But it was only one class a day. I also think it's a bad plan when there is no cognates between the languages. I'm sure it's very entertaining for the faculty, but it was very demoralizing as a student. I withdrew in the second term and never got back to Chinese, and unless we are called on a mission there, I don't really plan to.
And I'll reiterate that we were not learning classroom furniture and body parts and daily activities (we did this in German and I really did well with it.) We were trying to pick up stories behind traditional Chinese idioms.
PPS: I had the alternate experience with Arabic, where we basically spent two and a half years describing aspects of the language in English, and there was very little fluency based training. That also sucked. I could learn a list of vocabulary, fine, but I didn't every really master the tiny words that stick sentences together, and we were still doing handwriting drills in third year.