A2.1 – Elementary
COURSE TITLE - A2.1 – ELEMENTARY
DURATION – 5 WEEKS
TOTAL LESSONS - 25
COURSE DESCRIPTION
A2.1 helps learners move beyond basic survival English and begin communicating in fuller, more connected sentences. In this course, students develop confidence talking about personal life, routines, past experiences, work and study life, free time, opinions, preferences, and everyday communication. They learn to describe events in the past, express likes and dislikes with reasons, make suggestions, compare ideas, ask polite questions, and interact more naturally in real-life situations. By the end of A2.1, learners can take part in structured everyday conversations with greater clarity, confidence, and independence.
WEEK 1 – Personal Life, Routines, and Past Experiences
WEEKLY OUTCOME
You will move beyond short A1 answers and begin speaking and writing in longer connected sentences. You will practise linking ideas with and and but, describing routines with clear time expressions, and shifting into past simple to talk about completed actions. By the end of the week, you will sequence a short past story with connectors and keep a conversation going by asking follow-up questions about past experiences.
LESSON 1 – Reviewing A1 Foundations & Expanding Self-Introduction
LESSON OUTCOME
You will deliver a richer self-introduction that sounds more complete at A2 level. You will connect sentences naturally as you introduce your name, your job or studies, your daily routine, and one personal detail, while keeping your present simple accurate and clear.
HOMEWORK
Write 10 sentences introducing yourself.
Prepare to present orally next lesson.
LESSON 2 – Describing Daily Routines in Detail
LESSON OUTCOME
You will describe your daily routine in a connected paragraph using the present simple with adverbs of frequency and time expressions. You will practise placing adverbs such as usually and often correctly and answering routine questions clearly.
HOMEWORK
Write a paragraph about a weekday and a weekend day.
LESSON 3 – Talking About Past Activities (Past Simple)
LESSON OUTCOME
You will shift confidently from present to past by describing completed activities using past simple forms. You will practise regular and common irregular verbs with time expressions like yesterday and last week so your past sentences sound accurate and natural.
HOMEWORK
Write 10 sentences about last weekend.
LESSON 4 – Sequencing Past Events
LESSON OUTCOME
You will turn separate past sentences into a clear short story. You will use sequencing words such as first, then, after that, and finally to organise events so your listener can easily follow your timeline.
HOMEWORK
Write a short past story with connectors.
LESSON 5 – Asking Follow-Up Questions About the Past
LESSON OUTCOME
You will strengthen your speaking interaction by asking and answering follow-up questions about past experiences. You will practise forming questions with Did you…? and responding with short and extended answers so your conversations feel more real and engaging.
HOMEWORK
Write a dialogue about a past experience.
WEEK 2 – Work and Study Life, Free Time, and Planning
WEEKLY OUTCOME
You will use present simple to describe your work or study routine and explain responsibilities with clear verbs. You will also talk about free-time activities using frequency expressions, then progress into planning language by using present continuous for future meaning and present simple for schedules. By the end of the week, you will combine routine, role, free time, and a plan into connected conversations.
LESSON 6 – Describing Daily Routines with Frequency
LESSON OUTCOME
You will describe your work or study routine clearly and confidently using the present simple with accurate adverb placement. You will practise asking routine-based questions and delivering a short spoken routine that includes frequency and time expressions.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 sentences describing a typical weekday.
Include:
At least three adverbs of frequency
At least two time expressions
LESSON 7 – Talking About Jobs and Responsibilities
LESSON OUTCOME
You will explain what you do in your job or studies using simple, professional language. You will describe responsibilities with clear action verbs and practise asking questions about roles so you can talk naturally about work and study life.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 sentences describing:
Your job or studies
Your responsibilities
One thing you like about it
LESSON 8 – Talking About Free Time
LESSON OUTCOME
You will talk about your hobbies and relaxation habits in connected sentences. You will explain when you relax using time expressions such as after work and on weekends, and you will build confidence asking and answering questions about free-time activities.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 sentences about:
Your daily routine
Your free time
One activity you want to do more often
LESSON 9 – Making Plans and Arrangements
LESSON OUTCOME
You will make simple arrangements by using present continuous for plans and present simple for schedules. You will practise asking questions like What are you doing tomorrow? and describing plans for tomorrow and next week in clear, connected sentences.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 sentences about your plans for next week.
LESSON 10 – Integrated Communication
LESSON OUTCOME
You will combine routine language, job/study information, free-time activities, and one plan into a connected overview of your week. You will practise speaking with structure so your listener can follow your ideas easily.
HOMEWORK
Write 10–12 sentences describing:
Your typical week
One future plan
WEEK 3 – Experiences and Events
WEEKLY OUTCOME
You will deepen your past narration by mastering regular -ed forms and common irregular verbs while keeping questions with did clear and accurate. You will practise sequencing events into a short story, then expand your past descriptions by using was and were with basic adjectives. By the end of the week, you will maintain past-experience conversations through follow-up questions, reactions, and expressions of interest.
