections, each containing a conversational text (with its own vocabulary list) and a reading passage. The accompanying workbook, newly written, provides students with extensive skill-using activities based on the skills learned in the main text. Audio files for this volume may be downloaded on the web in MP3 format at A set of CDs is also available for purchase. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Register a free business account Carol Schulz is senior lecturer in the Korean Language Program, Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia University. Sung-Ock Sohn is professor of Korean language at the University of California, Los Angeles.Full content visible, double tap to read brief content. Videos Help others learn more about this product by uploading a video. Upload video To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness. Please try again later. Mikael 5.
0 out of 5 stars Absolutely easy to work with with just the book. I learned so much Korean within two hours of just practice on my own. Since this is an INTEGRATED book, it does have a bit of a prerequisite of knowing some Korean. It briefly covers Hangul in the preface, but I suggest you learn Hangul before jumping into this book. It doesn't use the bs romanization. This is my forth self-taught language. So please understand that I know what I'm saying haha. ???!You’ll have a solid foundation of Korean grammar understanding by the end of this book. I recommend this book to anyone who is serious about learning Korean. The price is also very cheap for what you get out of this book, compared to similar college textbooks. I recommend talking to a native Korean either in person or through an exchange app like HelloTalk to compensate for this. You might even learn something new in the process. Finally, there are indeed exercises in the book to do with a partner. You can either skip these, or use an app, like previously stated. You’ll still learn a lot!I struggled with teaching myself Korean for about 10 months with other books and programs until I took a friends advice to just purchase these same college textbooks she used for Korean and learn right from the books. I wish I had done it sooner. The University of Hawaii has really impressed me with their set of Korean language books. The vocabulary and grammar are introduced and explained so clearly I rarely ever had to pick up my dictionary (though the grammar was a little more difficult to grasp than the vocab I still managed). Though I don't recommend using the textbooks alone for self-study I can say if you're going to take that route, start speaking from the very minute you open these books.
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I made the mistake of not asking around my friends (who speak Korean) to practice with me because now I've gone into the Intermediate levels without having any speaking practice, all I can do is read and translate (fairly well, but I would probably be much better if I could verbally speak it fluidly as well) so I'm still struggling but its not too bad. The lessons may seem a little cheesy but I think they are put together so well I really honestly had fun learning from these books at my own pace. Its definitely worth a try. I really not only love how each lesson is organized but also the Appendix has all the listed grammar rules throughout the book making it really easy to find if you forget them. All in all Integrated Korean is a wonderful set of books to purchase and 100 worth every penny in my opinion regardless of whether you're purchasing them for an actual Korean course or just teaching yourself!Intermediate 1 was way too hard for me so I went back with Beginner 1. These are really well made books - I've looked at others and these are just more comprehensive. However, they are difficult for non-native Korean speakers. I didn't like other types of books because I felt they were too basic. That being said, I don't think Beginner 1 is really for beginners, I think that you need to know your alphabet and get your basic reading ahead of time. I'm only doing this on my own, not as part of a curriculum, so someone that really is starting out with learning wouldn't be able to get through with these books because it would be too difficult. I also didn't get the accompanying workbooks, but upon searching the internet for some pictures of the workbook pages - I think that they might help in addition to the textbook, but I don't think I'll be getting them.
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I am so horribly disgusted with the quality of the kindle e-book that I would like a refund, I cannot due the homework my instructor assigns due to the lack of pages and even if I could the quality of the text is so terrible that I'd still request a refund in order to purchase the paper-back edition (Which is very, very nice)I'm on the endeavor of learning Korean, and this has definitely been of great help to me. More than practice, these books have actually guided me through the process of teaching myself Korean. I do admit that it leaves you with a bit of a disadvantage with regards to the answer keys and the fact that they are more or less designed to be used as part of classroom material, not individual study. Sometimes you'd appreciate the answers as an example or a confirmation that you're understanding things well. Other than that, I really love these books and plan on getting the whole set. The color schemes are simple, the order and explanations are easy to digest, the vocabulary is appropriate per lesson and it has a lot of activities you can do to practice almost instantly after learning something new. If anyone wants to begin learning Korean, this is definitely a recommendation!I used it to study with a tutor and that significantly helped me understand the grammar concepts inside a lot better. However if you're someone who can pick things up quickly, (I'm quite slow when it comes to understanding), then may it will be okay for you. The book is split up into chapters that have 1 to 2 grammar concepts and they centre your learning of them around a broad topic for example: asking for directions, meeting up with friends, talking about your family. And since they centre the grammar learning on topics, the vocabulary box you get for each chapter is related to that. For example: school would have vocab such as notebook, classroom, teacher and so on.
