Translated by Google
Mother tongue English to CM2
From 33.31 C$ /h
Young Master Communication student, English is my second mother tongue. From my own experience, I find that the sooner a child is confronted with a language and the easier it is to use it as an adult.
Having grown up in a family of 5 children, I am the only one who has accepted since the CP to be sent every year to my family abroad for vacation, Great Britain, Ireland, Switzerland and North America. As a result, I assimilated the basics of the language very early and when I entered 6th grade I already spoke very good English, unlike my brothers who are still struggling today despite the fact that their parents are bilingual. The fact is that they never really assimilated these bases because they always had the choice between French and English to express themselves. I'm not saying that we have to force children to speak English but rather to help the child to excel himself to be understood. I assume that a child who is certain that you do not understand what he says will always find a way to communicate with you.
My learning of the language goes mainly through play, music, cinema but also reading, in short all that children have always used to see and hear or do in French. The goal is to expose the child as much as possible to the language so that he can record the different sounds and push him to guess the meaning of words based on what they already know in French. An example that works well for little girls, listening to and singing Disney songs in French and English.
At first, teach them the basics, then give them all the tools they need to express themselves and finally slowly bring them to gain confidence in their linguistic capacity so that they can surpass themselves and start, for example tell his day.
To help children in their learning I suggest to parents to buy once a month bought a cartoon (for vocabulary) in English, a rhyme (for pronunciation) in English and an illustrated book (for spelling).
I recommend 2 lessons per week for real effectiveness, with a different pace depending on the age of the child, 2x1h on 2 days from Kindergarten to CP and 2h at a time from CE1 to CM2.
Having grown up in a family of 5 children, I am the only one who has accepted since the CP to be sent every year to my family abroad for vacation, Great Britain, Ireland, Switzerland and North America. As a result, I assimilated the basics of the language very early and when I entered 6th grade I already spoke very good English, unlike my brothers who are still struggling today despite the fact that their parents are bilingual. The fact is that they never really assimilated these bases because they always had the choice between French and English to express themselves. I'm not saying that we have to force children to speak English but rather to help the child to excel himself to be understood. I assume that a child who is certain that you do not understand what he says will always find a way to communicate with you.
My learning of the language goes mainly through play, music, cinema but also reading, in short all that children have always used to see and hear or do in French. The goal is to expose the child as much as possible to the language so that he can record the different sounds and push him to guess the meaning of words based on what they already know in French. An example that works well for little girls, listening to and singing Disney songs in French and English.
At first, teach them the basics, then give them all the tools they need to express themselves and finally slowly bring them to gain confidence in their linguistic capacity so that they can surpass themselves and start, for example tell his day.
To help children in their learning I suggest to parents to buy once a month bought a cartoon (for vocabulary) in English, a rhyme (for pronunciation) in English and an illustrated book (for spelling).
I recommend 2 lessons per week for real effectiveness, with a different pace depending on the age of the child, 2x1h on 2 days from Kindergarten to CP and 2h at a time from CE1 to CM2.
Extra information
Bring his best smile and a lot of energy, not to mention a small notebook, two pens (red and black), white sheets and colored pencils.
Location
At student's location :
- Around Boulogne-Billancourt, France
About Me
A smiling teacher is a child who learns.
I am a smiling and patient person who likes the contact of children. Student in communication, I have a natural attraction for languages, in addition to my 3 basic languages (French, English and Spanish) I learn Mandarin, Korean and Japanese.
I am a smiling and patient person who likes the contact of children. Student in communication, I have a natural attraction for languages, in addition to my 3 basic languages (French, English and Spanish) I learn Mandarin, Korean and Japanese.
Education
BAC S (2010), DUT TC (2012), ATC License (2013)
Experience / Qualifications
I worked on a different position called bilingual, responsible for FEDEX, hostess in the Mazars cabinet and Assistant Communications Officer at BNP Paribas Finance Group. I gave English lessons to two little twins for 10 months (8 years) and I give since September English lessons to my nephew 3 years who has just returned in small section.
Age
Preschool children (4-6 years old)
Children (7-12 years old)
Teenagers (13-17 years old)
Adults (18-64 years old)
Seniors (65+ years old)
Student level
Beginner
Intermediate
Duration
60 minutes
The class is taught in
French
English
Spanish
Skills
Availability of a typical week
(GMT -05:00)
New York
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
Sun
00-04
04-08
08-12
12-16
16-20
20-24
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