Courses
Courses provide structured, multi-chapter language learning. Each course is broken into chapters and sections that combine example sentences, quizzes, and pronunciation practice.
Course Structure
A course is organized in three levels:
- Course — A learning track (for example, "Everyday Spanish" or "Business English").
- Chapter — A themed group of sections within a course.
- Section — A focused learning unit containing example sentences, quizzes, and optional assessments.
Course
├── Chapter 1: Greetings
│ ├── Section 1.1: Saying hello
│ └── Section 1.2: Introducing yourself
└── Chapter 2: At the cafe
└── …Browsing Courses
- Open the Courses page from the sidebar.
- Browse the course list — each card shows the cover, title, description, and progress (if enrolled).
- Click a course card to open its detail view.
Enrolling in a Course
On a course's detail page:
- Review the course description, chapter list, and enrollment status.
- Click Enroll to start the course.
- You'll be taken to the first chapter automatically.
Progress is tracked per chapter and shown on course cards.
Studying a Section
A section is the main learning unit. It typically includes:
- Example sentences — Listen to the audio, study the text, and use shadow reading to practice pronunciation.
- Pronunciation assessment — Record yourself and receive per-word, per-syllable feedback.
- Pitch contour — Visualize your intonation against the reference audio.
- Quizzes — Test comprehension with multiple-choice or fill-in questions.
Section Shortcuts
Space- Play / Pause the example audioR- Start / Stop recording your voiceEsc- Cancel an in-progress recordingG- Play / Pause your recordingV- Show / Hide the pronunciation assessment
Navigating Within a Course
- Sections drawer — Open the drawer to jump to any section in the current chapter.
- Course nav — Move forward / backward between sections.
- Chapter switcher — Use the chapter drawer to switch chapters.
Tips for Course Learning
- Work in order — Sections build on each other; complete them sequentially for best results.
- Re-record freely — The pitch contour comparison is most useful after 2-3 takes.
- Use quizzes as checkpoints — If a quiz is hard, revisit the previous section's examples.