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I do find it useful that they have one box to show you all you will come across in the chapter and the book does have mini exercises for you to practice. Although if you really want to concrete what you learnt then I'd recommend purchasing the workbook too since it helped me a lot. It's a thorough book and laid out very nicely, including culture along the way. The explanations are okay but I personally think they could have been worded in a much simpler way, so that would be a negative. And also there are no answers- hence why it might be better to have this book if you know someone who can check to see you're correct.Except in the introduction, no romanisation is used, forcing you to practice reading Hangeul, and there are quite a few exercises to complete to make the learning process interactive rather than just reading a list of rules. However, as other reviewers have mentioned, this textbook is clearly aimed at students taking courses at school or university, which is apparent in the lack of CD (the audio files are available online, but how much would it have cost them to include them on a CD), the lack of an answer key, and the fact that a good number of the end-of-chapter exercises are classroom activities. So, for what it is it is excellent, but with a bit of tweaking with self-study customers in mind, it would be perfect.This textbook (with the workbook) is AMAZING. I can read the Korean alphabet which helps me comprehend Korean words (may not understand as much). Very informative however, neither of them have answers to the activities which is probably the only disadvantage.It also uses the McRune-Reischauer romanization, wich is no longer used, but is not a big problem if you take your time to look for the Revised version. It arrived on time and in perfect conditions:). Grammar points are systematically introduced in simple but adequate explanations and abundant examples and exercises.
Digital options and audio are available for most Integrated Korean volumes. These files may be downloaded at. It contains nearly 1,000 activities on 160 of the most commonly used grammar patterns for beginning and intermediate levels, all sorted by alphabetical order, as well as topics for comprehensive grammar instruction using an interactive approach. Nearly 40 practical activities and lesson ideas for advanced levels are also included. These activities are sorted by skill orientation (e.g., speaking-oriented, reading-oriented, etc.), which will allow them to be used with any Korean-language textbook published in the U.S., Korea, or elsewhere. These lessons reflect the current trend among Korean-language learners in U.S. universities, where, traditionally, primary learners were students of Korean heritage. In recent years, the number of non-heritage learners has increased and thus, to meet their needs, activities with different degrees of difficulty are provided for each grammar pattern and topic enabling instructors to select those most suitable to their students’ needs. The first part includes greetings and Hangul, sentence endings, clausal endings, other suffixes, particles, and more. Supplementary instructional materials such as Power Point presentations, video clips, photos and images, and sample quizzes are available free for download at www.kleartextbook.com under the Instructor section after a simple login. An introductory chapter provides the framework of the volume, defining language, culture, and society and their interrelatedness and presenting an overview of the Korean language vis-a-vis its culture and society from evolutionary and dynamic perspectives. North Korea’s “cultured language,” and Korean in contact with Chinese and Japanese.
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Several topics representative of Korean socio-cultural vocabulary (sound symbolic words, proverbs, calendar-related terms, kinship terms, slang expressions) are discussed, followed by a consideration of Korean honorifics and other related issues. Two chapters on Korean media, one on advertisements and the other a comparative analysis of television ads in Korea, Japan, and the U.S., follow. Finally, contributors look at salient features of the language, narrative structure, and dialectal variation. All chapters are accompanied by a set of student questions and a useful bibliography. A beginning level of proficiency in Korean is sufficient to digest the Korean examples with facility, making this volume accessible to a wide range of students. It offers the student a wide range of literary writing, including three different genres of poetry, short stories, and essays. Each piece is accompanied by a vocabulary glossary and notes, explanations of socio-cultural details, an introduction to the author, and a translation. The textbook is distinguished by a variety of exercises designed to enhance students’ proficiency in referential reading, writing, and comprehension skills. It is designed for use by students who have completed the fourth-year level in Korean (approximately five hundred class hours) or the equivalent. Overall, special effort has been made to render the volume learner-centered and learner-friendly. More than five hundred characters are targeted in exercises that aid in the efficient study of the forms, meanings, and sounds of individual characters and their compounds. Although the primary goal of the Reader is recognition of basic Chinese characters, students are encouraged to learn to write them properly by inclusion of a section on stroke order. The Reader is also designed to reinforce skills in reading and writing in Korean while studying Chinese characters.
