Our mission
Make real-life Spanish accessible and measurable for everyone. We align to CEFR, emphasize communication, and use data to support progress.
We focus on what moves the needle: speaking time, feedback quality, and the ability to reuse structures under pressure. Every lesson produces a take-home “repeatable pattern” so progress stays visible between sessions.
Brand story
Conexion Real started as a small teacher-led experiment: fewer slides, more speaking, and a sharper feedback loop. Students asked for the same clarity outside the classroom, so we built a system around it.
“Real” means two things here: Spanish you can use in actual life, and a learning process you can trust. We keep the tone friendly, the criteria strict, and the outcomes practical.
Timeline
Accessible accordion; use Tab / Enter to navigate.
2018 — First pilot cohorts
We started with small online groups to validate our teaching method: more talk time, lighter materials, and immediate correction that stays supportive.
2020 — DELE prep tracks
We introduced exam prep with mock tests and feedback loops. The takeaway: exam success improves when speaking habits become consistent and measurable.
2023 — Conversation clubs
We launched topic-based speaking labs: short prompts, high repetition, and vocabulary that sticks because you actually used it out loud.
2025 — Pronunciation micro-tools
We built lightweight interactive tools for self-checking patterns (stress, accents, and common mistakes) so students can practice between sessions.
What we value
Clarity over complexity
You’ll get a simple next step. We reduce cognitive load so practice stays consistent.
Feedback with a purpose
Corrections are prioritized: what blocks communication first, then what improves accuracy.
Respect for your time
Short loops, high speaking ratio, clear homework that takes minutes—not hours.
High standards, human tone
We keep the bar high while staying kind. Confidence grows when your process is safe.
Pronunciation sandbox
Type a Spanish word to see stress highlights and accent hints (based on basic rules). This tool is for learning patterns—not as a replacement for listening practice.
Rule reminders (simplified)
- If there’s a written accent, that vowel is stressed (e.g., camión).
- If a word ends in vowel, “n”, or “s”, stress the penultimate syllable by default (e.g., hablan).
- Otherwise, stress the last syllable by default (e.g., doctor).
- “ción” endings are typically stressed on “ó” when accented (e.g., comunicación).