Will three-hour Spanish classes actually feel like three hours or does time go faster

Adult Fluenz student delivering a final Spanish presentation to peers and coaches, culminating the high-touch Fluenz Spanish Immersion experience in Mexico City.

Kathzvi from Southampton made this specific observation: “Learning a language is never easy, but 3 hour classes flew by.” Three hours. Flew by. That shouldn’t be possible if you’re watching the clock.

Kathzvi | Southampton, NY

“Learning a language is never easy, but 3 hour classes flew by. The teachers are all highly qualified, extremely patient and knowledgeable.”

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Julia Vitullo-Martin called the two-hour sessions “intense”—not boring, not dragging, intense. There’s a difference.

Julia Vitullo-Martin | New York City, NY

“The two-hour Spanish sessions are intense, but everyone in my group (16 people of diverse ages and backgrounds) felt they had made an unprecedented great leap forward.”

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jordanmphillips | Austin, Texas

“It is really intensive, but somehow they made it very enjoyable.”

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jordanmphillips said it was “really intensive, but somehow they made it very enjoyable.” Shara worried beforehand about being “over-stimulated” but found the packed schedule “enriching, fun, and unexpectedly restorative.”

Shara | Solo Traveler

“Coming off of a pretty intense work situation, I was looking forward to the trip, but a bit nervous about the potential for being ‘over-stimulated’ or taxed from the Spanish lessons. Although we had a very packed schedule, every aspect of it was enriching, fun, and unexpectedly restorative.”

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Time perception matters. If classes drag, you’re not engaged. If they fly by, something’s working.