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Award-Winning French Tutors

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Emily
Learning French means internalizing patterns — verb conjugation systems, gendered agreement, the logic behind subjunctive triggers — not just memorizing word lists. Emily earned a full French major at Yale alongside her science degree, so she teaches the structure underneath the language in a way th...
Yale University
Master of Public Health (MPH), concentration in Epidemiology and Global Health
Yale School of Public Health
Master in Public Health, Public Health
Yale University
Bachelor of Science (B.S.), double major in Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology and French

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Ivanna
Learning French through all four levels takes sustained momentum, and Ivanna keeps students progressing by linking new grammar — passé composé versus imparfait, relative pronouns, conditional constructions — back to patterns they already know. Her own experience as a multilingual learner gives her s...
Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Masters, Political Science: Current democracies.
Arizona State University
Bachelors, Global Studies/Political Science
Certified Tutor
Margot's French studies span grammar, reading comprehension, and cultural context — from mastering passé composé versus imparfait to navigating authentic French texts. She connects language rules to real usage patterns so that conjugation tables start making intuitive sense rather than feeling like ...
Dartmouth College
Bachelors
Certified Tutor
Martha
Learning French well means internalizing patterns — when to use the subjunctive, how object pronouns rearrange in compound tenses, why certain prepositions follow certain verbs. Martha treats these not as arbitrary rules but as a system students can reason through, drawing on her background in psych...
Duke University
Bachelors, Psychology
Duke University
Current Grad Student, Global Health
Duke University
BS in psychology
Certified Tutor
8+ years
Skyler
Skyler's language-learning background extends beyond her Russian specialization — she has studied French formally and brings a linguist's eye to verb conjugation patterns, pronoun usage, and the grammatical structures that trip up English speakers. Her approach connects French grammar to the logic b...
Stanford University
Master of Arts, Russian, Central and Eastern European, and Eurasian Studies
Barnard College
Bachelor in Arts, Russian Studies
Certified Tutor
10+ years
Sherry
Studying both linguistics and psychology at the University of Chicago gave Sherry an unusual edge for teaching French — she understands how language systems are structured and how the brain actually acquires new ones. She applies that dual perspective to everything from gendered noun patterns to the...
University of Chicago
Bachelor's degree in psychology and linguistics
Certified Tutor
10+ years
Nicholas
Most French tutors learned the language; Nicholas studied how it works at the graduate level, earning a master's in French Linguistics and Pedagogy. That means he can explain why certain verb conjugations follow the patterns they do, how pronoun placement shifts in complex sentences, and what makes ...
Middlebury College
Masters, French Linguistics and Pedagogy
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelors in Linguistics and Deaf Studies
Certified Tutor
10+ years
Of all the subjects Daniel covers, foreign languages — especially French — represent his deepest tutoring experience, from foundational vocabulary and verb conjugations to preparing students for AP French Language and Culture. He also teaches Spanish, so he can draw on the structural similarities be...
Brown University
Bachelors
Certified Tutor
10+ years
Sarah
Sarah teaches French through all four levels, from foundational verb conjugations and gendered nouns in French 1 through the literary analysis and advanced grammar of French 4. Her approach ties vocabulary and structure together so that irregular verbs and subjunctive constructions start to feel lik...
Yale University
Current Undergrad, Political Science and Government
Certified Tutor
5+ years
Finley
While French isn't Finley's primary academic focus, he has studied the language through multiple levels and brings the same structured, analytical approach he uses in his Harvard coursework to grammar rules, verb conjugations, and reading comprehension. He's particularly useful for students who need...
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, History
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Viraj
Viraj is completing a French minor at Cornell, which means he's actively working through the grammar, composition, and oral comprehension that language learners find trickiest. He tackles verb conjugation patterns and sentence structure with the same analytical precision he brings to his science cou...
