What You Study
Advanced syntax, stylistic variation, discourse markers, idiomatic language, nuanced modality, and structures that shape tone, argument, and emphasis.
Academic and professional vocabulary for presentations, debates, analysis, negotiation, formal writing, and subject-specific communication.
Listening practice with fast natural speech, lectures, panel discussions, documentaries, and culturally dense content with layered meaning.
Reading editorials, essays, literary passages, reports, and complex source material while tracking inference, stance, and rhetorical design.
Production tasks focused on argumentation, summarising, critical response, persuasive communication, and fluent interaction under pressure.