ESLuent's High School English track is built for teen learners — grades 9 through 12 — across Reading, Writing, Vocabulary, and Grammar. Aligned to CEFR levels (A2 → C2) so it works whether you're in a U.S. classroom, an international school, or studying abroad. Lessons crossover with SAT, AP Lang, AP Lit, and college-application essays — so the work you do tonight is the work that lifts your transcript.
How our courses map to grades 9–12, what CEFR means in school terms, and where to start.
10-minute placement aligned to CEFR. We tell you your grade-level reading and writing per skill.
Study routines for a packed school week, essay-writing under deadline, and the small habits that lift your grade.
Each skill has its own track, scored to the same rubric examiners use.
Annotation method, theme & symbol, rhetorical analysis (the AP Lang move), and reading non-fiction with purpose.
Five-paragraph essays without the cliché, thesis statements that actually argue, and college essays that sound like you.
1,500 academic words, SAT-style vocab in context, and the etymology shortcuts that make new words click instantly.
Comma splices, semicolons, the dash, parallel structure — the moves that turn a B paper into an A paper.
Not sure where you stand? Take the 10-minute placement test — we'll point you at the right level track.
Every High School English lesson connects to a real next step — SAT, AP exams, your college application essay, your school's state assessment. Pick the pathway you're heading toward.
Vocab in context, transitions, command of evidence — the R&W moves that move your composite score the most.
Rhetorical situation, devices, claim & evidence, synthesis essay — the AP Lang exam, broken into 96 tight lessons.
Poetry analysis, prose passages, the FRQs, and the works you can actually use on the open-question essay.
Common App, supplements, the personal statement — drafts that sound like you, not like a chatbot.
STAAR, Regents, FSA, MCAS — state-specific writing and reading prep aligned to your school's assessment.
Cross-examination, public-forum debate, original oratory — argument structures and speaking under pressure.
Short stories, flash fiction, character voice, and the writing-workshop habits that survive your senior year.
Six-week summer programs: pick reading, writing, vocab, or essay-prep and arrive in September a level ahead.
A 10-minute CEFR-aligned placement test. We tell you your grade-level reading and writing per skill — and which AP / SAT / college-essay path makes sense from where you stand.