What's included
16 live meetings
13 hrs 20 mins in-class hoursHomework
2-4 hours per week. Homework is a very important part of this class. Learners will be given homework assignments after each lesson and expected to work at home on their vocabulary, reading, answering questions. The homework consists of memorization of the new vocabulary for each module and practicing reading Russian dialogues. The homework might take anywhere from 2 to 3 hours per week. Students will send completed homework to the teacher to be evaluated/corrected.Assessment
Informal assessment: students will read dialogues with a student partner or teacher.Class Experience
The course consists of 6 parts, or Modules. Each Module is divided into 3 lessons. In each Module we will cover different sets of vocabulary and work on a dialogue that includes the corespondent set of vocabulary. Also, students will learn about verb, noun, pronoun endings to better understand Russian grammar. Module 1 (lessons 1, 2 and 3) Review the greetings, introductions, family vocabulary studied in the previous course of Introduction to Russian Language and Culture. Work on a dialogue “My Family and I”; review personal pronouns. Vocabulary: descriptive adjectives. Grammar: possessive adjectives; Masculine, feminine, neutral, and plural forms of adjectives. Module 2 (lessons 4, 5, and 6) Calendar and weather vocabulary: Students will be able to discuss the current date, day of the week, season and weather. The dialogue to practice is “What is the weather like today?” Grammar: the verbs “like” and “love” conjugation. Module 3 (lessons 7, 8, and 9) Discussing sports. Vocabulary: a list of different sports. Grammar: “I like more/less than”; the verb “to play” in 1st and 2nd person singular” Dialogue: “What sport do you like better?” Module 4 (lessons 10, 11, and 12) Discuss your favorite activities. Vocabulary list includes but is not limited to “listen to the music”, “play the piano”, “play video games” “read”, “walk in the park”. Dialogue: “What do you like to do?” Grammar: vocabulary verbs in 1st and 2nd person singular. Module 5 (lessons 13, 14, and 15) Vocabulary: food, Russian typical food, food preferences, discussing how is food different in Russia. Dialogue: “Let’s go to the restaurant!” Grammar: cases of Russian nouns Module 6 (lesson 16) This final lesson is an informal assessment of everything learned during this course. The studied dialogues will be chosen for students to read. A free talk will be encouraged on multiple topics that were taught in class.
Learning Goals
By the end of this course students will be able to carry out conversation in Russian language on different topics: describing self and family, discussing sports and weather, talking about favorite activities and foods.
Other Details
Pre-Requisites
Before entering this class, students are required to complete my Introduction to Russian Level 1 or an equivalent of Level 1 with another teacher.
Supply List
Please, bring a notebook and a pen/pencil to each class.
External Resources
Learners will not need to use any apps or websites beyond the standard Outschool tools.
Teacher expertise and credentials
Mississippi Teaching Certificate in Foreign Language
Master's Degree in Education from Freed-Hardeman University in Henderson, Tennessee
Hello! I am Maria Meeks. From Russia but teaching French and Spanish in American high schools. I graduated from a Russian University with Bachelor’ and Master's Degrees in English. Also I have a Master's in Education Degree from an American college (Freed-Hardeman University, Henderson, TN). I am certified to teach English, ESL, French and Spanish in the state of Mississippi.
My career started in Bashkir State University (Ufa, Russia) where I taught English for two years. There I met my future husband who was an American exchange student. We moved to USA where I taught preschool for three years and later high school (French and Spanish) for 13 years. I also taught Russian for one semester at Freed-Hardeman University.
I decided to offer Russian online because I saw a lot of interest among my students in learning this language and because it is not offered in public schools in Mississippi.
Also I want to teach about Russian food and how to cook it. I brought some Russian food to my students, they liked it so much that they asked for recipes and some actually cooked it!
I see my classes being hands- on experience, whether conversational Russian or, especially, cooking class. We will start conversing in Russian in my very first lesson! This is my approach to teaching any foreign language: the emphasis goes to learning how to speak and use the language in real life. As for cooking class, we can cook together during our lesson and see results right away!
My teaching philosophy stems from the fact that every student is a capable learner. I believe that every pupil in my classroom is able to be successful in any subject. It is my responsibility as a teacher to facilitate my student's success.
I expect to create a welcoming, homey, comfortable atmosphere in my classes and I know that I will enjoy sharing my knowledge with my future students.
Below you will see a complete description of my Russian classes and equivalent of Modern Language Level that they make in High School.
Russian Level 1, Introduction to Russian Language and Culture is an 8-hour course that covers
the alphabet, pronunciation and orthography; personal and possessive pronouns; gender and number of nouns.
Conversational topics include Greetings, Family, Sports, expressing likes and dislikes.
Russian Level 2, Conversational Russian is a 16-hour course that continues with grammar nominative, prepositional and accusative cases; adjectives and gender; present tense verbs.
Communicative areas of proficiency include 1) calendar, telling date, date, season, year, describing
weather during different seasons; 2) describing people (physical characteristics and personality); 3)
talking about hobbies, activities.
Russian Level 3 Advanced is a 16-hour course that covers present, past, future tenses, reflexive verbs, perfective/imperfective verbs, imperative mood.
Communicative topics include daily routine, discussing Russian food, talking about three meals of the
day, telling time in Russian.
Russian Level 4 Advanced is a 16-hour course, it covers1) nominative, genitive, accusative noun cases; 2) conversational topics include talking about yourself and extended family, sports and more activities.
Russian Level 5 Advanced is a 16-hour course that covers instrumental and prepositional noun cases, as well as conversational topics about clothes and colors, discussing school subjects, professions, occupations.
Russian Level 6 Advanced is a 16-hour course with the topics to cover: going around the city, asking
for/telling directions, getting around in a store, ordering food in a restaurant.
While taking these classes students are expected to complete at least 2 hours of homework per week.
Upon completion of Levels 1 through 6 students finish 90 hours of instruction. With the grammar and
topics covered in all the courses, it could be an equivalent to Russian Level 1 and 2 of High School.
Reviews
Live Group Class
$50
weekly or $400 for 16 classes2x per week, 8 weeks
50 min
Completed by 50 learners
Live video meetings
Ages: 13-18
2-4 learners per class
Financial Assistance
Tutoring
More to Explore
Video ProductionThe Science Of EmotionsLearn About AnimalsDyslexic ReadingQuilting For BeginnersPython CodeFor Japanese BeginnersAdvanced Hand DrawingHuman Biology ScienceTeen Stardew ValleySingapore DimensionsVocabulary WordsNicelySocial Psychology Understanding The Influence Of Others Flexible SchedulingSinging Individual