Learning English is hard enough. Learning English and trying to understand AI, blockchain, and fintech in your second language can feel impossible.

This track is for learners who want to grow their English skills and tech vocabulary at the same time—with a patient tutor who slows everything down, explains the jargon, and connects the words to real examples.

What Makes This ESL Track Different

1. Real Tech Vocabulary, Not Textbook Dialogues
We focus on the language you actually see in today’s tools:

  • AI: model, prompt, inference, dataset, agent, bias

  • Blockchain & Web3: on‑chain, wallet, gas fees, smart contract, DeFi, staking

  • Fintech & Money: yield, APR, volatility, stablecoin, liquidity, tax basis

You learn what the words mean, how to say them clearly, and how to use them in real conversations.

2. English Skills Built Around Your Goals

We practice the core skills, but always tied to AI/blockchain/fintech topics:

  • Speaking: practicing clear explanations:

    “Explain this chart in simple English.”

  • Listening: understanding livestreams, podcasts, and tutorials

  • Reading: breaking down articles, whitepapers, and app interfaces

  • Writing: emails, support tickets, and simple documentation in English

3. ELI5 Explanations, Adult Topics

You get “explain‑it‑like‑I’m‑5” clarity on complex ideas, without being treated like a child.
We take serious topics—taxes, risk, hardware wallets, AI tools—and rebuild the language step by step so you can ask smart questions in English and actually follow the answers.

Who This ESL Track Is For

  • Learners who already know some English but struggle with tech and finance vocabulary

  • Professionals and students in crypto, fintech, or AI who need English for work, study, or collaboration

  • Curious adults (including 40–60 year‑olds) who want to feel confident talking about the future of money and technology in English

Why I Built This

Most English classes ignore the words that show up in wallets, exchanges, AI dashboards, and tax forms.
Most tech content assumes native‑level English and moves too fast.

This ESL track sits in the middle:
a slow, friendly space where you can practice English and understand the tools that are reshaping work, money, and daily life.

Everyone should have .fun learning—
especially when the vocabulary is this important.

English as a Second Language
for the New Economy