![]() My biggest tip here would be to find a teacher that matches your learning style and has some kind of a lesson plan for you to learn grammar - you'll probably pick up vocab naturally as you move to more advanced conversations. I really like iTalki because it's really flexible and teachers set their rates, so you can shop around. I have a teacher from Colombia that has his own lesson plan mapping roughly to the different DELE proficiency levels. Nowadays there is an endless array of apps, software, and courses that claim to teach you Spanish in days or weeks. ITalki - I've found the most success on iTalki. It's also really motivating to hear news about Latin America in Spanish (there's also a Spain version). It's been really great for practicing my listening skills and hearing unconventional vocabulary words. News in Slow Spanish - I have an active subscription here now. It did provide some lesson plans with vocab and grammar topics and you got a bunch of practice listening when speaking to the teachers. I struggled to consistently find slots with the teachers I liked so I wasn't really getting the value out of it (it's pricey at $150/mo). ![]() ![]() I've been learning Spanish for about a year and have tried a few different paid options.īaselang - Baselang is really good if you are good at planning your classes in advance and really have the time to take advantage of the unlimited lessons.
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