Programs

A full academic portfolio for Quran, Arabic, and Islamic studies.

Each program has a clear level plan, live delivery, and tailored support.

Methodology

From correct sounds to deep understanding.

Islamic studies are taught through the Quran, Sunnah, stories of the prophets, causes of revelation, and practical manners.
The focus is not memorization alone, but wisdom, conduct, and understanding.

Learning Modes

  • Private lessons
  • Small group classes
  • Live video and audio sessions
  • Progress reports, rewards, and certificates
Pricing

Flexible plans for groups and one-to-one lessons

Group pricing is per learner in a 5-student group, while one-to-one lessons start from $11 per hour with discounted monthly packages.

Group Class

5-Learner Group

$4/hour per learner

A budget-friendly option for learners who want a live class in a small group format.

Private

5 Monthly Hours

$55/month

One-to-one teaching starting from $11 per hour with a flexible monthly commitment.

Private

10 Monthly Hours

$105/month

A steady weekly plan with a lower effective hourly rate than booking individual sessions.

Private

15 Monthly Hours

$150/month

Best for learners who want higher study intensity and stronger month-to-month progress.

Quran Circles

A 24-week Tajweed mastery track in Hafs 'an 'Asim that moves from foundational rules to fluent, assessed recitation and a final ijazah-style evaluation.

24 Weeks 49 Lessons 4 Progressive Quarters Hafs 'an 'Asim Track
Learners seeking structured Tajweed, precise articulation, and fluent Quran recitation.
  • Four progressive quarters from foundations to fluent recitation
  • Noon, Meem, Lam, articulation, characteristics, Madd, Waqf, and Ibtida'
  • Practical drills, live correction, voice recording, and recurring assessments
  • Final theoretical and practical evaluation with programme certification
Detailed Curriculum

COMPLETE CURRICULUM · HAFS 'AN 'ASIM

Tajweed Mastery Program

A structured, 24-week journey through the rules of Quranic recitation — from foundations to a full Ijazah in recitation.

4 quarters24 weeks49 lessons

QUARTER I · WEEKS 1–6

Foundations of Tajweed: Noon, Meem & Lam Rules

This phase is the foundation upon which everything else is built. The student begins by understanding the nature and purpose of the science, then moves directly into the most essential practical rules governing the silent Noon, Tanween, silent Meem, and the various Lam letters.

Week 1: Introduction to the Science of Tajweed

  1. Introduction to Tajweed: its definition, purpose, and ruling on applying it

    Objective: The student will be able to define Tajweed accurately, state its primary goal of protecting the tongue from error (Lahn), and explain the ruling on Tajweed in terms of both scholarly knowledge and practical application.

  2. Rules of Isti'adhah, Basmalah, and the ways of beginning recitation

    Objective: The student will distinguish between the different formulas of seeking refuge (Isti'adhah), understand the rulings of Basmalah when starting or connecting Surahs, and correctly apply the various ways of beginning recitation.

Week 2: Rules of the Silent Noon & Tanween — Part I

  1. Ith-har: the four throat letters and the ruling of clear pronunciation

    Objective: The student will identify all six throat letters that trigger Ith-har, apply a fully clear Noon or Tanween before them without any trace of Ghunnah, and practise in Quranic examples.

  2. Idgham with and without Ghunnah: the six letters and their two groups

    Objective: The student will distinguish between the two Idgham groups — with Ghunnah (ي ن م و) and without Ghunnah (ل ر) — and apply full assimilation of the Noon/Tanween into the following letter.

Week 3: Rules of the Silent Noon & Tanween — Part II

  1. Iqlab: converting the Noon/Tanween to a Meem before Ba'

    Objective: The student will apply Iqlab before Ba' with Ghunnah at two counts, understand that the concealed Meem is produced with slightly separated lips, and identify Iqlab in the Mushaf by the small Meem symbol.