Cornell University
Bachelor in Arts, Biology, General
Certified Tutor
10+ years
Ruthie
Grammar tables and verb conjugations only stick when they're connected to actual communication, not drilled in isolation. Ruthie teaches French by linking structures like the passé composé and imparfait to the situations where each one naturally appears, building both accuracy and confidence. Her 5....
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelors, Biological Basis of Behavior
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Cindy
While French isn't Cindy's primary language specialty, her experience learning and teaching multiple languages gives her a structured approach to grammar, verb conjugation, and vocabulary acquisition. She's especially effective at showing students how to decode reading passages and write clear, gram...
Harvard University
Current Undergrad Student, English
Certified Tutor
7+ years
Julie
Earning a full Bachelor of Arts in French means Julie didn't just study the language — she read, wrote, and argued in it at an advanced academic level. She digs into verb tenses, subjunctive triggers, and pronoun placement with the kind of precision that moves students past intermediate plateaus. Wh...
Duke University
Bachelor of Science, Neuroscience
Certified Tutor
Kerry
Learning French requires consistent practice and the willingness to make mistakes out loud — two things that are harder than they sound when self-consciousness takes over. Kerry teaches across all four levels of French and uses her psychology training to create a low-pressure environment where stude...
William James College
Masters, Professional Psychology
Cornell University
B.A. in Psychology
Top 20 Languages Subjects
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Viraj
Middle School Math Tutor • +28 Subjects
Viraj is completing a French minor at Cornell, which means he's actively working through the grammar, composition, and oral comprehension that language learners find trickiest. He tackles verb conjugation patterns and sentence structure with the same analytical precision he brings to his science coursework, making abstract grammar rules feel more logical.
Ruthie
Calculus Tutor • +26 Subjects
Grammar tables and verb conjugations only stick when they're connected to actual communication, not drilled in isolation. Ruthie teaches French by linking structures like the passé composé and imparfait to the situations where each one naturally appears, building both accuracy and confidence. Her 5.0 rating speaks to an approach that keeps students engaged rather than overwhelmed.
Cindy
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +55 Subjects
While French isn't Cindy's primary language specialty, her experience learning and teaching multiple languages gives her a structured approach to grammar, verb conjugation, and vocabulary acquisition. She's especially effective at showing students how to decode reading passages and write clear, grammatically sound compositions.
Julie
Calculus Tutor • +31 Subjects
Earning a full Bachelor of Arts in French means Julie didn't just study the language — she read, wrote, and argued in it at an advanced academic level. She digs into verb tenses, subjunctive triggers, and pronoun placement with the kind of precision that moves students past intermediate plateaus. Whether the goal is conversational fluency or mastering written grammar, her dual-degree background keeps lessons grounded in how French is actually used.
Kerry
Middle School Math Tutor • +36 Subjects
Learning French requires consistent practice and the willingness to make mistakes out loud — two things that are harder than they sound when self-consciousness takes over. Kerry teaches across all four levels of French and uses her psychology training to create a low-pressure environment where students actually speak, conjugate, and think in the language. She emphasizes verb tenses, conversational fluency, and the listening comprehension skills that classroom instruction often rushes past.
Asta
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +73 Subjects
While French isn't Asta's primary language specialty, her background in language instruction — including ESL/ELL and Mandarin — means she understands how grammar systems work across languages and how to make verb conjugations and gendered nouns click for English speakers. She brings a structured, analytical approach to building reading and writing skills in French.
Lauren
Calculus Tutor • +20 Subjects
Lauren earned her bachelor's degree in French, which means she doesn't just teach grammar rules — she understands the language from the inside, including the irregular verb patterns, gendered agreement quirks, and subjunctive triggers that textbooks often gloss over. Whether a student is wrestling with passé composé versus imparfait or building reading comprehension, she can explain the why behind the rule.
Kate
AP Calculus BC Tutor • +52 Subjects
Eight months living and studying in France gave Kate the kind of fluency that textbooks alone can't provide — she knows how French actually sounds and flows in real conversation. She covers everything from passé composé vs. imparfait distinctions to advanced reading comprehension, and she's tutored both high school and adult learners.
