Biblical Hebrew Vocabulary Guide Taps Ancient Methods of MemorizationBased on ancient memory aids, or "mnemonics," this proven Hebrew vocabulary guide teaches over 500 Hebrew words without using rote memory. This method of memorization engages the students imagination, resulting in deep encoding for rapid recall.
By: Kasfeldt Enterprises The expanded and revised edition of "Biblical Hebrew: Vocabulary made Easy!" has been proven a successful pedagogical method of rapid acquisition of Biblical Hebrew vocabulary. This guide has been shown to help students who struggle with the difficult task of memorizing Biblical Hebrew vocabulary effectively. By means of eliminating rote memory, Hebrew vocabulary is learned by focusing attention through visualization and aural memory "cues." The result is rapid learning that is retained long-term because the aural sub-vocalization of the Hebrew words work to prompt the memory whenever Hebrew words are read (sub-vocalized) By means of this method, students have learned over a dozen Hebrew vocabulary words in only minutes. With a minimum of effort and time, over 500 Hebrew words can be learned by heart in 28 days. Unlike all other Hebrew vocabulary guides, "Biblical Hebrew: Vocabulary Made Easy!" also gives students and teachers resources to overcome the difficulty of Hebrew words that sound-alike, "homophones," This guide will provide both students and teachers a long-term reference, learning aid and teaching tool to minimize the frustration of learning Biblical Hebrew vocabulary. Biblical Hebrew: Vocabulary Made Easy! is a welcomed help for any Classical Hebrew student, seminarian, pastor or Hebrew language student. As an additional help for students, a "flash card" version of "Biblical Hebrew: Vocabulary Made Easy!" has been released for all e-readers to take learning Hebrew vocabulary on the go. # # # Blair W. Kasfeldt is a freelance writer, author and copywriter. Specializing in Christian theology and memory helps, or "mnemonics." Photos: https://www.prlog.org/ https://www.prlog.org/ https://www.prlog.org/ End
Page Updated Last on: Dec 20, 2011
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