Marhaba About 4 years ago I made a similar post and ended up teaching @prolepylene@hexbear.net for almost 2 years, then last year I did the same thing and taught a couple of comrades. I can honestly say I love teaching my native tongue, especially to comrades!
So I wanna do it again!
I have my own course material, and ofc I make sure to adapt the lessons and study plan to my student’s interests and pace. I try to incorporate Comprehensible Input as much as possible. I believe language learning has to be fun, engaging, and things have to make sense. And believe me Arabic makes a lot of sense unlike English.
Let me know if you have any questions about Arabic or my approach to teaching. And dw about money, really, this is just a ‘side hustle’ that I enjoy, and so you can pay what you can!
You can dm me from a throwaway account if you want.
Arabic is nowhere near as intimidating as some of you might think, it actually has internal logic and consistency.
I'm just gonna quote what @prolepylene said about his experience learning Arabic:
Learning languages is hard, but I find it very rewarding. My lessons are fun, the language itself makes sense in a way that allows me to infer meanings and uses I don’t explicitly know, and it teaches me about English almost as much as Arabic. Arabic as a language makes a lot more sense than English. A big part of it is that Arabic isn’t a bastard language of Germanic and Romantic influences, though the history of the Arabic world has left it with many loan words from the west. The other big thing is MSA (Modern Standard Arabic), though not really spoken colloquially, is actively managed to make it universal and easy to learn. In my opinion, the script is the least intimidating part of the language.
The [Arabic root system] is pretty great. At first I wasn’t sure how it was substantially different from the Latin root system, but comparatively to English the Arabic root system is everywhere throughout the language. As you learn the forms and patterns you can break down basically all verbs, nouns, adjectives, and adverbs to a base form and a pattern that you can use to infer meaning.
And if there is enough interest we can have group lessons as well, let me know if you’d be interested in that.
Group Lessons
Might make it less ‘intimidating’ to give the language a shot or if someone has social anxiety. It will be a pay-what-you-want (or nothing at all) so the money barrier should be completely gone.
I’d expect scheduling to be a problem because of all the different time zones, but we can do it on the weekend and see what works best.
I’m more than happy to do trial lessons, commitment-free.
sadly I gotta say no… I’m already studying JP, and god forbid I learn two languages at once… that’s gonna mess me up so bad lol
It’s best to make some good progress in the language you’re learning before starting another one.