Antiguena Spanish School

antiguena school lesson
A teacher and student in the garden

I’ve always wanted to speak five languages. It’s an arbitrary number, but if you include English and Japanese, which I already speak, Spanish and perhaps Arabic and Mandarin, you could go almost anywhere in the world and be able to converse with locals. This week, I started on the path to Spanish fluency by enrolling in classes at Antiguena Academy in Guatemala. I was recommended to start in Guatemala because the people speak slowly and clearly compared to other Latin American countries, and Antigua because it’s such a quaint, friendly city.

I’m not sure whether Antiguena is the best school, but it’s cheap, they arrange daily cultural activities on top of the lessons, and my teacher makes the classes interesting. In one week, we’ve covered all present tense verb forms and a number of useful phrases. That may be fast because I’ve studied Spanish before (then lost it learning French while living in Belgium), but it seems to be the standard curriculum.

Best of all, the classes are held in a private garden on the edge of town, with fifty teacher-student pairs scattered throughout. It’s ringing with laughter, yet otherwise tranquil. Tostadas and other local dishes are available very cheaply during the morning break, when students gather on the garden’s lawn to catch up and plan their weekends.

I plan to spend a few weeks here, but am open to studying in other towns in Guatemala or further afield. Do you know of other Spanish schools worth trying in Latin America? What’s good about them?

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