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Musical App Helps Kids Learn English 

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Adir Peled, cofounder of Singit, found the method helped him. The Israeli Ministry of Education uses Singit to teach English to 60,000 students in grades five through nine.  SINGIT

One of the best ways to learn to speak a foreign language is to sing it.

That’s the philosophy behind Singit, a software program that teaches English using the power of music.

The company is the brainchild of Michael Peled, who struggled with dyslexia from childhood.

When he told his father he couldn’t learn English, his father, who was also dyslexic, told Peled he learned English by listening to the songs of John Lennon and Bob Dylan.

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Peled eventually channeled that insight into a learning app to help Israeli students increase their confidence in speaking English.

Today, the Israeli Ministry of Education uses Singit to teach English to 60,000 students in grades five through nine across 800 Israeli schools.

Israeli children often bop to the beat of music in English, sometimes mumbling the words if they don’t understand the lyrics. Singit uses the songs kids like to listen to, then provides questions for learning vocabulary and meaning. The students can follow the lyrics on a screen and click on words to see translations.

The app allows them to repeat a word, only moving on to the next word if they pronounce it correctly. Peled said it’s a way for them to learn English while enjoying themselves.

Israeli children enjoy learning English by using a special technique. The Singit app allows them to repeat a word, only moving on to the next word if they pronounce it correctly. SINGIT

In the classroom, teachers can choose the songs for their curriculum. At home, students can follow their own musical tastes.

The company now has its sights on selling Singit via a monthly subscription plan to people in other countries.

Audio version

While Singit is designed for all students, an all-audio version is geared especially to teach English to students with dyslexia or attention disorders.

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Adir Laebo, Singit’s customer-service manager, struggled with ADHD and class attention — until he fell in love with music. An all-audio version of the app is geared to students with dyslexia or attention disorders. SINGIT

Adir Laebo, Singit’s customer service manager, has a tale similar to Peled’s. He had ADHD and “couldn’t sit tight and listen in class.”

“I remember coming home and crying my eyes out,” Laebo said.

He told his grandfather that he couldn’t learn English, and his grandfather started playing Led Zeppelin on the stereo.

“He gave me the vinyl record with the lyrics on the back, and I started listening and following the lyrics,” Laebo said. “I still remember it was the song ‘No Quarter,’ and I fell in love with the music.”

Despite Peled’s early struggles in English, he graduated from high school with honors and served in an Air Force cyber-unit. At Weizmann Institute’s Program for Gifted Students, Peled developed a platform that later became Singit.

Using seed money saved from his work in venture capital, Peled founded Singit in 2019 with Benny Rosner, his former army commander, who serves as the company’s chief technology officer.

In 2020, the Ministry of Education adapted Singit’s program. The company now has 13 employees.

Learning without realizing it

Singit’s two competitors are Duolingo, which is geared to adults, and Lingopie, an Israeli video-streaming platform that enables viewers to learn different languages while watching TV shows and movies.

Peled said the company’s data shows average students learn 200 new words through the app during the school year. Others can learn more than 1,000 words.

The company’s data shows average students learn 200 new words through the app during the school year. Others can learn more than 1,000 words. BEN MULLINS/UNSPLASH 

Haifa resident Yaron Menashe said his two sons, aged 10 and 12, use Singit in their English classroom. His younger son already knew some English from playing the game Minecraft.

“He learned a few words here and there, but now he hears songs that he loves and speaks in sentences,” Menashe said. “Both boys use the app in class to listen to the music, and I see them using it at home, like a game.”

While teachers might prefer teaching English to the songs of Adele, Menashe said his sons love the American rock band Imagine Dragons.

“For my older son, the app just makes him learn more English without realizing that he is learning,” Menashe said.

Produced in association with ISRAEL21c.

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