  2. Ikhfa': the fifteen letters, degrees of concealment, and the nature of Ghunnah

    Objective: The student will identify all fifteen Ikhfa' letters, apply the rule as a state between Ith-har and Idgham with Ghunnah, and understand that the fifteen letters produce varying degrees of proximity to full assimilation.

Week 4: Rules of Doubled (Mushaddad) Letters & Silent Meem

  1. The doubled Meem and Noon (Ghunnah Mushaddad)

    Objective: The student will understand that the doubled Meem and Noon represent the most obligatory positions of Ghunnah, and will apply Ghunnah at its correct measure (two counts) — neither excessive nor insufficient.

  2. Rules of the silent Meem: Ikhfa' Shafawi, Idgham Mutamathilayn Saghir, and Ith-har Shafawi

    Objective: The student will distinguish between all three rules of the silent Meem, identify the triggering letter for each, and apply Ikhfa' Shafawi with Ghunnah while keeping the lips neither fully separated nor fully sealed.

Week 5: Rules of the Silent Lam Letters

  1. Rules of the Lam of Definition: Solar Lam (Shamsiyyah) and Lunar Lam (Qamariyyah)

    Objective: The student will classify the Arabic letters as solar or lunar, apply solar Idgham and lunar Ith-har in flowing recitation without hesitation.

  2. Rules of the Lam of verbs, commands, nouns, and particles

    Objective: The student will know the default ruling of Lam in verbs, nouns, and particles, identify the cases where the Lam of a verb is assimilated, and apply this knowledge in Quranic verses.

Week 6: Review & Assessment — Quarter I

  1. Theoretical review and practical exercises on all Quarter I material

    Objective: The student will mentally reorganise the rules of Quarter I, correct errors using review charts, and read a passage of the Quran applying all studied rules.

  2. Oral assessment and evaluation of recitation level

    Objective: The student will objectively assess their vocal performance, identify areas of weakness before moving to Quarter II, and record their recitation for comparison at the end of the programme.

QUARTER II · WEEKS 7–12

Letter Articulation Points & Characteristics

This phase is the "central pillar" of Tajweed and requires intensive focus, visual study, and hands-on vocal practice. Every Arabic letter has a precise place of origin and a set of characteristics that define its sound.

Week 7: Main Articulation Points (Makhaarij al-Huroof)

  1. The five general articulation regions: the empty space (Jawf), throat, tongue, lips, and nasal passage

    Objective: The student will draw a mental map of the five general articulation regions, connect each region to its group of letters, and explain the relationship between a letter's point of origin and how it is produced.

  2. The Jawf and the throat articulation points in detail

    Objective: The student will identify the three sub-points of the throat and their respective letters (lowest, middle, highest), and aurally distinguish between Hamzah, Ha', 'Ayn, Ghayn, Kha', and Ha.

Week 8: Tongue Articulation Points — Part I

  1. Back of tongue (Qaf & Kaf) and middle of tongue (Jeem, Sheen, non-elongated Yaa')

    Objective: The student will aurally distinguish between Qaf and Kaf, recognising their articulation points are close but not identical, and will correctly produce Jeem, Sheen, and Yaa' from the middle of the tongue without mixing them.

  2. The edge of the tongue: Dhad and Lam

    Objective: The student will produce Dhad correctly from the right or left edge of the tongue (or both), distinguish it from Dha', and articulate Lam precisely from its correct point without slipping.

Week 9: Tongue Articulation — Part II; Lips & Nasal Passage

  1. Tip of the tongue: Noon, Ra', and the warning against rolling the Ra'

    Objective: The student will produce Noon from the tip of the tongue with moderate pressure, avoid the rolling (trill) of Ra' by producing it as a single clean sound, and aurally distinguish between a concealed and a clear Noon.

  2. Palatal, gum, and sibilant letters: Ta, Dal, Ta', Sad, Zay, Seen, Dha', Dhal, Tha'

    Objective: The student will group similar letters by articulation point, aurally distinguish each letter from its near-equivalents in terms of voicing, aspiration, and occlusion, and apply correct pronunciation in Quranic vocabulary.

