Combien de temps faut-il pour apprendre l’anglais

Combien de temps faut-il pour apprendre l’anglais ?

Des milliers de personnes souhaitent parler anglais à travers le monde. Savoir combien de temps est nécessaire pour apprendre l’anglais est donc un sujet populaire et pertinent.

De nombreux facteurs influencent le temps qui vous est nécessaire pour apprendre l’anglais, parmi lesquels :

1. Votre exposition quotidienne à l’anglais

Vous apprendrez l’anglais rapidement si vous y êtes exposé quotidiennement, toute la journée, en vivant, travaillant, étudiant ou voyageant dans un pays anglophone par exemple. Suivre un cours d’anglais dans un pays anglophone est la meilleure façon d’apprendre l’anglais rapidement, puisque vous recevrez un enseignement dans cette langue et serez immergé dans la langue et la culture locale tous les jours en dehors de la salle de classe.

Si vous ne pouvez pas suivre un cours d’anglais à l’étranger, essayez de vous immerger chez vous le plus possible dans la langue. Si vous pouvez dédier une heure ou deux chaque jour à l’étude de l’anglais, votre niveau s’améliorera beaucoup plus rapidement que si vous n’y consacrez qu’une heure ou deux chaque semaine. Suivre un cours du soir d’anglais un jour par semaine et compléter cela par un auto-apprentissage chez vous avec des journaux, des films, la radio ou la télévision en anglais est une bonne idée.

2. L’âge auquel vous commencez à apprendre l’anglais

Vous pouvez commencer à apprendre l’anglais à n’importe quel âge. Cependant, les enfants sont avantagés puisque leur cerveau se développe encore et qu’ils démontrent une capacité naturelle pour les langues. Ils apprendront l’anglais rapidement et développeront une prononciation authentique, sans l’inhibition qui nous gêne généralement en tant qu’adultes. Si vous commencez tôt, vous avez plus de chances d’apprendre l’anglais plus vite. Mais ne vous laissez pas décourager par cela si vous devez apprendre l’anglais lorsque vous êtes adulte. Avec le bon enseignement, le bon état d’esprit et en s’impliquant, vous pouvez apprendre l’anglais à tout âge !

3. Si vous parlez d’autres langues

Si vous parlez déjà une seconde ou une troisième langue, cela vous aidera à apprendre l’anglais plus rapidement. Votre cerveau sera déjà habitué au processus d’apprentissage d’une langue, et vous aurez une meilleure compréhension de la grammaire et des temps. Vous apprendrez l’anglais encore plus rapidement si cette seconde langue est une langue germanique ou romane, qui sont proches de l’anglais. La maîtrise d’une langue scandinave (suédois, norvégien, danois) or romane (français, espagnol, italien) accélèrera votre progrès en anglais.

4. Le niveau de maîtrise que vous souhaitez atteindre en anglais

Bien entendu, apprendre seulement les bases de l’anglais sera beaucoup plus rapide que de savoir parler couramment la langue. Certains étudiants ont seulement besoin d’atteindre un niveau intermédiaire (B1) pour communiquer, d’autres un niveau B2 (communication commerciale basique, études de premier cycle universitaire), ou un niveau C1 (master ou doctorat, enseignement de l’anglais, journalisme international). Plus les objectifs sont élevés, plus il vous faudra y consacrer du temps et de l’énergie.

Plus le nombre d’heures que vous consacrez à cet apprentissage est élevé, plus vite votre niveau s’améliorera. En débutant l’anglais sans aucune connaissance préalable, il vous faudra peut être 10 ans pour atteindre le niveau B2 (avancé) en anglais avec deux heures par semaine. Vous pouvez atteindre le même niveau en un an avec 25 heures par semaine.

5. La vitesse à laquelle vous apprenez

Chacun d’entre nous apprend de manière différente et à une vitesse différente. Vous connaissez probablement votre rythme d’apprentissage et votre aptitude pour les langues. Ne vous découragez pas même si vous trouvez les langues difficiles, cela ne devrait pas vous empêcher d’apprendre l’anglais, qui se révélera être gratifiant et sera une langue utile. Trouvez la méthode qui vous permet d’apprendre le plus facilement et faites en un jeu, en regardant des films en anglais, en lisant des magazines anglais, en jouant des jeux anglais, ou en notant dans un cahier les nouveaux mots anglais que vous découvrez.