The lessons are organized into seven parts: new characters, reading text, glossary, notes, new words in characters, more words in characters, and exercises. After every fifth lesson, there is a section reviewing all the characters introduced in the preceding five lessons. The Essential Composition section contains chapters concerned with the writing of essays, diaries and letters, document preparation, and expository writing. The Advanced Composition section considers descriptions of impressions, writing poetry, newspaper accounts, writing articles and theses, and summarizing. Each chapter consists of numerous units designed to cover words, phrases, idioms, and grammatical patterns (with sentence examples). Exercises and a model writing example are included in each unit. English translations of model writings, an index of useful grammatical patterns, and an English-Korean glossary are provided at the end of the text. For students using the Integrated Korean series, this text is recommended for use after the completion of Advanced Intermediate 2. Contact Us When ordering or registering on our site, as appropriate, you may be asked to enter your: name, e-mail address, mailing 0address, phone number or credit card information. You may, however, visit our site anonymously. Website log files collect information on all requests for pages and files on this website's web servers. Log files do not capture personal information but do capture the user's IP address, which is automatically recognized by our web servers. This information is used to ensure our website is operating properly, to uncover or investigate any errors, and is deleted within 72 hours. University of Hawai?i Press will make no attempt to track or identify individual users, except where there is a reasonable suspicion that unauthorized access to systems is being attempted.
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You can see a full list of the cookies we set on our cookie policy page. These cookies are only set once you’ve opted in through our cookie consent widget. We may also release your personally identifiable information to those persons to whom disclosure is required to comply with the law, enforce our site policies, or protect ours or others’ rights, property, or safety. However, non-personally identifiable visitor information may be provided to other parties for marketing, advertising, or other uses. We therefore will not distribute your personal information to outside parties without your consent. Our website, products and services are all directed to people who are at least 13 years old or older. This policy is effective as of May 25th, 2018. Groups Discussions Quotes Ask the Author All series' volumes have been developed in accordance with performance-based principles and methodology--contextualization, learner-centeredness, use of authentic materials, usag All series' volumes have been developed in accordance with performance-based principles and methodology--contextualization, learner-centeredness, use of authentic materials, usage-orientedness, balance between skill getting and skill using, and integration of speaking, listening, reading, writing, and culture. Grammar points are systematically introduced in simple but adequate explanations and abundant examples and exercises. In response to comments from hundreds of students and instructors of the first edition, this new edition features a more attractive two-color design with all new photos and drawings and an additional lesson and vocabulary exercises. Lessons are now organized into two main sections, each containing a conversational text (with its own vocabulary list) and a reading passage. The accompanying workbook, newly written, provides students with extensive skill-using activities based on the skills learned in the main text.
To see what your friends thought of this book,Don't be deterred by the fact that some of the grammar lessons are extremely short, this is actually a good thing. Integrated Korean explained verb conjugation in 2 lines, but did a much better job at it than any of my o Don't be deterred by the fact that some of the grammar lessons are extremely short, this is actually a good thing. Integrated Korean explained verb conjugation in 2 lines, but did a much better job at it than any of my other textbooks. Each chapter also has reading passages to help introduce you to the grammar points that will be covered in the chapter. I really appreciated it because as someone who's not quite a beginner, it allowed me to filter out the sections I didn't need. I only have two complaints: 1) The book doesn't have enough practice exercises. I know that the authors want us to purchase the workbook as well, but I haven't been able to find an affordable copy. It's pretty difficult to find Korean worksheets online, so the only way to practice is to write and then get feedback from native speakers. 2) The lack of audio files. This is pretty disappointing because listening is very critical for both comprehension and to help improve pronunciation. It's useless for that purpose. It was then the textbook for a Korean class I started. Unfortunately, it is really a university level intensive textbook and isn't suitable for an evening class hobby learner so I had to top up a lot of the learning with YouTube videos and Korean From Zero. It's really not a good book. It's useless for that purpose. It was then the textbook for a Korean class I started. Unfortunately, it is really a university level intensive textbook and isn't suitable for an evening class hobby learner so I had to top up a lot of the learning with YouTube videos and Korean From Zero. It's really not a good book.
It has 8 units and each unit has 2 conversations, a narration, usage example of the lessons learned in the unit, and a piece on Korean culture snipplet. The audio files are provided in KLEAR website. The Grammar Points and Vocabulary I have no complain against the grammar taught in this book. At my beginner level, I'd just welcome any points taught and be happy to be able to create more simple sentences throughout the lessons. Since it's a college te It has 8 units and each unit has 2 conversations, a narration, usage example of the lessons learned in the unit, and a piece on Korean culture snipplet. The audio files are provided in KLEAR website. The Grammar Points and Vocabulary I have no complain against the grammar taught in this book. At my beginner level, I'd just welcome any points taught and be happy to be able to create more simple sentences throughout the lessons. Since it's a college textbook, the vocabulary revolves around campus life and it's perfectly ok with me. I love it that they only use romanization at some parts in the introduction. I'm not a big fan of romanization. It surely helps at certain point, like when the first time learning ??, or when we communicate with those who are not learning Korean (btw, ?? is Hangul, the Korean writing system), or when the tools are not capable for writing in ??. For Korean learning textbooks and dictionary, I prefer romanization served at minimum or almost zero rate. That's why I prefer Collin's gem dictionary instead of Berlitz. Thanks to Febry, the dictionary is on the way, yay. The Exercises The book does not have the answer key and I read that even the workbook of this KLEAR series don't have the answer key provided. The exercises tend to be short in number and some are only applicable in a classroom or with partners (not quite suitable for a self learner like me). Despite all that, I'm grateful to have those exercises.
