Karen Vaughan Learning Guide

Notebooks let you save and organize lessons to focus on specific grammar topics. Add lessons, study them, and test your knowledge later.

A mix of A1 and A2 grammatical concepts to help Karen on the way to reaching a level of conversational Spanish that she can be confident in.

Level Kwiziq score Lesson Lesson Award  
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate in the near future in Spanish with ir a + infinitive (El Futuro próximo)
A1 : Beginner   Ser vs Estar in Spanish: Using estar in Spanish (not ser) when talking about locations
A1 : Beginner   Forming the present progressive/continuous in Spanish with estar + present participle (El Presente Progresivo)
A1 : Beginner   Forming regular gerunds in Spanish (-ing form)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate tener in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate hacer in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate ir in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate regular -ar verbs in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate regular -er verbs in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate regular -ir verbs in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using the perfect tense in Spanish (not the preterite) to talk about experiences
A2 : Lower Intermediate   When to use the perfect tense versus the simple past (Perfecto vs Indefinido)
B1 : Intermediate   Using the Spanish near future (not the present progressive) for future arrangements
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Spanish irregular past participles ending in -to/-cho
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate hacer in the present perfect tense in Spanish (El Pretérito Perfecto)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Use of ya in Spanish with the present perfect tense (El Pretérito Perfecto)
B1 : Intermediate   Using gustar in the conditional in Spanish = would like [to do something]
A2 : Lower Intermediate   How to say "to love something/doing something" in Spanish
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using gustar to say you like something (he likes, she likes, we like, you like, they like)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using gustar to say you like doing something (he likes, she likes, we like, you like, they like)
A1 : Beginner   Using A + la/las + [time] to say at what time something takes place in Spanish
Clever stuff happening!