Does anyone know of an accessible way we can learn Spanis using JAWS or Voiceover?
@DesireeRenae The Spanish course from innovative language, it’s just a website, Spanish part 101, and you can read the grammar notes and listen to lessons. Also there is Rocket Languages, Babbel, which is probably better on the PC than on the phone, you could even put a YouTube video through Gemini or Omni Describer, and ask for a transcription. And there is coffee break Spanish too, and they also have PDF notes you can pay for. Most of these options are paid for. (1/5)
If you don’t want to pay, you could listen to podcast for Spanish learners, and then look up topics Online that they’re talking about, like verbs and other grammar topics. If ever a website or PDF is inaccessible, you could just put it through ChatGPT or Gemini and get them to explain it to you. I have a Turkish course with a pretty inaccessible PDF, and if I really don’t understand something, I just put it through ChatGPT, and it clarifies things. (2/5)
And then I google things to doublecheck what it’s saying is true. You could also use textbooks, there are quite a few on Kindle, and Google Play Books, and when there’s something like a verb table, you can open a Google Play book in Google Chrome on your PC, and Google Chrome will OCR it, or again you could just ask ChatGPT or Gemini, you could share your screen with Gemini. Or take a screenshot and get ChatGPT to explain it. (3/5)
If you want a free podcast for learners, coffee break Spanish is free, it’s just the lesson notes you need to pay for. There is also an app called Language Transfer, and a course called Spanish uncovered you can get for your PC, the PDFs are accessible. I’m not sure which one of these resources is Latin American Spanish or European Spanish. If you really want a Latin American resource, look into getting Colloquial Latin American Spanish. (4/5)
It’s a textbook, and I think it’s on Kindle or Google Play. I actually wouldn’t recommend Kindle for textbooks these days, Google Play is much better. Or you could try finding it on welib.org or Annasarchive. (5/5)