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Conversational English tutors, lessons & classes

What's up? The way casual American English actually opens a conversation, not the "Hello" your textbook taught you.

Personally vetted conversational English tutors. Real-time speaking practice for adult ESL learners who can already read and write English but freeze up in actual conversation — the gap between textbook English and the way Americans actually talk.

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Conversational English tutor in casual conversation with an adult ESL student
20 yrs
EST. 2006
In-Person Online
250+Tutors
18+Years in LA
150+Film & TV Credits
50+Languages

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Conversational English tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen has been teaching conversational English to international students since 2006. Most of our conversational English students arrive at intermediate or upper-intermediate level on paper (B1-C1 by CEFR), already comfortable reading and writing, and stuck on the speaking side. We work with adult learners across every nationality, with concentrations from Latin America, East Asia, the Middle East, and Europe, plus a steady stream of heritage learners who grew up around English but never used it actively. Every tutor below was met and vetted by us in person or via thorough video interview. No marketplace. No automated profile-creation. Real teachers with real backgrounds in adult English acquisition.

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Real conversation — slang & rhythm

5 things that separate textbook English from the way Americans actually talk

These aren't grammar rules. They're the everyday habits of casual American English that classroom textbooks systematically skip, and that produce stiff-sounding learners at every fluency level. Screenshot to share.

  1. 01

    What's up? / How's it going?

    The actual casual openers in American English, not the textbook "Hello, how are you?" The expected response isn't a real answer; it's a return greeting. "What's up?" gets "Not much, you?" or just "What's up?" back. "How's it going?" gets "Good, you?" Treating these as real questions and launching into how your week has been is one of the clearest tells of a learner stuck in textbook mode.

    e.g. "Hey, what's up?" "Not much, you?"

  2. 02

    Like, you know, I mean, basically

    The famous American filler stack. These aren't bad English. They're the discourse-marker grammar of casual speech, used by everyone from teenagers to executives. Like introduces an approximation or a quote ("and he was like, no way"). You know checks in with the listener. I mean walks back or clarifies. Basically signals a summary is coming. Skipping all of these makes you sound robotic; using them naturally is a fast track to sounding native.

    e.g. "It was, like, basically the worst meeting ever, you know? I mean, nobody had any answers."

  3. 03

    Gonna, wanna, gotta, kinda, sorta, dunno, lemme

    Reductions. The unstressed words in fluent American English collapse: going to → gonna, want to → wanna, got to → gotta, kind of → kinda, sort of → sorta, don't know → dunno, let me → lemme. Native speakers write these out in their full forms but pronounce them reduced. Hearing them in real time is half of the listening battle; using them in your own speech without overdoing it is half of sounding fluent.

    e.g. "I'm gonna grab coffee, you wanna come? I dunno, kinda need to head back soon."

  4. 04

    Hang out, figure out, run into, pick up, deal with

    Phrasal verbs are the working backbone of casual American English. Hang out = spend casual time with someone. Figure out = solve, understand. Run into = encounter unexpectedly. Pick up = fetch, learn, lift, increase (context-dependent). Deal with = handle, manage. The one-word formal synonyms (socialize, comprehend, encounter, fabricate, manage) all sound stiff in casual speech. Building active phrasal-verb fluency is the single biggest unlock for sounding conversational.

    e.g. "I ran into Mark at the coffee shop, and we're gonna hang out Saturday and figure out the project."

  5. 05

    Or whatever, or something, talk soon, catch you later

    The casual hedges and closers. Or whatever and or something are casual approximators that signal you're not being precise ("we should grab a drink or something"). Talk soon and catch you later are the conversational equivalents of formal closings, used in person, on the phone, in text. American casual English rarely uses formal closings ("goodbye," "farewell") in friendly settings. Knowing the casual openers and closers locks in the register for the whole conversation.

    e.g. "Let's grab lunch next week or something. Talk soon!"

About Conversational English

English the way people actually speak it

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to Conversational English

Beginner conversational foundations (A2-B1)

For learners who can read and write basic English but freeze up in conversation. Lessons focus on functional speaking from session one: greetings and small talk, asking and answering questions, ordering food, navigating common situations. Speaking time dominates over explanation time; grammar gets clarified as it comes up in conversation. Target: comfortable functional conversation within 3-6 months of weekly committed lessons plus daily listening exposure.

Plateau-breaking (B1-B2)

The intermediate plateau in English looks like this: you can hold conversations but with significant hesitation, you understand most of what you read but miss spoken nuance, your vocabulary covers everyday topics but runs out fast on specifics, you sound stiff because you're missing the discourse markers and phrasal verbs that make casual English flow. Lessons target the specific blocks: phrasal-verb fluency, filler and discourse-marker comfort, reduction recognition, and massive volume of speaking practice with subtle correction.

