If you have a friend who is a native Spanish speaker, ask him to help you learn to speak Spanish. During the lessons, take good notes and ask questions on aspects of sentence structure or pronunciation in Spanish that you are unclear about. Also, ask your friend to prepare some study notes, so you can practice speaking Spanish at home.
Get some Spanish instruction books from the library and a voice recorder. Then, turn on the recorder and read aloud specific conjugations of verbs, sentences that have the conjugations of those verbs and vocabulary words from different chapters in the book. Continue this activity for about a few weeks until you improve in speaking Spanish.
Watch educational Spanish language instruction programs on local public access stations. When you view the programs, write down any key aspects of the lesson that may be essential in learning to speak Spanish and also pay special attention to how certain verbs are pronounced by the host of the program.
Visit Spanish tutorial websites. If some of the websites have a feature where you can hear the pronunciation of verb conjugations and sentences in Spanish, click on those links and listen carefully to how these conjugations and sentences are pronounced.