You already have opinions. Let's get them into English.
School English can feel like a performance — answer correctly, don't get picked on, don't sound stupid. We do the opposite. Small groups, real topics, and a room where being wrong out loud is completely normal.
Most teenagers don't need more grammar. They need more nerve.
By the time most teenagers reach us, they've already studied English for years. They can conjugate verbs they'll never say out loud. What's missing isn't knowledge — it's the confidence to use it without freezing up.
So we flip the priority. Conversation first. Confidence first. The grammar catches up — it always does, once speaking stops feeling dangerous.
Topics worth having an opinion on
Conversation only works if there's something real to say. Here's the kind of thing that comes up.
What's actually going on
Current events, social media, the things your friends are talking about — discussed properly, in English.
Who you're becoming
Plans, doubts, opinions about the future. The kind of conversation that's hard enough in your first language.
Things you're into
Gaming, music, sport, shows — whatever you'd talk about anyway, just with new words for it.
Exams, without the panic
If exams matter to you, we'll prepare you properly — but never at the cost of being able to actually speak.
How confidence actually builds
It's not a switch that flips. It's a process — and we know exactly what it looks like.
Permission to be imperfect
We set the tone early: nobody here is grading your accent or judging your grammar mid-sentence.
Low-stakes speaking, often
Short, frequent chances to talk — about opinions, not just facts — so speaking stops feeling like a performance.
Real disagreement, welcomed
We want you to push back, argue, change your mind out loud. That's fluency — not reciting answers.
Your own voice, in English
Not a textbook voice. Yours — your humour, your opinions, your way of explaining things.
Ready to actually use your English?
Book a free consultation — no pressure, just a conversation about where you're at and where you'd like to go.