Finally: Affordable, Unlimited, Online Spanish Group Classes for Beginner, Intermediate, and Advanced Students | GoSpanish Review

by | Feb 22, 2021

gospanish online spanish classesI just finished trying a new service called GoSpanish and, although I encourage you to read my full review that follows, I’ll cut to the chase right here: flat rate of $35 per month (less than that if you use my discount code at the bottom of this post) for unlimited Spanish classes at four different levels with high-quality teachers, class sizes averaging 2-6 students, and which you can participate in from any device with internet (works on desktop, laptop, and smartphone – I tried all 3).  DO IT.

A few more details…

Cost

The $35 per month is their cheapest plan (Silver) but even the cheapest plan gets you unlimited classes.  I suspect they’ll change this in the future but those who get in on the original deal will probably be able to keep their original plan at the original price (in other words: they’re low-balling themselves, get in now).  The two additional plans are at $59 and $79 per month and they merely get you some private classes (2/month and 4/month, respectively).

For those of you wondering how that compares with what you’d pay for a 1 hour class with a good tutor on iTalki: fear not, I have done the math for you.  A good Spanish tutor on iTalki will run you about $10-15/hour, with GoSpanish going from the $35 plan to the $59 one gets you 2 private, 1-hour classes (with good teachers in my opinion) for an additional $24 (59 – 35 = 24), or $12/class.  Pretty reasonable.  If you go for the Platinum plan at $79/month, that nets you 4 private classes for an additional $44 (79 – 35 = 44), or $11/class–so a slightly better deal.

Honestly, that’s pretty good: that’s at the low end of what you’ll find on iTalki if you find a good teacher for that rate (you can, but you’ll likely have to try a few first).  If you want private tutoring, the upgrade is probably worth the premium, yes.  If you don’t, it’s not.  You’re not going to do much better than $11-$12/hour anywhere else.

Classes

The classes are broken down by level and there are four of them: Beginner, Upper Beginner, Intermediate, and Advanced.  “Beginner” is for people starting from scratch who speak absolutely no Spanish whatsoever, Upper Beginner is for those who are still beginners but can at least find their way around a bit (corresponding to A2 of the CEFR scale for those familiar).  Intermediate and Advanced are the classes I took and I would place their Intermediate Class at B1 on the CEFR and their advanced class at B2 (you’ll be hard-pressed to find anybody running C1 or C2 level classes for any language outside of expensive tutors who specialize in teaching people to pass those exams).  You need to be conversational if you’re going to take the intermediate or advanced classes.

There are 15 classes held per day by my count, each one is 1 hour long.  That typically means 2-3 per day of each level, except Advanced.  From what I saw there was only one Advanced class per day and it was the last one of the day at 8 PM my time (CST, I’m in Texas, so that’s 9 PM EST and 6 PM PST).  I’ll post a screen shot of their class schedule below.

gospanish online spanish classes

Teachers

The teachers were all very good by my measure, and I’ve got years of experience with dozens of tutors at this point.  They’re all native speakers and all of the ones I had were Argentinean, for what that’s worth.  They all spoke very clear, neutral, South American Spanish.  None of them had the strong, stereotypical Argentinean accent (the “che”/”she” thing).

How It Works

The teachers have basic lesson plans and, at least at the intermediate and advanced levels, do an approximately 50/50 mix of exercises and casual conversation, which I think is just right.  At the beginner level (I did not take a beginner class) there is probably more structure and less conversation simply because beginners don’t yet have a strong enough command of the language to hold a conversation for very long.

They make a point of calling on the students equally, in order, so that everybody gets about equal participation (unless you choose to merely listen in, which you can do).

The way the exercises function are basically as springboards into conversation about the subject they address, e.g. a recent session I did (which I have a video of) talked about estuaries in Argentina and the animals that inhabit them, which led to a discussion about wildlife and parks in both Argentina as well as in the places the students lived, so we all had an interesting discussion about that and learned not only some Spanish but also a bit about the different regions the teacher and students were located in like the everglades, alligators, and manatees in Florida where he lived (all of this was in Spanish, of course).

