They brought in a political philosopher for an evening lecture. Lauri C from Santa Monica called him “well-known.” Julia Vitullo-Martin described it as “a lively lecture on Mexico’s political history.” That’s not language instruction—that’s intellectual programming.
Lauri C | Santa Monica, California
“The program also included so many incredible cultural activities in Mexico City – a chef’s table dinner at Pujol, a trip to Casa Azul, a curated tour of the Museo Nacional de Antropologia, an evening lecture from a well-known political philosopher.”
Read full review on TripAdvisor
Julia Vitullo-Martin | New York City, NY
“The evening events–a tamale & tequila tasting, a lively lecture on Mexico’s political history, a private tour of the Maya room at the National Museum of Anthropology, and more–were superb.”
Read full review on TripAdvisor
LLP mentioned they had “the opportunity to hear an immensely entertaining playwright.” The instructors themselves have backgrounds in philosophy, film, and art—not just language teaching credentials.
LLP | Solo Traveler
“The instructors are not only extremely knowledgeable in teaching Spanish but also have diverse education backgrounds in languages, philosophy, film and art. We had the opportunity to hear an immensely entertaining playwright.”
Read full review on TripAdvisor
robinthompsonphd | Solo Traveler
“The cultural events (poets, museums, restaurants) increased my desire to learn Spanish and made me more appreciative of Mexican history, art, and culture.”
Read full review on TripAdvisor
robinthompsonphd said the cultural programming—poets, museums, restaurants—”made me more appreciative of Mexican history, art, and culture.” You’re getting cultural education, not just language mechanics.