Xaviera
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +19 Subjects
As a French major who studied the language through advanced literature and cultural analysis, Xaviera brings depth that goes well beyond conjugation drills. She connects grammar concepts like the subjunctive and passé composé to real usage — showing students how French actually sounds and functions in context. From beginning vocabulary to complex written expression, she adapts to each level.
Kirstie
Arithmetic Tutor • +35 Subjects
Learning French grammar often clicks faster when someone can explain why a structure works, not just what the rule is. Kirstie's liberal arts training and strong grounding in Latin give her an unusual ability to connect French syntax back to its roots, making patterns like subjunctive triggers and pronoun placement feel logical rather than arbitrary.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
French verb conjugation is one of the most challenging aspects for learners because of the sheer number of tenses and irregular verbs. A tutor can break down conjugation patterns systematically, starting with present tense regular verbs (-er, -ir, -re) before moving to compound tenses like passé composé and imparfait. Rather than memorizing tables, expert tutors teach you to recognize patterns and understand when to use each tense in real conversation, which makes conjugation stick much better than classroom drilling alone.
In a classroom, most students speak only a few minutes per class. With personalized 1-on-1 instruction, you get continuous speaking practice where a tutor can correct your pronunciation, help you think through complex sentences, and respond naturally to keep conversation flowing. Tutors also adapt the difficulty in real-time—slowing down when you need it or pushing you to use more advanced structures—which accelerates your ability to think and speak in French without translating from English first.
Many students struggle with listening because native speakers talk quickly and use connected speech, slang, and cultural references that textbooks don't teach. Tutors expose you to authentic French audio at your level, pause to explain difficult passages, and teach you strategies like listening for key words rather than understanding every single word. They can also use French media—podcasts, films, news clips—tailored to your interests, which keeps you engaged while building the ear training that classroom listening exercises alone often miss.
Passive vocabulary lists don't work—you need to use new words in context and revisit them repeatedly. Expert tutors teach vocabulary through conversation and real scenarios rather than flashcards, and they use spaced repetition by bringing back words you've learned in previous sessions. They also help you understand word families and patterns (like how -tion words are similar in French and English), which lets you learn more efficiently and remember words longer because they're connected to meaning, not just memorized.
Yes—pronunciation is one of the biggest advantages of 1-on-1 tutoring. Tutors can identify exactly which sounds you're struggling with (like the French 'r', nasal vowels, or silent letters) and show you how to position your mouth and tongue correctly. They provide immediate feedback in conversation, so you can hear the difference between your pronunciation and native-like speech, and they help you practice the rhythm and intonation of French, which are just as important as individual sounds for sounding natural.
The best French tutors teach grammar as a tool to understand patterns, not as rigid rules to memorize. For example, they explain why the passé composé uses 'avoir' vs 'être' by showing you the pattern, then immediately use it in real sentences so you internalize when it's actually used. This approach—learning grammar in context rather than in isolation—helps you develop intuition for what sounds right in French, which is essential because native speakers don't think about grammar rules when they speak.
Language and culture are inseparable. Understanding French cultural references, idioms, and social norms helps you use language appropriately and makes learning more engaging. For instance, knowing that 'tu' vs 'vous' reflects social hierarchy helps you understand why these distinctions matter beyond just grammar rules. Tutors who weave in cultural context—through films, literature, current events, or discussions about French-speaking regions—help you develop communicative competence, not just technical language skills.
True immersion means thinking and responding in French without translating. Expert tutors create this by speaking primarily in French during sessions (adjusted to your level), encouraging you to express ideas in French even if it's imperfect, and gently correcting mistakes without breaking the flow of conversation. Over time, this trains your brain to process French directly rather than translate from English, which is the key to developing real fluency and confidence in spontaneous conversation.
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