British Council (BC) Drama | IELTS | Editorial Opinion
Russia’s Prosecutor General’s Office has labeled the British Council — one of the organizers of the IELTS English exam — an “undesirable organization.”
Prosecutors claim the BC “uses education and culture as a cover” to promote British interests and values. They also accuse it of supporting the LGBT movement (banned in Russia), discrediting Russian state policies, being a “nest of spies” (their words, not ours!)
Yulia’s Take (Ex-BC Employee & IELTS Band 8 Holder)
(Author of this channel worked at BC in 2016 and shares the inside story)
💓 The Good Side of BC
Student-focused – Courses tailored for specific needs (medical English, teens, IELTS writing, etc.)
Well-run – Clear processes, career growth opportunities, and solid* training for teachers
Prestigious brand – Tough to get hired (even for Brits), but it’s a mark of quality
Diverse accents – Students hear different English speakers (not just "Queen’s English")
☺️ The Reality (No Rose-Tinted Glasses)
Backed by* the UK government – Part of its diplomatic mission, protects its interests. Some departments focus on profit (like IELTS), others push cultural influence (charity events, etc.)
Why the cultural push? Practical, not ideological – The UK wants to attract international students (big $$$ for their economy)
Side effect? Some employees start comparing their home country unfavorably after seeing better work standards abroad.
LGBT inclusion – Coursebooks cover rights (LGBT, women, disabilities, race), but some behind-the-scenes hypocrisy exists (e.g., bias against hiring Indians).
🧸 Final Opinion: It’s Complicated
People love black-and-white narratives (good vs. evil) and hate fence sitters*, but reality is messier. The BC isn’t all saint or all spy — it’s an organization with interests, like any other.
Your best move? Focus on your goals (like acing IELTS) and make decisions that benefit YOU.
🤐 Gonna zip my lip about BC & IELTS — don’t want problems
📈 Even more motivated to take IELTS now
🤷♂️ Not an IELTS fan either way
Russia’s Prosecutor General’s Office has labeled the British Council — one of the organizers of the IELTS English exam — an “undesirable organization.”
Prosecutors claim the BC “uses education and culture as a cover” to promote British interests and values. They also accuse it of supporting the LGBT movement (banned in Russia), discrediting Russian state policies, being a “nest of spies” (their words, not ours!)
Yulia’s Take (Ex-BC Employee & IELTS Band 8 Holder)
(Author of this channel worked at BC in 2016 and shares the inside story)
Student-focused – Courses tailored for specific needs (medical English, teens, IELTS writing, etc.)
Well-run – Clear processes, career growth opportunities, and solid* training for teachers
Prestigious brand – Tough to get hired (even for Brits), but it’s a mark of quality
Diverse accents – Students hear different English speakers (not just "Queen’s English")
Backed by* the UK government – Part of its diplomatic mission, protects its interests. Some departments focus on profit (like IELTS), others push cultural influence (charity events, etc.)
Why the cultural push? Practical, not ideological – The UK wants to attract international students (big $$$ for their economy)
Side effect? Some employees start comparing their home country unfavorably after seeing better work standards abroad.
LGBT inclusion – Coursebooks cover rights (LGBT, women, disabilities, race), but some behind-the-scenes hypocrisy exists (e.g., bias against hiring Indians).
People love black-and-white narratives (good vs. evil) and hate fence sitters*, but reality is messier. The BC isn’t all saint or all spy — it’s an organization with interests, like any other.
Your best move? Focus on your goals (like acing IELTS) and make decisions that benefit YOU.
