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Intensive Chinese tutors, lessons & classes

最近怎么样? Zuìjìn zěnmeyàng — the friend-level "how have you been" that most students reach far too late.

Personally vetted Intensive Chinese tutors for learners on a deadline. Accelerated Mandarin lessons built around a date that is already fixed: a posting abroad, an exam window, a start at a new job.

5.0 · 500+ reviews · Free 30-min trial · Match in 24 hrs
Intensive Chinese tutor and student working through an accelerated Mandarin lesson plan — Strommen
20 yrs
EST. 2006
In-Person Online
250+Tutors
18+Years in LA
150+Film & TV Credits
50+Languages

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Intensive Chinese tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen has been teaching Chinese in LA since 2006, and intensive students have always been part of the mix: people with a posting, an exam, or a job offer and not enough runway. There is no marketplace model behind this page and no profiles assembled by software. The tutors below were vetted by Strommen in person, and many have run compressed timelines before, so they know how to pace a plan that holds up under pressure.

Filter by location, age, or price. Then book a 30-minute free trial, and bring the date with you.

Below are the Strommen tutors who specialize in Intensive Chinese. Photos, ratings, and rates are real. Click any card to read their bio and book a free 30-minute trial.

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全力以赴 — immersion & acceleration

5 phrases an intensive student hears in week one

These come up early in an intensive plan, because tutors actually say them, in encouragement and in feedback. Worth keeping a screenshot of before your first lesson.

  1. 01

    加油 (jiā yóu)

    Literally "add oil." The all-purpose Mandarin cheer: go, keep going, you can do it. An intensive student hears it a lot, before a timed drill, after a hard listening exercise, the week the schedule gets heavy. It is the most natural thing a tutor says when they want you to push through the next stretch.

    e.g. 加油,你一定可以的!(Jiā yóu, nǐ yídìng kěyǐ de!) means "Keep going, you can definitely do this!"

  2. 02

    慢慢来 (màn man lái)

    "Take it slow, no rush." The phrase that sounds like a contradiction on an intensive page but is not. A good tutor uses it precisely, on the parts of Mandarin that punish hurry: tones, character recognition, the q-x-j sounds. Speed everywhere is not the goal. Speed where it works, patience where it matters.

    e.g. 别紧张,慢慢来。(Bié jǐnzhāng, màn man lái.) means "Don't be nervous, take it slow."

  3. 03

    厉害 (lìhai)

    "Impressive, formidable, seriously skilled." The praise has an edge to it: someone who is 厉害 is not just good but a little intimidating in their goodness. When a tutor tells an intensive student 你的中文真厉害, the progress has become visible, which on a compressed timeline is the encouragement that keeps the schedule survivable.

    e.g. 你的中文真厉害!(Nǐ de Zhōngwén zhēn lìhai!) means "Your Chinese is really impressive!"

  4. 04

    给力 (gěi lì)

    "Powerful, comes through, really delivers." Internet-origin slang from around 2010, now broadly accepted even on state media. It describes something that performs: a study method that works, a teammate who came through, a tutor whose plan actually moves the needle. An intensive student learns fast which resources are 给力 and which only look it.

    e.g. 这个方法真给力!(Zhège fāngfǎ zhēn gěilì!) means "This method really works!"

  5. 05

    牛 / 牛逼 (niú / niúbī)

    "Awesome, killer, badass." 牛 on its own is clean and fine in everyday speech; the longer 牛逼 is stronger and only for close friends, never in a professional setting. Worth knowing the line early, because intensive students pick up slang from clips and tend to overuse the crude version. A tutor will flag where it is safe to say.

    e.g. 这个翻译太牛了!(Zhège fānyì tài niú le!) means "This translation is amazing!"

About Intensive Chinese

When the deadline is the syllabus

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to Intensive Chinese

A plan reverse-engineered from your date

Intensive lessons start at the deadline and work backward. The trial is a scoping session: what the date requires, where you are now, how many self-study hours a week are realistic between lessons. From there the tutor sets the contact cadence, often two or more sessions a week, and a weekly milestone schedule. The plan gets reviewed regularly and adjusted when progress runs ahead of or behind where it should be, since a fixed date does not forgive a plan left on autopilot.