You start off by reading (the teacher has each student read a portion out loud, correcting any mistakes they make) about the topic of the day, in this case estuaries in Argentina:

Then you do some exercises together:

During this time things naturally diverge into normal conversation with the teacher guiding and directing as necessary.  Like I said, it ends up being about 50% exercises and 50% spontaneous, natural conversation.  I think this is the right way to do this: you do need some kind of outline for what to talk about otherwise you might have a lot of awkward fumbling, struggling to think of things to say, and consequently a lot of wasted time, but you don’t want to have a script that must be strictly adhered to either.

The conference call itself is done via Adobe Connect, which is free, and you just need to install it as either a plugin for your browser or app for your mobile phone.  I took classes both ways (desktop computer and from my phone) and it worked perfectly each time.

Functionality (from my phone?! yes please!)

I tested it from my desktop, laptop, and phone (a Motorola Moto X running Android): it worked fine on all three.  I was especially impressed with how well it ran on my phone.  To me, that’s a real breakthrough because it allows students to massively expand where and when they can do a class.  Check out the video below if you’d like to see me trying it out (it’s about 6 minutes, includes some observations and tips):

A few quick notes (I’ll save you some time if you don’t feel like watching the video)

  • It worked really well.  No lag, I could hear them clearly and they could hear me clearly, it just worked.  This seems like a big deal to me, that people can now take foreign-language group classes (small class size) from their phones.  That makes this available to a lot more people who otherwise wouldn’t be able to find the time and opportunity to do it.  It makes it much, much more convenient.
  • I had it on speakerphone and when I switched on my microphone it automatically went out of speakerphone mode and back into regular (?) phone mode such that I had to hold it up to my ear in order to hear.  This may very well be a quirk that’s specific to my phone (Motorola Moto X, unlocked, Android) and, regardless, this would work better (and most people would do this) with earbuds or headphones of some sort, which would preclude this from happening in the first place, so it’s really irrelevant.  Plus, it’s really not a problem even if it does happen, you just put the phone up to your ear when it’s your turn to talk.
  • You can easily read all the exercises and see all the buttons you need to press.  There’s one to “raise” your virtual hand (signaling the teacher you wish to speak) and another to turn your microphone on and off – those are the two you’ll be using most.

Conclusion

Again, this all worked really well, I have very few criticisms.  Perhaps they should consider having students test out to a certain level, that is make them take a placement exam to ensure people end up in the right classes (I mention why in the video: the people in the intermediate level classes, oddly, seemed more advanced than those in the advanced classes).  I would say that they’ll really need to watch out for increasing class sizes as this gets more popular but that really shouldn’t be something that’s difficult to handle since there’s a glut of Spanish teachers available at the moment so they’re plentiful and cheap (cheapest language to learn via tutor on iTalki from what I’ve seen).  This is likely due to Spanish being such a common language (main spoken language of 23 countries) and those countries where it’s spoken having a relatively low (relative to the U.S. and W. Europe) cost of living which means labor in general from those areas is going to be cheap.

I would also say I think they’re going to find themselves having to up their rates, but that’s just a guess ($35/month for unlimited Spanish classes seems unsustainable to me).  So not only would I recommend you give them a try because they’re good but also because the price is probably going to go up in the future and you can likely lock in your monthly rate now if you’re interested in this type of service. I’ve worked with and recommended them for a couple of years now and always had good experiences, as have all of my readers (I’ve yet to get a complaint and people do email me if they have problems with something I’ve directed them to).

Check out GoSpanish here! Not only can you sign up for a 5-day free trial but, if you do decide to buy a plan with them and you use one of my links (like this one, click me!) plus my special discount code, “spanishwithandrew”, you’ll get 10% off!

Hope that helps, tell me what you think in the comments.

Cheers,

Andrew

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