  3. Lip articulation (Fa', Waw, Ba', Meem) and the nasal passage (Khayshum)

    Objective: The student will distinguish between the articulation of Fa' (inner lower lip + upper incisors) and that of Waw, Ba', and Meem, and understand that the nasal passage is the seat of Ghunnah, not a letter-articulation point.

Week 10: Letter Characteristics with Opposites (Sifaat)

  1. Introduction to Sifaat; voicedness & breathiness (Jahr/Hams); strength & softness (Shiddah/Rakhawah/Bayniyyah)

    Objective: The student will define a Sifah and explain the contrast between opposing characteristics, aurally distinguish voiced from unvoiced letters by placing a hand on the throat, and classify letters as strong, soft, or intermediate.

  2. Elevation & lowering (Isti'la'/Istifal); occlusion & openness (Itbaq/Infitah); fluency & heaviness (Idhlaq/Ismat)

    Objective: The student will memorise the seven letters of elevation (Isti'la': خص ضغط قظ), distinguish between full occlusion (Itbaq) in its four letters versus the remaining elevated letters, and understand how Idhlaq enables greater speed of articulation.

Week 11: Letter Characteristics without Opposites

  1. Sifaat: whistling (Safeer), echoing (Qalqalah and its three levels), and softness (Leen)

    Objective: The student will apply the whistle of Sad, Seen, and Zay clearly; observe the three levels of Qalqalah (weakest in the middle, strongest when pausing on a doubled letter); and produce the two Leen letters effortlessly without elongation.

  2. Sifaat: lateral deflection (Inhiraf), repetition (Takreer), spreading (Tafashi), elongation (Istitaalah), and nasalisation (Ghunnah)

    Objective: The student will understand the vocal effect of each characteristic: avoiding Takreer in Ra', controlling Tafashi in Sheen, observing the elongation of Dhad, and producing Ghunnah at its correct position.

Week 12: Review of Articulation Points & Characteristics

  1. Producing each letter with its full articulation point and characteristics (practical drills)

    Objective: The student will read each letter of the alphabet in isolation, then in a word, then in a Quranic sentence — fulfilling both its articulation point and characteristics — and will self-correct by listening back to a voice recording.

  2. Practical assessment: pronunciation of individual and combined letters

    Objective: The student will demonstrate the ability to produce each letter from its correct articulation point independently, then evaluate their vocal performance across varied Quranic passages.

QUARTER III · WEEKS 13–18

Tafkheem, Tarqeeq & the Rules of Elongation (Madd)

Here we learn to give the recitation its correct melody and eloquence — through the heaviness or lightness of letters and by precisely measuring their elongation according to strict phonetic rules.

Week 13: Heaviness (Tafkheem) and Lightness (Tarqeeq)

  1. Always-heavy letters (خص ضغط قظ) and always-light letters

    Objective: The student will apply Tafkheem to all seven Isti'la' letters in every position, lighten all permanently-Tarqeeq letters, and perceive the clear sonic difference between the two states.

  2. Tafkheem and Tarqeeq of the elongated Alif and the Lam of the Divine Name "Allah"

    Objective: The student will understand that the Alif follows the letter preceding it in heaviness or lightness, distinguish between the heavy and light Lam of the word "Allah" by identifying the preceding letter, and apply this in multiple verses.

Week 14: The Rules of Ra'

  1. Cases where Ra' is heavy (Tafkheem) and cases where it is light (Tarqeeq)

    Objective: The student will enumerate the cases of heavy Ra' (Fathah, Dhammah, preceded by Fath or Dhammah, Isti'la') and distinguish them from the cases of light Ra' (Kasrah, preceded by Kasrah, followed by Kasrah Isti'la') and apply them in Quranic recitation.

  2. Cases of disputed Ra' and practical applications

    Objective: The student will understand the difference of opinion in specific cases (such as Ra' after a static Kasrah followed by an Isti'la' letter), apply the strongest opinion in recitation, and read a varied selection of Quranic verses covering all Ra' types.

