We bought this videotape for my daughter, who is now 20 months old. My wife and I are interested in having her learn German.The best that I could say about the tape is that it is "OK." The tape introduces words very slowly, one word at a time, then uses the preceeding three words in a sample sententce. For example, you'll get:
"Boy..." [while showing a picture of a boy]
"Boy..." [while showing a picture of a different boy]
"Boy..." [while showing a picture of a different boy]
"Eat..." [while showing a picture of a person or animal eating something]
"Eat..." [while showing a different picture of a person or animal eating something]
"Eat..." [while showing a different picture of a person or animal eating something]
"Apple..." [while showing a picture of an apple]
"Apple..." [while showing a different picture of an apple]
"Apple..." [while showing a different picture of an apple]
"The boy eats an apple. The boy eats an apple" [picture of a boy eating an apple]
So you have to ask youself: can you or your child watch this for 38 minutes a day, for however many days?
The video goes through some general words (Mom, dad, boy, girl, etc...), numbers, and colors. And that's it.
Some claims they make:
1) The tape is 45 minutes long. There is actually a bit more than *35 minutes* of content time. The rest is credits and blank tape.
2) The tape is "total immersion." I do not know where they are getting the definitions from, but *everytime* someone pulls a book from a shelf, or opens a book to read or display to the audience (i.e., YOU) in this video, *it is ALWAYS an English book.* I imagine that something calling itself "total immersion" would require showing people reading German texts in the German language, "total immersion" video". Anything calling itself "total immersion" would also have to show people *interacting* in the target language, which there is absolutely none of in this video. It's all very one-way, almost "teacher-fronted" as I describe above.
This company seems to have gone very wide, and not at all very deep. This is the only video tape in German they provide, to my knowledge. That'sa a pity because after you watch this video a couple of times, the question that begs to be answered is "Well, what do I do now?"
This video alone provides too limited an exposure to the target language. It could be one *very small* part of a German language environment that parents might be trying to create, but nothing more.