*Post Glossary🫧 fence sitter → Someone who doesn’t pick a side in an argument; stays neutral.🫧 solid training → High-quality, practical lessons that actually help you learn🫧 backed by → Supported/funded by (often a government or powerful group)
🤐 Gonna zip my lip about BC & IELTS — don’t want problems
📈 Even more motivated to take IELTS now
🤷♂️ Not an IELTS fan either way
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Sunday plug* for old & new @EnglishForImpact readers
Our channel was born on March 3. It's growing fast — but to go from baby to toddler*, we need to hit 500 subscribers
We're almost there — and when we cross 500, we’re unlocking a brand-new bonus for you:
🪴 Free Weekly Group Speaking Meetups
🫧 On advanced topics
🫧 New vocab, better fluency
🫧 Real practice with real people
🫧 Free
Wanna help us launch this next week instead of in September? Share this channel in your stories, groups, channels, or just DM a friend
Think your share won’t matter? It does. One share = one step closer. Maybe your share is the magic one
🔗 [Channel link]
📩 Send proof to @ybeymlina and reserve your free speaking spot already now, before public release (optional)
We're grateful to work with a smart, professional, and motivated crowd. Let’s grow this together 🙌
Our channel was born on March 3. It's growing fast — but to go from baby to toddler*, we need to hit 500 subscribers
We're almost there — and when we cross 500, we’re unlocking a brand-new bonus for you:
Wanna help us launch this next week instead of in September? Share this channel in your stories, groups, channels, or just DM a friend
Think your share won’t matter? It does. One share = one step closer. Maybe your share is the magic one
🔗 [Channel link]
📩 Send proof to @ybeymlina and reserve your free speaking spot already now, before public release (optional)
*Post Glossary🫧 Toddler — a small child who has just learned to walk, usually between 1 and 3 years old.🫧 Plug — a short message where you promote or recommend something — like a shout-out
We're grateful to work with a smart, professional, and motivated crowd. Let’s grow this together 🙌
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At S2S and PitchUp, we work with very serious people — founders, top managers, product folks, engineers. Focused, thoughtful, time-conscious. And yet, when it comes to silly viral videos, our users tend to split into* 2 camps*:
Whatever your take is, viral videos are hard to ignore if you:
In fact, very serious data scientists study virality patterns, because attention drives trends, and competition for attention is fierce*
This week, S2S learners explore the anatomy of virality, and pick up new expressions from a sharp BBC analysis of viral content
*Post Glossary🫧 a camp — a group of people who share the same opinion or way of thinking
"People were in two camps — some loved the idea of AGI, others hated it"🫧 to split into — to divide into parts or groups
"The team split into small groups to work on different tasks"🫧 to dismiss (sth) as noise — to say that something is not important or useful; to ignore it
"Some people dismiss TikTok as noise, but others see value in it"🫧 fierce /fɪəs/ competition — very strong or intense competition
"There is fierce competition for attention online — everyone wants to go viral"
🌀 Want to shape up your English with topics like this?
Learn more about S2S
📅 Book a very demure, very mindful trial call [here]
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Lots of English learners say things, but that’s not the same as communicating. At S2S, our learners get feedback not only on grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation, but also on how they interact in real conversations
Why does that matter? Because even perfect grammar won't save a conversation that feels awkward, stiff, or one-sided
Yesterday, Dasha (S2S assessor) and Yulia (S2S founder) provately chatted about the little “magic moves” that turn an 'answer-the-question' exercise into a real human exchange
Let us share 2 simple magic moves for effective communication you can start using today:
“Does that make sense?”
“Do you see what I mean?”
“Did I explain that clearly?”
These show you care if the other person is following. They invite response and make the conversation feel mutual, not like a speech
Instead of generic “How about you?”, try:
“Have you seen something similar before?”
“Do you feel the same about AI?”
“What did you mean when you said AGI is hypothetical?”
These lead to real thoughts, more speaking, and stronger skills
Too obvious? Yep. But here’s the thing Knowing a trick ≠ Using it in real time. It takes focus and practice to apply these in actual conversations, but when you do, your results skyrocket
🚀 If you want to grow your communication skills
👀 If you want Dasha & Yulia to record short demo videos showing real vs. robotic communication? Let us know in the comments!
