CourseVerdict

French Essential Training vs Preply Kids

Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.

LinkedIn Learning · Languages

French Essential Training

3.5/ 5 · 24 opinions
16 positive5 neutral3 negative/ 24 total

Preply · Languages

Preply Kids

3.8/ 5 · 30 opinions
17 positive7 neutral6 negative/ 30 total

Per-criterion

French Essential Training

Content quality3.8 / 5

French Essential Training delivers structured, beginner-friendly content aligned with LinkedIn Learning's production standards. The platform's courses are produced with professional-grade video and audio, ensuring that phonetics demos and vocabulary walkthroughs are presented clearly. Learners on the platform generally praise the fact that content is "consistently fantastic" and that instructors "provide helpful insights," which holds true for language courses in the LinkedIn Learning catalogue. However, recurring criticism across LinkedIn Learning's language offerings is that content can feel "generic and not much detailed as expected," and some modules originate from the legacy Lynda.com era, meaning they can appear dated. A language instructor who reviewed LinkedIn Learning on Capterra specifically noted that "course search isn't great when looking for specific language levels," and that some courses are "super basic with no or very limited assessment." For French Essential Training specifically, the course appears to cover foundational phonetics, greetings, numbers, basic grammar structures, and everyday vocabulary — standard fare for an A1-A2 level course. This makes it a reliable starting point but insufficient on its own for anyone targeting conversational fluency or a structured progression to B1 level.

Instructor / method4.0 / 5

Stephanie Minart is a credentialled French language educator, and LinkedIn Learning's instructor vetting process requires demonstrable subject-matter expertise backed by verifiable LinkedIn profiles — a feature reviewers specifically highlight as a trust marker. Users on Capterra noted they value "learning and honing your skills from actual industry leading experts," and one language instructor confirmed that LinkedIn Learning videos "dovetail into what I am teaching," suggesting the pedagogical approach is professionally sound. Minart's instructional style, consistent with LinkedIn Learning's format guidelines, is concise and professionally delivered. The platform's broader experience shows instructors are rated highly for their "diverse and in-depth knowledge," and for language courses in particular, this translates to clear articulation and methodical pacing that beginners find accessible. The main limitation is the one-way nature of video-based instruction. Unlike a live tutor or interactive platform, learners cannot ask Minart follow-up questions in real time. Feedback from LinkedIn Learning users across categories notes that "some courses are still very lecture-based and could benefit from more hands-on practice or interactive elements."

Value for money3.5 / 5

French Essential Training is accessible only through a LinkedIn Learning subscription, priced at approximately $19.99–$39.99 per month (annual vs. monthly billing), with a one-month free trial available. For learners who use LinkedIn Learning's broader catalogue simultaneously, the value proposition improves substantially — the subscription unlocks 20,000+ courses, not just this one. One Capterra reviewer summarised this well: "the monthly fee per user is reasonable" when factored against the full library. However, for learners whose sole goal is French acquisition, the subscription cost compares unfavourably to dedicated language platforms such as Babbel or Pimsleur, which offer deeper interactive practice at comparable or lower price points. One reviewer on Bitdegree put it bluntly: "30 dollars for semi-pro courses? oh come on now." Language learners in particular often need speaking practice and adaptive feedback, which LinkedIn Learning does not provide. The LinkedIn Learning completion certificate — awarded upon finishing French Essential Training — is not externally accredited. Multiple reviewers across Capterra, G2, and TrustRadius specifically flag that "employers do not tend to recognize this platform as valid" and that certificates "lack accreditation." For learners aiming at formal French proficiency recognition (e.g., DELF), the certificate holds no official value.

Real-world fluency3.6 / 5

French Essential Training targets practical, everyday French — the vocabulary and phrases an English speaker would need for travel, basic workplace communication, or a foundation before pursuing formal study. LinkedIn Learning reviewers consistently describe the platform as "a practical tool for continuous professional development," and language courses are specifically flagged as useful supplementary material by at least one certified language instructor on the platform. Learners who engage with the course as a starting point and supplement it with conversation practice via italki, Duolingo, or in-person classes report good outcomes at the A1-A2 level. The course equips learners with pronunciation fundamentals and a core vocabulary base that transfers well to real interactions. However, as a standalone resource, it falls short of providing the speaking confidence needed for real-world French conversations. LinkedIn Learning's mobile app — rated 4.8/5 on iOS — allows offline downloads, meaning learners can review French vocabulary and listen to pronunciation models during commutes or travel, which directly serves real-world retention. The integration with LinkedIn profiles also appeals to professionals who want to signal language-learning initiative to employers, even if the certificate itself is not formally accredited.

Preply Kids

Content quality3.7 / 5

There is no fixed curriculum — each tutor builds the lessons. For motivated kids with a strong tutor that means fully personalized, age-appropriate material (games, exam prep like DELF Junior). But it is a marketplace, so structure and quality vary from one tutor to the next.

Instructor / method4.2 / 5

The instructor is the whole product, and it is the strongest part. Kids tutors average 4.93/5 across nearly 194,000 reviews, and parents repeatedly praise patience, engagement, and the ability to keep young or shy learners involved. The flip side: you have to find the right one.

Value for money3.6 / 5

Lessons start around $3/hour and average roughly $14/hour — cheaper than most live kids tutoring. But the 28-day subscription model, lessons that expire if unused, and refund friction when a tutor is unavailable pull the perceived value down for some families.

Retention & motivation3.5 / 5

1-on-1 accountability and a tutor who feels like family keep many kids engaged far better than a self-study app. The risk is churn from tutor mismatch — a poor fit slows progress until you switch — and from rigid scheduling that punishes busy families who miss the 28-day window.

Real-world fluency4.0 / 5

Live speaking time with a real person is exactly what builds conversational confidence in children, and parents report measurable gains — improved school grades, passed junior exams, comfort speaking. This is the clear advantage of tutoring over app-only learning for kids.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.