Week 15: Primary Madd (Natural Elongation)

  1. The natural Madd (Madd Asli / Madd Tabee'i) and its types

    Objective: The student will understand that the natural Madd is the basis of all elongation (two counts), identify its letters (Alif after Fathah, Waw after Dhammah, Yaa' after Kasrah), and apply it accurately without excess or deficiency.

  2. Madd al-'Iwadh, Madd al-Silah al-Sughra, and Madd al-Tamkeen

    Objective: The student will apply Madd al-'Iwadh when pausing on a tanwined Fathah, produce Ha' al-Dhamir with its Silah correctly in connection, and elongate the two Yaa's of Tamkeen with precision.

Week 16: Secondary Madd — Caused by Hamzah

  1. Madd al-Muttasil (joined) and Madd al-Munfasil (separate)

    Objective: The student will distinguish between Muttasil (Madd letter and Hamzah in the same word — obligatory 4–5 counts) and Munfasil (across two words — permissible 2–5 counts), and maintain a consistent length throughout a single recitation session.

  2. Madd al-Badal and Madd al-Silah al-Kubra

    Objective: The student will identify Madd al-Badal as a Hamzah followed by an elongation letter, understand its ruling (permissible with varying levels), and know the correct order of priority when it conflicts with another Madd.

Week 17: Secondary Madd — Caused by Sukoon

  1. Madd al-'Aridh lil-Sukoon and Madd al-Leen

    Objective: The student will distinguish between 'Aridh (pausing at word-end) and Madd Leen (Waw or Yaa' static before another letter), and apply the three permissible lengths (2, 4, or 6 counts) for both types.

  2. Madd al-Laazim: word-level (lightened & heavy) and letter-level (lightened & heavy)

    Objective: The student will understand that Madd al-Laazim is the strongest Madd type — elongated six counts obligatorily — and will distinguish between its word-based and letter-based forms and their respective subdivisions.

Week 18: Review of Madd Types & Priority Rules

  1. The rule of the stronger cause in Madd, with applications

    Objective: The student will apply the principle of prioritising the stronger cause when two Madd causes appear in one word, and rank all Madd types from strongest to weakest.

  2. Assessment and practical applications of Madd durations during recitation

    Objective: The student will assess the accuracy of their Madd durations during connected recitation, avoid inconsistency in similar words, and record their recitation to compare before and after the quarter.

QUARTER IV · WEEKS 19–24

Letter Interactions, Pausing & Starting

The final phase for mastering fluent, unbroken recitation — understanding exactly where to pause and how to resume without disturbing the meaning.

Week 19: Identical, Homogeneous, Proximate & Distant Letters

  1. Idgham of identical letters (Mutamathhilayn) and homogeneous letters (Mutajanisayn)

    Objective: The student will distinguish between Mutamathhilayn (same articulation point and characteristics) and Mutajanisayn (same point, different characteristics), and apply the Idgham of each correctly in Quranic verses.

  2. Idgham of proximate letters (Mutaqaribayn) and the ruling on distant letters (Mutaba'idayn)

    Objective: The student will understand Mutaqaribayn (close in point or characteristics) and apply their rules, and recognise that Mutaba'idayn fall outside assimilation rules and each is pronounced independently.

Week 20: Rules of Pausing (Waqf) & Starting (Ibtida') — Part I

  1. The importance of Waqf & Ibtida', and the four types of pausing: compulsory, testing, anticipatory, and deliberate

    Objective: The student will understand that incorrect pausing may corrupt the meaning or produce a clear error (Lahn Jali), classify all four types of Waqf, and provide an example of each.

  2. Divisions of deliberate pausing: complete pause (Waqf Taam) and sufficient pause (Waqf Kaafi)

    Objective: The student will define the complete pause (meaning fully concluded) and the sufficient pause (meaning concluded but contextually linked), and choose the most appropriate pausing position in given Quranic verses.

