Posts Tagged ‘teachers’
www.mychinese360.com myChinese 360, a TCG Global company, offers education solutions for instruction of Mandarin as a Second Language. Learn Chinese from myChinese360′s highly qualified, native Chinese speaking teachers. All instructors have received US teaching certificates after completing a rigorous vetting process and training in American educational theories and practices. TCG’s China based teachers use up-to-the-minute, [...]
All teachers from ChineseTeachers.com are native Chinese who have passed strict assessment process to teach students from over 150 nationalities. This video introduces how easy a lesson is conducted and how the lesson notes can be edited after the lessons. This video also shows premium study materials for students of all level that can be [...]
myChinese360 teachers discuss their passion and dedication to teaching American students Chinese as a second language. myChinese360 instructors are certified to teach in the United States and are well qualified to prepare young generations for the global market.
Listen to how the benefits of StudioChinese can make learning Chinese easy.
Why a course that gets you speaking from the start is the best way to learn Mandarin Chinese.
Visit here bit.ly to Learn Chinese Online for FREE – Learn Mandarin – Audio lessons, Chinese vocabulary, grammar, Chinese dictionary – learn all about the Chinese language.
Learning English can seem like a complicated and time consuming task. Understanding English slang, and how native English speakers engage in conversation, is something that cannot be learned in a text book. Learning English from a native speaker teacher has a number of advantages. Although there can be miscommunication regarding culture and customs, native speaker [...]
Study: Students learn second languages better from accented teachers A new study on how well students learn second languages from teachers with accents suggests Arizona may be making a mistake by trying to remove heavily accented Hispanic teachers from classrooms filled with Hispanics trying to learn English. Read more on Seattle Times
