I
want
to
learn
Spanish
in
Central
and
South
America.
Any
advice?
There’s
no
shortage
of
language
schools
in
big
Latin
America
cities
and
popular
tourist
destinations,
says
Eliot
Greenspan,
a
veteran
travel
writer
who
has
penned
guidebooks
for
Frommer’s
on
Guatemala,
Ecuador
and
Costa
Rica
(frommers.com).
Most
involve
immersion
programs
that
combine
classroom
work
with
outings
to
cafés
and
museums,
and
many
offer
the
camaraderie
and
intimacy
of
small-group
learning.
(Which,
he
says,
are
preferable
over
one-on-one
classes.
Also,
this
way
you’re
not
forced
to
sing
solo,
as I
was
in
Italian
school,
as
you
chop
your
way
through
old
popular
tunes.)
So
it
comes
down,
as
so
much
travel
planning
does,
to
where
you
really
want
to
go.
What
destination
is
on
your
dream
list?
Ideally,
you
can
stay
long
enough
–
two
weeks?
A
month?
– to
let
the
language
settle
in.
In
Ecuador,
for
instance,
consider
Cuenca,
Greenspan
says.
“It’s
a
beautiful
small
city,
with
great
architecture,
a
couple
of
good
museums,
several
excellent
restaurants,
and
a
vibrant
college
and
expatriate
scene.”
And,
he
says,
“In
Cuenca,
you
can’t
go
wrong
with
Simon
Bolivar
Spanish
School
[bolivar2.com]
or
Nexus
[nexus.edu.ec].”
If
you’re
considering
Central
America,
Antigua
in
Guatemala
is
“a
fabulous
city
– a
living
museum,
with
loads
of
things
to
see
and
do,
and
dozens,
if
not
more,
language
schools.”
Here,
check
out
Spanish
school
San
Jose
el
Viejo
(sanjoseelviejo.com)
or
Centro
Linguistico
Maya
(clmaya.com).
And
in
Costa
Rica,
where
Greenspan
has
lived
for
the
past
two
decades,
he
recommends
skipping
the
capital
in
favour
of a
language
school
near
the
beach
or
in
the
mountains.
CPI
Spanish
Immersion
Schools
(cpi-edu.com)
has
sites
in
the
urban
college
town
of
Heredia,
the
cloud
forest
region
of
Monteverde
and
in
the
beach
town
of
Flamingo.
“And
they
make
it
easy
to
spend
some
time
at
one
location
and
then
switch
to
another.”
(As
for
costs,
classes
in
Guatemala
and
Ecuador
are
a
bargain
compared
to
Costa
Rica,
he
says.)
What
else
do
you
love
doing?
Surfing?
Horseback
riding?
Diving?
“Many
language
schools
complement
class
learning
with
extracurricular
activities
like
dance
classes
or
cooking
lessons,”
Greenspan
says.
Find
the
right
match,
and
it
will
surely
motivate
your
grammar
studies.
Where
do
you
want
to
sleep?
The
majority
of
schools
offer
home-stay
options.
Expect
simple
accommodations
(usually
a
private
room)
and
meals.
“Staying
with
a
local
family
really
increases
the
immersion
nature
of
any
study
program.
On
the
downside,
students
will
have
to
be
willing
to
adapt
to
the
generally
conservative
and
provincial
cultural
mores
and
standards
of
the
local
family,”
Greenspan
warns.
“If
you’re
looking
for
more
independence,
more
nightlife
and
more
dining
choices,
you
should
probably
stay
at a
local
hotel.”
Some
schools
also
offer
accommodation
within
the
school
premises.
In
Antigua’s
San
Jose
el
Viejo,
for
example,
this
includes
mini-apartments
or
the
tempting
“Castle
Room,”
which
is
reached
by a
spiral
staircase
and
features
a
four-poster
bed,
terrace
and
views
of
the
gardens
and
distant
volcano.
Sounds
like
a
lovely
place
to
study
tenses
–
and
the
views.
From
The
Globe
and
Mail