Week 21: Rules of Pausing & Starting — Part II

  1. The good pause (Waqf Hasan) and the ugly pause (Waqf Qabih)

    Objective: The student will distinguish between Waqf Hasan (pausing with resumption from what follows) and Waqf Qabih (pausing at a point whose meaning cannot stand alone), and avoid pausing where an unintended meaning might be implied.

  2. Rules of starting (Ibtida'): good and ugly starts, and pausing signs in the Mushaf

    Objective: The student will recognise the pausing signs printed in the Mushaf (م، ط، ج، ز، لا) and apply them correctly, and understand that an ugly start may distort meaning even when recitation is technically sound.

Week 22: Pausing at Word-Endings & Stress (Nabr)

  1. How to pause at word-endings: pure Sukoon, Rawm, and Ishmam

    Objective: The student will apply the pure Sukoon pause, distinguish between Rawm (sounding one-third of the vowel) and Ishmam (a lip gesture without sound), and know which ending types allow each method.

  2. The ruling on syllabic stress (Nabr) in recitation and its positions in the Quran

    Objective: The student will understand that Nabr (raising the voice on certain syllables) is not part of Hafs 'an 'Asim's transmitted recitation and must be avoided, while distinguishing between permissible vocal beautification and prohibited stress-based patterns.

Week 23: Meeting of Two Sukoons & Hamzat al-Wasl

  1. Resolving the meeting of two Sukoons — by vowelling or by deletion

    Objective: The student will apply the correct method (Fathah, Dhammah, or Kasrah) when two silent letters meet in connection, and understand that the Arabic tongue avoids two consecutive silent letters in connected speech.

  2. Rules of Hamzat al-Wasl (connective Hamzah) at the start and in connection, and how to begin with it in verbs and nouns

    Objective: The student will distinguish between Hamzat al-Wasl (written but silent when connected) and Hamzat al-Qat' (always sounded), and correctly apply the vowel of Hamzat al-Wasl when beginning recitation in verbs, nouns, and particles.

Week 24: Final Review & Comprehensive Assessment

  1. Comprehensive review of the most common recitation errors: Lahn Jali (clear error) and Lahn Khafi (subtle error)

    Objective: The student will classify the types of recitation error (clear and subtle), understand the difference in their ruling, and correct a personal list of common errors through a documented voice recording.

  2. Final recitation assessment — awarding the "Theoretical and Practical Ijazah" of the programme

    Objective: The student will demonstrate mastery of all Tajweed rules — theoretically and practically — in a flowing recitation before the teacher, receive the official Ijazah certificate, and be encouraged to continue reciting with correct Tajweed for the rest of their life.

Programme Strengths

  • Comprehensiveness & Logical Progression The curriculum follows an excellent ascending structure — from theoretical introduction, to articulation points and characteristics, then elongation rules, then pausing and starting. This is a completely sound and well-established scholarly sequence.
  • Balance Between Theory and Practice The recurring practical lessons throughout the programme are essential — Tajweed is a science that can only be truly mastered through actual vocal practice, not theoretical knowledge alone.
  • Periodic Reviews at Quarter-End Placing a review session at the end of each quarter is an excellent strategy — it consolidates learning and ensures strong retention before transitioning to the next, more advanced phase.
  • Final Assessment with an Ijazah Certificate Awarding a formal Ijazah in the final lesson is a powerful motivator. It gives the entire programme a clear, inspiring, and tangible goal for every student enrolled.
  • Learning Objectives for Every Lesson Adding a clear, measurable learning objective to each of the forty-nine lessons helps the teacher gauge the attainment of competencies and gives the student a precise understanding of what they are expected to master — not merely to hear.

Tajweed Mastery Programme · Hafs 'an 'Asim · 49 Lessons across 24 Weeks

May Allah grant us all the ability to recite His Book as it deserves to be recited.

Arabic Language Oasis

A 72-week Arabic mastery curriculum that begins with letters and reading, then advances through grammar, morphology, rhetoric, literature, and professional expression.

