Time, exposure, practice and consistent correction

Your learning experience doesn’t depend only on me. Your goal is my goal and I’m commited to helping you get there!

But your progress depends on you too.

So here there are a few things for you to consider:

To become each day more comfortable with English, you’ll need:

Time

Exposure

Practice

Consistent correction

And…

Having this in mind and having commited yourselves to hard work, I’m sure you’ll get there!

Content, context, experience

This is my commitment to you and that’s how I truly believe our work should be.

The following words guide my teaching since day # 1:

“Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.”

William Butler Yeats

I’ll offer you everything I know! I’ll be right here with you: face to face! I’ll listen to you! I’ll understand you!

You will scatter your hopes and dreams…

And I’ll care for them until they flourish…

And I truly hope you grow stronger in knowledge of our amazing English speaking world as well as to your full potential!

And try not to focus only on the journey’s end, but instead, enjoy what you are becoming along the way!

I welcome you all! We’ll create magic! At least for me: this is magic!

Good advice from the Beatles!

Good advice here, especially at this time of the year. Hehe…

They said it all, or perhaps I should say: they sang it all!

Did you like it? Does this help you?

This post was specially put together keeping each one of you in mind

Now, high above I said especially, and now I’m saying specially? What’s the difference?

Especially and specially can often both be used with the same meaning.

It was (e)specially cold.

Especially is often used to mean ‘above all’.

We play a lot of tennis, especially on Sundays.

The children are very noisy, especially when we have visitors.

I like all kinds of fruit, especially apples.

We prefer especially before prepositions and conjunctions.

We go swimming quite a lot, especially in January.

I drink a lot of coffee, especially when I’m working.

Specially is used with a past participle to mean ‘for a particular purpose’.

These shoes were specially made for me.

The song was specially written for his birthday.

So to summarize it all:

From Practical English Usage, Michael Swan.