
SPEAK ENGLISH LIKE A NATIVE
The more time you spend with English, the better you become! That's why native English speakers are so good at it: they've spent thousands of hours listening, talking, reading, and writing English.
HOW TO LEARN ENGLISH BETTER
If you haven’t gotten the results you wanted yet, it’s not because you’re bad at languages, it’s because you haven’t found your own special way of learning yet.
The Global Future Of English
Almost 850 million people speak English as their first language. And over 500 million people speak English as a second language. English is the most popular foreign language to learn. It is the language that many people use for doing international business. It is also a common language for education. But English as global language has a long and complex history.
Slower speed: Spotlight English
One of the first things you’ll notice when learning a language is the speed at which natives speak. Even if you understand words written on the page, when you hear them spoken at full speed by a native speaker you can feel like you’re listening to a confusing collection of random sounds. This programs use a basic vocabulary of 1500 words and slower speed (about 90 words per minute, or half the normal speaking speed). It is easier for people to understand, no matter where in the world they live.
1000 Collocations In 10 Minutes A Day
Do you have difficulty putting English words together in a NATURAL way? Do you tend to translate in your head from your native language to English? When you do this, you’ll often say phrases that sound strange or unnatural in English! One great way to improve your English fluency is to learn collocations – the typical combinations of words that are frequently used by native English speakers. When you learn these, you’ll be able to make sentences in English more easily – and your sentences will sound more fluent. You’ll get 50 lessons and 50 quizzes to help you improve your English fluency fast – even if you have little time to study! Each lesson takes just 10 minutes, so it’s easy to improve your fluency fast!
Learn English through Stories
Reading or listening to stories is an effective way to learn new words and phrases and internalize grammar. A good story encourages us to turn the next page and read more. We want to find out what happens next and what the main characters do and what they say to each other. Read our entertaining short stories specially written for pre-intermediate (CEFR level A2), intermediate (CEFR level B1), upper intermediate (CEFR level B2) and advanced (CEFR level C1) learners. These stories help to extend vocabulary in the most natural way.
Word on the Street
"Word on the Street" is an exciting English Language teaching programme co-produced by the BBC and the British Council. Improve your language level and learn about the UK and its culture by watching our Word on the Street video series. These materials are for intermediate B1 and upper intermediate B2 level learners.
TED Talk
TED is a global community, welcoming people from every discipline and culture who seek a deeper understanding of the world. TED began in 1984 as a conference where Technology, Entertainment and Design converged, and today covers almost all topics — from science to business to global issues — in more than 100 languages. Meanwhile, independently run TEDx events help share ideas in communities around the world.
Tim's Pronunciation Workshop
Do you want to sound more natural when you speak English? Do you sometimes struggle to understand native speakers' pronunciation? This series is for you! Join him now in his pronunciation workshop.

FREEDOM LEARNING SPACE
Development of Individuality through the Freedom of Learning
The best space to learn: Room for all
We are all different and we learn differently. That is why our mission to create ROOM FOR ALL and give the students and teachers the possibility to decide where and how they work in the best way possible.
A good education system gives students the freedom to recognize their capabilities and individual potentials. As creative thinkers, they try to imagine and explore alternatives, and to think in a different manner. To learn on their own, youth need unlimited time to play, explore, become bored, overcome boredom, discover their own interests, and pursue those interests.
What does freedom in learning mean to you?
The purpose of education, finally, is to create in a person the ability to look at the world for himself, to make his own decisions, to say to himself this is black or this is white, to decide for himself whether there is a God in heaven or not. To ask questions of the universe, and then learn to live with those questions, is the way he achieves his own identity.
What can you get?
Self-Directed Education
Support learners in achieving a level of self-teaching and having the freedom to choose their own projects. Over time, they can reclaim the ability to initiate their own behavior, just as they once did in infancy and early childhood. Self-organization can extend to caring about the classroom environment.
Linking education, creativity and entrepreneurship
We offer a number of programs for students after school hours that allow these young learners to explore their passions in areas often not covered in-depth at the schools. One of the very successful offerings has been entrepreneurship.
The best place to sit
At Freedom Learning Space we focus on creating learning environments that satisfy diverse and changing needs. We develop learning spaces with our designs are meant to inspire curiosity and creativity in the students, and provide the foundation for better concentration, performance and learning.
Creating more comfortable environments
We all learn best when we’re comfortable. Why then do schools confine students to small, cramped desks with hard seats and very little of space for our book or tablet or laptop or paper. Creating more comfortable environments that mimic the way we sit and move when we are learning independently can help spark that kind of natural learning.