Enfin, les professeurs d’anglais savent trouver des solutions pour stimuler tous les types d’étudiants dans une salle de classe, et un cours d’anglais est certainement la meilleure façon de faire des progrès, quelque soit votre type d’apprenant.

Bonne chance et prenez plaisir à apprendre l’anglais !

Si vous trouvez cet article intéressant « Combien de temps faut-il pour apprendre l’anglais », lisez notre article « Comment apprendre l’anglais plus rapidement ».

Pour davantage de renseignements et de conseils concernant les cours d’anglais, merci de contacter Cactus. Cactus dispose de quinze ans d’expérience dans l’organisation de cours d’anglais à travers le monde pour tous les âges et tous les budgets, parmi lesquels des cours d’anglais général, des cours d’anglais commercial, des cours privés d’anglais, des cours de préparation aux examens d’anglais, des cours d’anglais pour enfants et adolescents, des programmes universitaires en anglais à l’étranger, et bien plus.

www.cactuslanguage.com

Traduit par Teva Serna

Comment apprendre l’anglais plus rapidement ?

Comment apprendre l’anglais plus rapidement ?

La réponse est simple, plus vous consacrez du temps à l’apprentissage et à la pratique de l’anglais, plus vite vous progresserez. A titre indicatif, si vous souhaitez atteindre un niveau intermédiaire en anglais (B1) sans connaissances préalables, il vous faudra :

  • Plusieurs années si vous étudiez 2 heures par semaine
  • 6 mois si vous étudiez 15 heures par semaine
  • 12 semaines si vous étudiez 30 heures par semaine

8 conseils pour apprendre l’anglais plus rapidement :

  1. Détendez-vous et amusez-vous

Lorsque vous êtes stressé, gêné ou frustré, le cerveau produit des « hormones de stress » qui agissent comme un mécanisme de défense. Cela ralentit les processus du cerveau à l’exception de ceux nécessaires à la survie. Si vous vous prenez moins au sérieux, vous trouverez probablement l’anglais plus facile à apprendre.

  1. Pratiquez encore et encore

Concrètement, tout dépend de la pratique. Apprenez des mots et des expressions et utilisez les avec votre professeur, d’autres étudiants, votre famille d’accueil, avec tout le monde. Il n’est pas nécessaire de chercher à atteindre la perfection. Néanmoins, plus vous pratiquez, plus vous progresserez rapidement en anglais.

  1. Ralentissez

Parler couramment ne signifie pas devoir parler vite, mais savoir parler anglais sans devoir penser à comment dire les choses. Plus vous vous entraînez à parler, plus cela deviendra facile et naturel.

  1. Lisez

Lire est une excellente façon d’apprendre les expressions et l’anglais utilisé quotidiennement. De plus, c’est rapide, facile et pratique ; vous pouvez par exemple lire sur votre téléphone ou votre tablette tout en voyageant ou pendant quelques minutes lors de votre petit-déjeuner. Saisissez l’occasion d’apprendre des mots et des expressions intéressantes.

  1. Fixez-vous des objectifs

Vous fixer des objectifs vous permet de rester sur la bonne voie et contribue à votre motivation. Cela vous permet de diviser le processus d’apprentissage de la langue anglaise en parties plus faciles à gérer, et vous pouvez vous récompenser à la fin de chaque étape. Vous apprenez ainsi l’anglais plus rapidement puisque vous maintenez votre vitesse et avez un programme à suivre. Pensez à vos raisons pour apprendre l’anglais et basez vos objectifs sur celles-ci.

  1. Apprenez avec un ami

Si vous avez un ami avec le même niveau en anglais que le vôtre, fixez vous comme objectif d’apprendre l’anglais ensemble. Vous pouvez pratiquer en parlant anglais (sans être gêné), regarder un film en anglais voire visiter un pays anglophone ensemble. Refuser d’abandonner quelqu’un contribue énormément à votre motivation et à votre progrès, et vous aide à apprendre l’anglais plus rapidement.

  1. Arrêtez de vous excuser

Passez moins de temps à vous excuser pour les fautes que vous faites et davantage de temps à apprécier les étapes que vous franchissez. Chaque fois que vous commencez à dire quelque chose, vous vous améliorez. Alors croyez en vous ! Ne dites plus « Je ne parle pas beaucoup anglais » mais « J’apprends l’anglais, pourriez-vous parler un peu moins vite ? ». Être plus positif vis-à-vis de votre anglais vous encouragera à apprendre encore plus.

