👉 Choose your language: https://levitintymur.com/#languages

Learning Speed Is Not About Talent

Many parents believe that children learn languages faster because they are “naturally gifted.” In reality, speed comes from the learning environment. Children absorb language best when it feels meaningful, safe, and engaging. Interactive games create exactly this environment.

Why Interaction Beats Passive Learning

Watching videos or repeating words after an adult is passive. Interactive games, on the other hand, force the brain to make decisions:

  • choose the right word,
  • react to visual cues,
  • connect meaning with action.

This activates deeper cognitive processes and leads to stronger memory retention.

Vocabulary Is Built in Context, Not Lists

Children rarely learn words in isolation. They remember vocabulary when it is connected to:

  • a situation,
  • an image,
  • an emotion.

Games simulate real situations in a simplified, child-friendly way. Instead of memorizing “winter words,” children use them.

From Recognition to Real Use

Effective language learning always moves through stages:

  1. recognizing new words,
  2. repeating and automating them,
  3. applying them in context.

Well-designed games naturally guide children through all three stages without pressure or boredom.

A Practical Example from Our School

At Levitin Language School, we developed a structured Winter Vocabulary Game for children learning English.
It includes:

  • 25 interactive levels,
  • gradual daily progression,
  • permanent access after purchase.

The game is not entertainment alone — it is a learning tool integrated into our teaching philosophy.

👉 Try our Winter Vocabulary Game here:
https://levitintymur.com/games-to-learn-english/

Games and Teachers: The Strongest Combination

Games work best when they support real teaching. A teacher helps:

  • explain mistakes,
  • transfer game vocabulary into speech,
  • adapt learning to the child’s pace.

This combination creates fast progress without stress.


© Tymur Levitin — founder, director, and lead teacher at Levitin Language School
Global Learning. Personal Approach.