Foundations that hold under pressure

Tones and the trickier pinyin consonants get drilled hard and early. Mandarin tones are meaning-bearing, not decoration, and the q, x, j sounds against zh, ch, sh are the cluster most American learners conflate. Habits set in the first hundred hours are slow and costly to fix later, so an intensive plan front-loads this groundwork rather than skipping it to feel quick. Tone sandhi, the rule that turns two third tones into a rising-then-dipping pair, gets the same early attention.

Skill-balanced acceleration

Listening and speaking respond fast to a heavy schedule because they reward exposure, and an intensive student gets plenty of it. Reading and writing move slower, since characters accumulate at their own pace. Lessons push hard where the pressure helps and stay patient where it does not, with measure words, aspect particles like 了 and 过, and topic-comment sentence structure woven in as the spoken work gets more confident. The goal is balanced progress, not a lopsided sprint.

Built around your specific deadline

An HSK sitting calls for section-by-section exam work and timed practice under real conditions. A relocation calls for functional speaking, survival logistics, and enough cultural calibration to land well in the first weeks. A new role calls for business register and meeting language. Each is a different intensive track, and the tutor builds the one that matches your date. Many students keep working with the same tutor afterward, shifting into conversational Chinese once the pressure lifts.

FAQ

About Intensive Chinese lessons & classes

How fast can I actually learn Mandarin on an intensive schedule?

Faster than a relaxed weekly hour, but not magically fast. The US Foreign Service Institute rates Mandarin a Category IV language, its hardest group, at roughly 2,200 class hours for working professional proficiency. An intensive plan does not shrink that total. It uses the hours you have well: more contact time, tighter feedback, a schedule built backward from your date. Honest progress on a heavy schedule is real, just not unlimited.

How many lessons a week does an intensive plan involve?

Most intensive students take two or more sessions a week, sometimes more in the final weeks before a deadline. The right number depends on your date, your starting level, and how many self-study hours you can commit between lessons. Your tutor sets the cadence at the trial and adjusts it as the timeline progresses. Lessons without between-lesson study do not produce intensive results, so the self-study hours matter as much as the contact hours.

Can an intensive course skip tones and characters to go faster?

No, and a course that tries is not actually faster. Tones are part of each word, not accent polish: 妈 and 马 are different words on the same syllable. Skipping characters caps a learner around HSK 2. Habits formed in the first hundred hours are expensive to undo, so an intensive plan front-loads the foundations. Cutting them borrows speed early and pays it back with interest later.

I have a fixed deadline. Can a tutor plan around it?

Yes, that is exactly what Intensive Chinese is for. Bring the date to the free trial, whether it is a relocation, an exam window, or a job start. The tutor scopes what the date requires, measures where you are now, and builds a weekly milestone plan that reverse-engineers from the deadline. The plan gets reviewed often and adjusted when progress runs ahead of or behind schedule.

Are your Intensive Chinese tutors native speakers?

Most are native Mandarin speakers, and several have run compressed timelines before, so they know how to pace a plan that holds up under real pressure. A few are longtime bilinguals, fully fluent and experienced with intensive students. Each tutor's bio specifies their background and where they have taught. You can match yourself to a tutor whose experience fits your particular deadline.

Can I do intensive lessons online, or only in person in LA?

Both. Many Intensive Chinese tutors teach online via Zoom or Jitsi and are available globally, which matters when a deadline does not wait for travel. Several also teach in person, and our Chinese classes in Los Angeles page covers the in-person options. The booking widget on each tutor's profile shows their available formats, and an intensive schedule can mix the two.

I already speak some Mandarin. Does intensive still make sense?

Yes, and existing Mandarin is a real head start. The trial lesson calibrates to where you actually are, so an intensive plan builds forward from your current level rather than restarting. Students with a foundation often accelerate well, since the plan can concentrate hours on the specific gaps the deadline exposes instead of covering ground you already hold.

What does an intensive Mandarin lesson look like?

Lessons are one-on-one and tied to your milestone plan. A session might pair targeted drilling on a weak point, tones, a grammar pattern, exam timing, with conversation practice that applies what you have built. Between sessions the tutor assigns focused self-study so contact time is spent on feedback rather than first exposure. Many students supplement with our top 100 basic Chinese words list to keep momentum between lessons.

Ready for Intensive Chinese lessons or classes?

Book a free 30-minute trial with one of our personally vetted tutors. Private lessons or small-group classes — your choice.