  1. N’abandonnez pas

Vous apprendrez l’anglais plus vite si vous acceptez dès le départ que cela requiert de la détermination et des efforts. Vous ferez probablement face à des incompréhensions, de la frustration et de la gêne occasionnelle avant d’atteindre un niveau de langue courant, tout comme un athlète s’entraînant pour la médaille d’or des Jeux Olympiques endurera la douleur, des blessures et la défaite avant d’atteindre son objectif. Vous apprenez à chaque fois que vous prononcez un mot, que celui-ci signifie exactement ce que vous souhaitez dire ou non, alors franchissez les obstacles, et vous atteindrez le niveau d’anglais que vous visez beaucoup plus rapidement.

Bonne chance !

Cactus collabore avec des écoles partenaires sélectionnées avec soin à travers le monde afin d’offrir des cours d’anglais pour tous les âges et tous les budgets. Que ce soit pour une année d’études universitaires à Londres ou un cours d’anglais intensif à New York, nos cours attirent ceux qui apprennent l’anglais pour les affaires, par plaisir, ou pour voyager.

Traduit par Teva Serna

moving abroad checklist

Moving Abroad Checklist: Learn the Language

Whatever your reasons for moving abroad – retirement in the sun, the opportunity to enhance your career or the pursuit of a more fulfilling lifestyle – you are sure to have a moving abroad checklist to help you prepare for life in another country. If you are relocating to a country where another language is spoken, the most important thing you can do is learn the language: even the basics will make a huge difference to your experience.

Moving Abroad Checklist: Learn the Language!

5 reasons to learn a language before you move abroad

  1. Knowing some of the language before you arrive will give you the skills and confidence you need from the very moment you set foot in your new location; knowing that you are prepared will also make the run up to your move less stressful. If you have children, this is just as important to help them adjust to a new life abroad.
  2. Taking language classes before you leave will help you to learn about the culture of your host country, too – from popular music and typical foods to cultural etiquette and greetings – thereby reducing culture shock when you arrive.
  3. There are many ways to learn a language before you move abroad, so you can pick the method that suits you best (or combine a few): evening language courses in 19 locations across the UK, private language tuition or a language course abroad.
  4. You may need to sort out housing, banking, schooling and other essentials before you arrive in your new country, and some knowledge of the language will vastly help with this. Depending on where you are moving to, you cannot always rely on the locals to speak English.
  5. Leaving loved ones behind can make any move abroad a little harder. By learning some of the language before you go, you are giving yourself the best chance of making friends in your new environment: meaningful exchanges with the locals will then help you to feel settled, and a smooth cultural transition is proven to maintain psychological happiness. Then all you need is to install Skype to call friends back home!

5 reasons to continue classes once you are there

  1. Learning a language in situ is a great way to meet people. Whether you want to take private language training in your home or office, or take an in-country language course at a local school, you will be making contacts and perhaps longer-term friends.
  2. Having a language course set up when you arrive will provide some consistency and routine in an unfamiliar environment. It will also make you feel good that you are doing something positive – all of which will help you to settle in quickly.
  3. Taking classes in-country is an excellent way to learn the local accent and the specific vocabulary of that country, which will help you to feel and sound more like a local.
  4. If you are emigrating with your family, your children will likely be immersed in the language and pick it up quickly. Show them an example by learning it too – and because you don’t want to be left behind!
  5. If you are relocating for work, language classes can be invaluable in keeping you up-to-date with important business language, familiarising yourself with business etiquette and helping you to establish successful business relationships. Knowledge of the language is a key factor in making the experience positive for everyone involved.

expat-show-large-2015Visit Cactus at the Expat Show in London at London Olympia on September 11th-12th. We will give you a FREE language needs analysis and a £50 voucher towards any language course.

Cactus Language Training is a leading provider of private and corporate language training. We specialise in language training for relocation – in any language, anywhere in the world.

Expat Show Free Tickets: London Olympia

Are you considering moving abroad? Whether you are thinking about relocating for work or emigrating for an improved lifestyle, the Expat Show in London promises to be an excellent source of information and advice from the experts.

As leaders in language training for relocation, Cactus is exhibiting at the Expat Show and we have FREE tickets for anyone wishing to visit – available until 6th September!

Expat Show Free Tickets

Expat Show free ticketsOrder your Expat Show free tickets here

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Why visit Cactus at the Expat Show?