Feeling ready to level up your English communication? DM @ybeymlina with the word “communication” and she’ll ask you a couple of quick questions and invite you to a free demo call
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Hey founder, product manager, or senior developer! If your English is B1+ (strong Intermediate or higher) and you can already explain your ideas, but still struggle with nuance, fluency, or confidence, PitchUp is your space to grow. At PitchUp, you’ll build clear thinking in English, precise vocabulary, strong delivery (intonation, energy, rhythm)
Common concerns
🇺🇸🇷🇺 Want to chat, ask questions, or check if PitchUp fits you? Message @ybeymlina with “PitchUp” — English or Russian is fine
We’re happy to have you here. Let’s grow together — and spread the word 🪴
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Speaking English with AI Chatbots: Game-Changer or Trap?
Hey English warriors! Love it or hate it, AI chatbots are here to stay, but are they really preparing you for real-life convos?
🧸 Disclaimer:
This post is based on 17+ years of teaching experience and psycho-linguistical background (Msc Psychology, Cambridge Delta) & 2+ years of tech management at Yandex Practicum
@EnglishForImpact’re tech optimists. We LOVE and ecnourage AI adoption*, but this post is written purely from a teaching & learning perspective
🪴 Pros of Practicing with AI:
📌 Unlimited access: chat anytime, anywhere
📌 Low or no cost: democritising access to learning opportunities
📌 Infinite patience, no judgement. Bot won’t roll its eyes if you ask "What is the present perfect?" 100 times
📌 Prompt-based feedback. Say: "Only correct my pronunciation!" & and it obeys
⭐️ AI makes English practice accessible to everyone, and that’s AMAZING.
😐 But… The Dark Side of Learning Exclusiveley with AI Bots:
🚬 The downside of infinite patience, no judgement is no communication skills training
🚬 Zero pressure. You don't learn to adjust*, impress, get your message across: AI will accept you just the way you're
🚬 Emerging unprepared to face real life interactions & a bit... egotistical ;)
⭐️ AI = great gym for your brain. Real humans = the real battlefield
What About You? Do you use AI chatbots? Does talking to real people in English still feel awkward? Share your thoughts in comments
P.S. This post was not written by AI… or was it?
🪴 Now go practice, with bots OR humans!
📎 Learn more about S2S (Human first)
Hey English warriors! Love it or hate it, AI chatbots are here to stay, but are they really preparing you for real-life convos?
This post is based on 17+ years of teaching experience and psycho-linguistical background (Msc Psychology, Cambridge Delta) & 2+ years of tech management at Yandex Practicum
@EnglishForImpact’re tech optimists. We LOVE and ecnourage AI adoption*, but this post is written purely from a teaching & learning perspective
What About You? Do you use AI chatbots? Does talking to real people in English still feel awkward? Share your thoughts in comments
P.S. This post was not written by AI… or was it?
*Post Glossary🫧 Adjust (verb) – To change something slightly to make it fit or work better
"She had to adjust her glasses to see clearly"🫧 Adoption (noun) – The act of starting to use something new
"The adoption of smartphones changed how we communicate"🫧 Roll (one’s) eyes (idiom) – To move your eyes upward to show annoyance, disbelief, or sarcasm
"When he told another bad joke, she just rolled her eyes"🫧 Emerging unprepared (phrase) – Coming into a situation without being ready
"Many students are emerging unprepared for job interviews because they don’t practice speaking"
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Yulia is a teacher and psychologist by education, and a product manager and startup accelerator resident by experience
Her personal mission is simple but powerful: to bring people closer through better English
🌍 She has lived and worked in 7 countries, including the US, Colombia, France, Turkey, Vietnam, and more, which gives her a truly global, human-first view of how people learn and communicate across cultures
Former brands she worked or studied with:
Yandex, British Council, Fulbright, Cambridge, and others. Swipe the carousel to see more
Most importantly: Yulia is down-to-earth, easy to talk to, and a big fan of improv comedy. Speaking with her leaves you full of insights, but also feeling light and uplifted
Feel free to message Yulia if you want to:
• share your story
• ask for help
• get started with S2S or PitchUp
@ybeymlina
🇺🇸🇷🇺Use English or Russian
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