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泰穆尔-列维廷
泰穆尔-列维廷
翻译系教师。专业认证翻译员,拥有英语和德语翻译和教学经验。我在世界 20 个国家从事教学工作。我的教学和授课原则是摒弃死记硬背规则的做法,而是要学会理解语言的原理,并像说话一样凭感觉正确发音,而不是在脑子里逐一复习所有的规则,因为在实际讲话中没有时间这样做。你总是需要根据情况和舒适度来进行练习。
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Tymur Levitin 的作者专栏
列维廷语言学校创始人兼校长
🔗 开始语言学校》,作者 Tymur Levitin


How can someone pass B1… but still struggle with A2?

Simple: they never truly mastered the basics.
They just moved on.

This happens more often than most teachers want to admit:
A student “graduates” to a higher level, but:

  • can’t confidently form the past tense
  • doesn’t recognize conditional structures
  • still struggles with articles and word order

Because moving forward ≠ internalizing.


Language is not a staircase. It’s a spiral.

Real learning looks like this:

  • You revisit what you “already learned”
  • You see it again — in a new context
  • You finally understand what it actually means

A test may show you’re B1.
But daily speech might show you’re stuck at high A2 —
and that’s not your fault.
It’s the system that rushes forward without giving you time to own the structure.


What “level” really means — and doesn’t

CEFR levels were never meant to define fluency.
They’re guidelines, not guarantees.

A student may pass a B1 exam because:

  • they memorized templates
  • they rehearsed for expected formats
  • they got lucky with vocabulary

But if you ask:

Can you reformulate this?
Can you adapt your sentence?
Can you explain why you said it that way?

— the room goes quiet.


Real language happens between the levels

It’s not about A2 or B1.
It’s about how well you:

  • understand what you’re saying
  • build sentences that serve your thoughts
  • switch structure when needed
  • express intent confidently

That’s not measured on a certificate.
But it’s what actually defines communication.


What I teach my students

I always say:

“You don’t need permission to master A2 just because your book says B1.”

In my lessons, we:

  • revisit, without shame
  • re-express, without fear
  • rebuild, not just repeat

Because speaking fluently doesn’t mean skipping forward -
it means owning your tools, even the basic ones.


Mastery isn’t speed. It’s confidence.

Progress in language isn’t about how fast you pass levels.
It’s about how deeply you understand what you’re doing —
and how freely you can use it.


我们博客的相关阅读

→ What a Dictionary Won’t Tell You — and Why Intuition Might
→ 语言障碍与语言无关
→ Understanding Sentence Structure as Meaning, Not Just Rules


© Tymur Levitin

Author, founder, director, and lead teacher at Levitin Language School
本文是作者专栏的一部分:
🟦 Language Without Illusions: 泰穆尔-列维廷’s Column on Real Learning


Next in the series:

“Grammar Is Not About Rules — It’s About Meaning”

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