Moving abroad is a big decision, especially if you are moving to a country where a different language is spoken. Cactus can help you make the process smooth and enjoyable by designing a bespoke language course to suit you and your family – be it through lessons before you go (evening language course or private tuition) or once you are in your new location (language course at a local school or private tuition). Speaking the language will help you integrate into the local community and feel at home much more quickly; it will also help you to make friends, give you confidence and make daily routine much easier.

Visit us on Stand A12 in the Relocation & Lifestyle Centre for a FREE language needs analysis and to claim your £50 voucher to put towards any language course!

We will talk you through the best language learning solution for you and make sure you are fully prepared to follow your dream.

If you have a language learning or language teaching query that you can’t find the answer to, please get in contact with us either by Facebook or by Twitter, or contact us here.

Cactus TEFL Guide: TEFL Explained

If you are considering embarking on a career teaching English, the Cactus TEFL Guide is a handy booklet that tells you everything you need to know about the world of TEFL.

Covering useful topics such as TEFL as a career or a gap year option, the different types of TEFL course and TEFL course survival tips, the Cactus TEFL Guide is an invaluable resource from the TEFL experts.

Feel free to browse our TEFL Guide below, and contact us if you need any further information or TEFL advice!

Cactus TEFL Guide

Cactus TEFL is an admissions and advice service for quality teacher training courses worldwide. Cactus works with well-known course providers to offer CELTA, TESOL, equivalent and online courses in over 90 locations across 36 countries. Cactus TEFL also offers free post-course careers advice and support, as well as access to our very own TEFL jobs board and job alerts.

Cactus Portuguese Teacher Book Success

Cactus has always been proud of the teachers who work for us, as they are all carefully selected for their skills, experience and personality.

Tres historias diferentes para aprender portugues - Ian Costabile - Cactus Portuguese teacher

This month we are delighted that our Brazilian Portuguese teacher Ian Costabile, based in Liverpool, has published an excellent book to help students learn Portuguese.

Três Histórias Diferentes para Aprender Português, or ‘Three Different Stories to Learn Portuguese’, is a collection of three stories cleverly designed to help Portuguese language students learn new vocabulary and sentence construction.

For anyone learning Portuguese – either Brazilian Portuguese or European Portuguese – this book uses different vocabulary, tenses, verbs and sentence structures in each of the three stories to maintain interest and cater to different abilities and interests. Above all, the stories are fun, making language learning fun!

Find out more about Ian’s book on his blog Português Azul – where you will also find plenty more inspiration and tips for learning Portuguese.

Cactus Portuguese Teacher

Ian moved from Brazil to the UK in 2009 and it was then that he started to teach Portuguese. A keen musician, he found that many of the people he performed to were interested in the Brazilian language and culture. Members of a local capoeira (Brazilian martial arts) group also came to him for Portuguese lessons. Since then, Ian has qualified as an interpreter and now teaches Portuguese at GCSE and A Level in an Academy in Liverpool.

It was in 2014 that Ian became a Cactus Portuguese teacher on our Portuguese evening courses in Liverpool. When asked how he found working for Cactus, Ian replied, “I find teaching for Cactus a great experience. It’s a very organised and competent company. All the groups of students that I taught through Cactus so far were very committed to learning and enjoyed every single lesson. Through Cactus I have met people from different backgrounds who showed a huge interest in Brazil, Portugal and Mozambique. I also became friends with other Cactus teachers and staff.”

We wish Ian the best of luck with his book! Anyone wishing to purchase his book can do so on Amazon.

If you have a language learning or language teaching query that you can’t find the answer to, please get in contact with us either by Facebook or by Twitter, or contact us here.

 

 

language skills to succeed

Peer Teaching and Peer Learning in the Language Classroom

Why it’s just as important students listen to each other, as well as the teacher:

Language students tend to rely quite heavily on their teacher; looking to their teacher for all the answers, depending on the teacher to model the target language, believing that only the teacher can provide the solutions to their language learning problems. And teachers are often guilty of fostering a behaviour that encourages this perspective. However, there are plenty of ways to encourage students to see their peers as a good resource for new language and correct language, and to encourage them to listen to and rely on each other.

Why is it important that students listen to each other?

Surely students are better off ignoring their classmates whose language is full of errors, and just listen to the teacher who will model the language correctly?