Advanced fluency refinement (C1-C2)

For advanced learners whose grammar is solid and vocabulary is broad, but who want to sound less translated and more natural. Accent refinement, idiomatic naturalness, regional and register adaptation, cultural fluency around humor, sarcasm, and references. Lessons are conversation-heavy with specific corrections and recommendations, often paired with substantial listening and media work between sessions.

Listening + reduction training

Closing the listening gap between read English and spoken English. Lessons include real-speed audio clips (podcasts, interviews, unscripted YouTube) with comprehension work, reduction recognition (gonna, wanna, dunno, lemme, etc.), and acclimation to natural-pace native speech. Critical for learners whose reading comprehension is high but whose listening comprehension lags well behind, a common pattern in academic ESL backgrounds.

FAQ

About Conversational English lessons & classes

I can read and write English fine but I freeze up in conversation. What's wrong?

Nothing is wrong. This is the most common pattern for adult ESL learners, and it has more to do with the gap between studied English and spoken English than with any deficit. Classroom English systematically teaches the formal written register and skips the casual mode, the discourse markers, the phrasal verbs, and the reductions that make up actual conversation. Conversational lessons close that gap with sustained speaking practice plus targeted work on the specific casual-register patterns that classroom English left out.

Should I learn American English or British English?

Whichever fits your context. Tell your tutor in the trial ("I work mostly with US colleagues," or "I'm planning to move to London," or "my school taught British English but I now consume mostly American media"), and we'll match you to a teacher with the right accent and curriculum. American English is the larger global influence (movies, podcasts, tech) and the most-exposed variety for most international learners, which makes it a solid neutral default if you have no strong directional preference. British, Australian, and Canadian English are all taught at Strommen with native tutors of each.

How is conversational English different from Business English?

Business English focuses on professional contexts: meetings, presentations, negotiation, written correspondence, industry vocabulary, corporate register. Conversational English focuses on the casual mode that underlies all of those: small talk, discourse markers, phrasal verbs, listening to natural-speed speech. Most adult learners need both: conversational English is the foundation, and Business English layers on top once the casual register is comfortable. If you're stiff in casual contexts, working on Business English first usually doesn't help; the casual layer is what's missing. See our Business English page for the professional curriculum.

How long until I can hold a real conversation?

Depends on your starting point and your commitment. From upper-beginner (A2-B1), expect 4-6 months of weekly 60-minute lessons plus 30 minutes daily listening exposure to reach comfortable functional conversation. From intermediate (B1-B2), plateau-breaking work typically shows results in 3-4 months. Advanced refinement is ongoing; the curve flattens but never stops. The biggest variable is daily exposure between lessons; learners who listen to natural-speed English audio every day progress dramatically faster than those who don't.

What about my accent? Can you help me sound less foreign?

Yes, though we'd reframe the goal slightly. The point isn't to lose your accent. Accents are part of who you are, and most native speakers find them charming. The point is to make sure your accent doesn't get in the way of being understood, and to give you the rhythm and stress patterns that make any accent feel easy to follow. That's prosody work: sentence stress, intonation, rhythm, the schwa, the th sounds if they're an issue. For learners who specifically want focused accent work, we have a dedicated American accent specialty page with tutors who specialize in accent modification.

Will I be corrected constantly during the lesson?

No, and the right tutor knows when to correct and when to let you keep going. Constant correction blocks the flow of conversation and reinforces speaking anxiety. The standard pattern is that the tutor takes notes on patterns rather than interrupting, then circles back to specific corrections at natural pauses. For high-stakes practice (presentation prep, interview prep) the correction style shifts to more immediate; for free-conversation lessons, corrections happen at the end of conversational arcs. You can also tell your tutor your preference in the trial. Some learners want more correction, some want less.

Do you teach heritage learners (English at home, fluent on the surface)?

Yes. The heritage English pattern usually shows up as someone who grew up in a household where English was spoken but who feels like their English isn't "educated" or who has specific register or pronunciation gaps from incomplete schooling in English. The activation work is different from beginner work: you don't need vocabulary or pronunciation from scratch, you need to fill specific gaps and build register confidence. Tell us in the trial that you grew up around English, and we'll match you to a heritage-aware tutor.

What does the trial cover?

30 minutes, free, with the tutor you select. Bring your actual goal: "I want to feel less stiff at work," "I'm moving to the US in six months," "my listening is way behind my reading," "I've been stuck at intermediate for years." The tutor will hold a short conversation to assess your current level and identify the highest-impact areas to work on first, propose a study plan, and you decide whether to continue. Most students settle into a weekly rhythm with their trial tutor; if not, swap is easy.

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