Other Parts I love the introduction, the objectives list, and the closing part of the book. My favorite part of the introduction is the pronunciation rules. It's the part where I always keep running to whenever I hear different from the sound I am expecting to catch on my ears. I mark this part with post-it. The objectives list provide us the summary of each unit, which grammar points at which part, what culture snipplet and what kind of usage. Needless to say, it's one helpful list for ? reference. As the new grammar rules come, I use this list a lot. The last few pages in this book consist of appendices, grammar index, and the glossary. More references which if I knew about it sooner, it would make my studying time more efficient. I even left out the glossary until I reached Unit 8, the last unit.Which makes me think that The University of Hawaii has no intentions of ever making one available. In that regard if you are a self learner like myself I don't think the hefty price tag of this book and is accompanying workbook are worth it. However, if you can buy it used or at a discount then get it. The vocab is useful as are the Narrations and Dialogues. On the website you can listen to the Dialogues and the Vocab for each Which makes me think that The University of Hawaii has no intentions of ever making one available. In that regard if you are a self learner like myself I don't think the hefty price tag of this book and is accompanying workbook are worth it. However, if you can buy it used or at a discount then get it. The vocab is useful as are the Narrations and Dialogues. On the website you can listen to the Dialogues and the Vocab for each chapter as well. The Grammar explanations are in English and short and to the point. I will be getting the Integrated Korean Beginning 2 but it will be a textbook rental and I will not be getting the Work books which run up to 30 dollars and are useless for self learners.
Excellent grammar lessons and outstanding online support with audio tracks to listen to the dialogue, narration and vocabulary. Some minor frustrations; occasionally new vocabulary is introduced in the exercises that is not listed in the new vocabulary section and some of those words are notably absent from the dictionary. It would also be helpful if the dictionary was cross-referenced to the lessons where the words were introduce Excellent grammar lessons and outstanding online support with audio tracks to listen to the dialogue, narration and vocabulary. Some minor frustrations; occasionally new vocabulary is introduced in the exercises that is not listed in the new vocabulary section and some of those words are notably absent from the dictionary. It would also be helpful if the dictionary was cross-referenced to the lessons where the words were introduced. All that said, this text is well structured and thought out. The lessons are well organized and include dialogues, vocabulary, grammar points, exercises, culture information, and narrations. It can be used simultaneously with the corresponding workbook and audio is provided of the KLEAR Textbook website. The downside, is that there are no answers provided for self-learners, so it might help to have some Korean speaking friends or an online source that can help you check your answers. There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Needless to say, this is due mainly to the near-miraculous development of the Korean economy, the marked increase in the overseas Korean population, and the firm commitment and sincere efforts of the Korean government and relevant Korean organizations to globalize Korean studies and the Korean language and culture.
The learning of Korean has thus been greatly promoted as the Korean language is the foundation on which all areas of Korean studies are built: Korean is the means by which non-Koreans conduct cross-cultural communication with Koreans; and Korean is the basis through which overseas Koreans maintain their national heritage, identity and pride. The key to these vital needs is the effective teaching of KFL supplemented with superior textbooks and other teaching or learning aids. The three linguistics faculty members of the Department regularly offer courses and seminars in the following areas. Goto Class Through the contextually rich texts of the dramas, and through frequent discussions sessions, this course will also offer an opportunity to increase students’ awareness about Korean culture, a crucial element in advancing their proficiency. Adapting interactive multimedia programs and elaborate online instructional designs, including various modes of language learning (listening, listening, writing and reading), this course will assist and motivate students to obtain the two main objectives mentioned above: increasing Korean language proficiency and gaining valuable cultural awareness. Teacher: Eunsun You KOR 452: Structure of Korean I I - Syntax - Sp2021 KOR 452 is the second half of The Structure of Korean, to complement KOR 451 offered in the Fall semesters. This course introduces various aspects of the Korean language, focusing on its uniqueness in light of general linguistics. The course begins with a brief introduction to the language structure in general and proceeds to more extensive overviews of the Korean language in the following areas: sentence types, embedded clauses, case marking, modality and tense-aspect, passive and causative constructions, negation, adverbial constructions, honorifics and politeness strategies, etc.