  1. Get with the accent: It is very likely that whatever language someone is learning they will be speaking to other non-native speakers of this language in the ‘real world’. It is important to get used to a range of accents and to be able to ‘interpret’ the message that it being communicated, regardless of the first language of the speaker.
  2. Learn from mistakes: Students should be encouraged to identify and learn from each others’ mistakes. Rather than relying on the teacher to give the correct answer every time an error is produced, the teacher can encourage the students to correct each others’ mistakes. This can be via on-the-spot error correction, or by boarding errors and getting students to discuss corrections in pairs before feeding back to the class.
  3. Emerging Language: Students often use the classroom environment to ‘test out’ new expressions they have read or discovered outside of the classroom. This ‘emerging language’ can be a great resource for the teacher and for other students to learn from. Students can be encouraged to listen to each other to notice new and useful expressions/vocabulary. In open class feedback students can listen to count and note the number of new expressions that are used, for example.
  4. If you don’t know, ask: Students should be encouraged to ask questions about the language they are learning – not just to the teacher but to their classmates and other people they meet outside of the classroom. A language learner is never going to get very far by relying on only one source of information (the teacher) during their entire language learning journey. They should be asking questions and thinking about the meaning, form and function of the language as they advance and progress, wherever they are and whomever they are with.
  5. Building confidence: Peer teaching gives students the opportunity to clarify what they already know in their own minds. It is much more useful for the student to reinforce their own understanding of the target language by explaining to a peer, rather than listening to the teacher repeating something for them. It also engenders a ‘I actually know this stuff!’ feeling in the student, which is both motivating and rewarding.

Even though teachers often secretly feel they should be ‘masters of their kingdom’ when they are in class, it is important to remember to constantly hand over to students. Look for new ways to make students independent learners both inside and outside of the classroom, to build their confidence, and to always facilitate, rather than dictate.

If you have a language learning or language teaching query that you can’t find the answer to, please get in contact with us either by Facebook or by Twitter, or contact us here.

10 ways to help your children learn a language

Our top tips for encouraging language learning at home

It’s well known that learning something when you’re young is the secret to learning it well, and for life. No more so is this relevant than in learning a foreign language, which – as any adult learner will testify – is more difficult later in life.

A child, on the other hand, their brain growing and eager to absorb new things, will soak up new language quickly. Expose them to a second language at an early age (before 10 is good; before 5 is great) and they show an innate ability to learn new words and develop natural pronunciation, without the inhibition that hinders us later in life.

Whether you have a toddler or a teen, there is plenty you can do, and you don’t even have to be good at languages yourself – take this as an opportunity to learn a language alongside your child!

Here are our top 10 ways to help your kids learn a language:

1. Nursery rhymes and songs

Younger children react positively to the repetition and melody of nursery rhymes and songs. Even if they don’t understand the words at first, this is a fun and effective way to absorb a foreign language. Go beyond Frère Jacques by buying a CD of French songs such as French Playground or 60 Comptines pour Crèche; alternatively, the BBC website offers fun, basic songs for primary school-aged children. Grab a few instruments and have a morning of music and fun!

2. Story tapes

Search for your child’s favourite story in another language. Bob the Builder becomes Bob le Bricoleur, Little Red Riding Hood becomes Le Petit Chaperon Rouge, and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs becomes Blancanieve y los 7 enanitos. Even Sesame Street and Dora the Explorer have been translated. Read the foreign language version along with your child, or play the CD that narrates the story for you both.

3. Word & picture cards

A basic idea, but a great way to learn and remember vocabulary, as it’s much easier to remember a word when associated with a colourful image. Simply write the name of an object, in the target language, next to a picture of that object. Then stick these cards around the house, for constant exposure, or bring them out as a game to name objects in the house and garden.

4. Indulge in the local culture!
french-croissantIf it takes a chocolat chaud and a croissant, then so be it. Pretend that you are living in France for the day and surround yourselves at home with French-related goodies. Play some French music or French radio in the background, draw a French flag, make a necklace with red, white and blue beads, serve baguette and French cheeses for lunch, play boules in the garden, and end the day with a trip to the local crêperie. It’s the next best thing to being in France.

 

5. Find a pen pal

children-learning-languages-smallOnce you child is a bit older and knows the basics in a foreign language, a pen pal is a great way to practise the language and exert some independence. There’s nothing like the excitement of an air mail letter dropping on the doormat (who receives hand-written letters these days?), or an email into the Inbox, to encourage a flurry of letter-writing back. Having a pen pal abroad is also a great way to learn about culture in another country and appreciate the differences in lifestyle, eg. school, food, holidays, hobbies, etc. – proving how language exposure can help your child to increase perspective.