LESSON 11 – Talking About Past Experiences (Regular Verbs)
LESSON OUTCOME
You will describe finished actions using regular past simple verbs with clear time expressions. You will also practise asking and answering basic past questions so you can discuss what happened yesterday or last weekend with confidence.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 sentences about:
Yesterday or last weekend
Include at least four regular past verbs.
LESSON 12 – Past Experiences (Irregular Verbs)
LESSON OUTCOME
You will talk about past experiences using common irregular verbs and practise questions and negatives with did. You will build accuracy with base vs past forms so your past narration sounds natural.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 sentences about yesterday using at least four irregular verbs.
LESSON 13 – Sequencing Past Events
LESSON OUTCOME
You will organise a short narrative using past simple verbs plus sequencing words—first, then, after that, finally—so your story is easy to follow.
HOMEWORK
Write a 10–12 sentence story using sequence words.
LESSON 14 – Describing People and Places in the Past
LESSON OUTCOME
You will describe a past place using was and were with adjectives such as busy, quiet, friendly, old, and new. You will practise making your description clear and vivid with accurate past forms.
HOMEWORK
Write 10–12 sentences describing a past place.
LESSON 15 – Asking Follow-Up Questions & Showing Interest
LESSON OUTCOME
You will sound more natural and engaged by using follow-up questions and reaction phrases. You will practise extending a past-experience conversation with questions and expressions of interest.
HOMEWORK
Write a 10–12 line dialogue showing:
A past experience
Follow-up questions
Expressions of interest
WEEK 4 – Opinions and Preferences
WEEKLY OUTCOME
You will shift from describing information to expressing your point of view clearly. You will give reasons using because, then build stronger interaction by making suggestions and responding politely in everyday and workplace situations. You will also practise agreeing and disagreeing respectfully, and you will make comparisons using comparative adjectives to support your preferences.
LESSON 16 – Expressing Likes, Dislikes, and Simple Reasons
LESSON OUTCOME
You will express likes and dislikes clearly and add simple reasons using because so your opinions sound complete in conversation.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 sentences about:
One thing you like
One thing you don’t like
Reasons for both
LESSON 17 – Making Suggestions and Simple Recommendations
LESSON OUTCOME
You will make suggestions using Let’s and Why don’t we, give simple recommendations using You should and You can try, and respond politely so you can reach simple decisions with others.
HOMEWORK
Write a short dialogue (10–12 lines):
One problem
Two suggestions
One response
LESSON 18 – Agreeing and Disagreeing Politely
LESSON OUTCOME
You will practise agreeing and disagreeing politely using softening language so you can share different opinions while maintaining a respectful tone.
HOMEWORK
Write a 10–12 line dialogue showing:
One agreement
One polite disagreement
LESSON 19 – Making Simple Comparisons
LESSON OUTCOME
You will compare people, activities, or places using comparative adjectives and simple structures like A is better than B, and you will give a basic reason for your preference.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 sentences comparing:
Two activities or places
LESSON 20 – Integrated Communication Review
LESSON OUTCOME
You will integrate opinions, reasons, suggestions, agreement/disagreement, and comparisons into a short coherent discussion that sounds more complete and real-life ready.
HOMEWORK
Write 10–12 sentences:
Two opinions
Reasons
One comparison
WEEK 5 – Everyday Communication
WEEKLY OUTCOME
You will strengthen practical communication for everyday and workplace settings. You will make polite requests with can and could, give clear instructions using imperatives and sequencing words, describe problems and ask for solutions, talk about rules using must and have to, and express ability and limitation using can and can’t.
LESSON 21 – Making Polite Requests and Asking for Help
LESSON OUTCOME
You will ask for help and make requests politely using can, could, and key polite expressions, and you will respond appropriately in everyday and basic workplace situations.
HOMEWORK
Write a 10–12 line dialogue:
One person asks for help
The other responds politely
LESSON 22 – Giving Instructions and Directions
LESSON OUTCOME
You will give step-by-step instructions or directions using imperatives, sequencing words, and direction language so your explanation is clear and easy to follow.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 steps explaining:
How to complete a daily task or reach a place
LESSON 23 – Describing Problems and Asking for Solutions
LESSON OUTCOME
You will describe a simple problem, ask What should I do?, and give basic advice using You should and You can try in a polite, practical way.
HOMEWORK
Write a 10–12 line dialogue:
One problem
Two pieces of advice
LESSON 24 – Talking About Rules and Obligations
LESSON OUTCOME
You will talk about obligations and prohibitions using must, must not, and have to, and you will practise questions like Do I have to…? to clarify rules.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 sentences describing:
Rules at your school or workplace
LESSON 25 – Talking About Ability and Possibility
LESSON OUTCOME
You will express ability and inability using can and can’t, ask questions about skills, and describe one limitation and one skill you want to improve.
HOMEWORK
Write 8–10 sentences describing:
Your skills
One thing you cannot do yet
Pricing
$100 - Onetime