6. Interactive learning

Like it or not, your child is growing up in a technically advanced world. Put aside Minecraft and use the tablet to hook up to some excellent interactive and educational programmes online. For younger children, the BBC’s Muzzy series is a fun language course led by a cuddly, green character and comprising DVDs, audio, songs and written work. Older children familiar with Wii and Nintendo will like their My French Coach (and My Spanish Coach) language software. An easy compromise if they like computer games, these games are fun and interactive whilst providing the basics of grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation.

7. Podcasts

Older children will love the technology and independence of downloading their own free language podcasts from iTunes. Le Journal en Français Facile is a daily and easily-understood podcast delivering the nightly news from Radio France Internationale, and likewise Langsam gesprochene Nachrichten does so in German. Follow with the transcript to catch those words you’re not sure of.

8. Talk about them in another language

A cunning ploy if you and your partner both speak another language. A colleague at work revealed that the most successful way to get his girls to learn French was to chat to his wife, about them, in French. Frustrated at not understanding the conversation, the girls had immediate impetus to up their game and catch their parents out. Sure enough, as dad told mum one night that he thought “Elle est fatiguée”, the oldest daughter responded quite indignantly, “Je ne suis PAS fatiguée!”.

9. Speak the language yourself

Practise what you preach! If your kids hear you speaking a language at home they will be more likely to speak it themselves. Drop in key words around the house, such as when you want them to pass you something, at meal times or bathtime. Even if at first they don’t understand, repetition will help their little brains to absorb the language and one day say it back to you.

10. Go abroad

barcelona_parc_guellMoney permitting, a trip to the country of the language your child is learning can really boost motivation and progress. In the exciting run-up to your holiday you can all practise the language together, and once there your child will absorb all the sights and sounds, be able to practise the basics, and get a real feel for another culture. Being able to travel and speak to people of other nationalities and cultures is, after all, what learning a language is all about.

 


Cactus runs after-school language courses for juniors aged 7-15 years in London and in Brighton. Courses start in September 2015 and run for 10 weeks. Available in French, Spanish or Mandarin Chinese, the emphasis is on learning through games, songs and other fun age-appropriate activities to make language learning educational and enjoyable.

Parents wishing to send their children abroad to learn a language can book one of our popular summer language camps for 5-18 year olds.

 

Cactus Foreign Language Evening Courses Video

Find out what it’s like to take an evening course with Cactus with our foreign language evening courses video.

Featuring first-hand interviews with a teacher and a student, the Cactus foreign language evening courses video shows you the benefits of an evening course if you’re learning a language for work, love, relocation, a love of the culture or for personal achievement.

evening-courses-video

Watch > Cactus foreign language evening courses video

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Providing plenty of practice for speaking in social situations, and keeping to small groups with an average of 8 students, our courses will give you the confidence and skills you need to use the language in real life. From Spanish courses and French courses to Mandarin courses and Arabic courses, there is a course for everyone.

Foreign language evening courses: locations

Our evening courses are available in 19 locations across the UK (10 locations within London), with the aim of bringing language learning close to you. Courses fit easily into the working week, offering one 2-hour lesson on one evening each week for 10 weeks.

Learn a language in: London, Manchester, Brighton, Bristol, Edinburgh (coming soon), Oxford, Leeds, Liverpool or Sheffield.

Be inspired and book online!

If you have a language learning or language teaching query, please visit our blog or get in contact with us either by Facebook or by Twitter. Alternatively, feel free to contact us here or call to speak to one of our advisors on  00 44 (0) 1273 830 960.

Join the Journey! Cactus Language Webinar

Everything you need to know about a Cactus Evening Language Course

If you want to take an evening course with Cactus, watch our Join the Journey! Cactus Language Webinar. In this quick, informative webinar, you will find out the answers to questions ranging from who is my teacher to what will I learn and how do I know what level I am. This is an invaluable resource for all of our evening course students.

join-the-journey-cactus-language-webinar

Watch > Join the Journey! Cactus Language Webinar

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Evening course locations

Cactus offers 10-week evening language courses in some 20 locations across the UK, including London, Manchester, Brighton, Bristol, Oxford, Liverpool, Leeds and Sheffield. Courses are available at many levels and it is easy to progress through the levels from one course to the next.

Why book with Cactus?

Cactus has over 16 years’ experience in the field of language learning and helps over 10,000 students each year to learn a language. We can give you expert advice on any aspect of language learning. Our courses are affordable, flexible and personal, and we are here to guide you every step of the way.

Book your evening course online quickly and easily, and contact us here or call 00 44 (0) 1273 830 960 to talk to one of our advisors.