72 Weeks 110 Lessons 504 Guided Hours 5 Integrated Stages
Serious Arabic learners moving from reading foundations to advanced academic and expressive fluency.
  • Five integrated stages from reading foundations to professional Arabic mastery
  • Reading, writing, grammar, morphology, rhetoric, literature, and advanced expression
  • Clear stage outcomes with oral, written, and analytical practice
  • Interactive beginner tools with advanced discussion and workshop-based learning
Detailed Curriculum

Arabic Language Learning

Advanced Curriculum Plan

72 Weeks · 110 Lessons · 504 Hours

Five Integrated Stages — From Foundations to Mastery

Stage One: Foundations — Reading & Writing (Weeks 1–8)

Goal: Master the pronunciation and handwriting of Arabic letters, and read basic vowelled words.

Weeks 1–2: The Arabic Alphabet & Its Sounds

  1. Arabic letters (Alef to Kha') — pronunciation and handwriting.
  2. Arabic letters (Dal to Dad) — pronunciation and handwriting.
  3. Arabic letters (Ta' to Fa') — pronunciation and handwriting.
  4. Arabic letters (Qaf to Ya') — pronunciation and handwriting.
  5. Letter positions and shapes: initial, medial, and final forms.
  6. Non-connecting letters (letters that do not join what follows them).

Weeks 3–4: Short & Long Vowels (Madd)

  1. Short vowels: Fatha, Damma, and Kasra.
  2. Long vowels: Madd with Alef, Madd with Waw, and Madd with Ya'.
  3. Sukoon (vowel lessness) and how to pronounce a consonant letter.
  4. Tanween in its three forms: Tanween Fath, Tanween Damm, and Tanween Kasr.

Weeks 5–6: Key Phonetic & Orthographic Features

  1. The shadda (gemination) and its effect on pronunciation.
  2. Solar Lam (Lam Shamsiyya) and Lunar Lam (Lam Qamariyya) — the difference.
  3. Ta' Marbuta, Ta' Maftuha, and Ha' at the end of a word.
  4. Alef Layyina: Alef Maqsura and Alef Mamduda at the end of words.

Weeks 7–8: Forming Simple Sentences & Review

  1. Reading and analyzing fully vowelled three- and four-letter words.
  2. Combining words to form simple nominal and verbal sentences (e.g. ذهبَ أحمدُ — Ahmad went).
  3. Dictation test on short passages.
  4. Comprehensive assessment of rapid reading and correct writing skills.

Stage Two: Vocabulary & Grammatical Structures (Weeks 9–20)

Goal: Distinguish between word classes, understand pronouns, and build a linguistic repertoire for speaking and expression.

Weeks 9–10: Parts of Speech & Core Nouns

  1. The three parts of speech: noun (ism), verb (fi'l), and particle (harf).
  2. Markers of nouns and markers of verbs.
  3. Demonstrative pronouns for near and far (هذا، هذه، ذلك — this, this, that…).
  4. Relative pronouns (الذي، التي، الذين — who/which/that…).

Weeks 11–12: Pronouns & Their Types

  1. Detached pronouns for the first and second persons (أنا، أنتَ — I, you…).
  2. Detached pronouns for the third person (هو، هي، هما — he, she, they two…).
  3. Attached pronouns with nouns and verbs (كتابي، ضربته — my book, I hit him).
  4. Practical exercises on pronoun conjugation.

Weeks 13–14: Tense & Meaning (Verbs)

  1. The past tense verb and its temporal meaning.
  2. The present tense verb and the letters of the present tense (أَنَيْتُ — A-N-Y-T).
  3. The imperative verb and the form of command.
  4. Drills on converting a verb between past, present, and imperative forms.

Weeks 15–16: Number & Gender in Arabic

  1. Masculine and feminine, and markers of feminisation.
  2. Singular and dual, and how to form the dual.
  3. Sound masculine plural and sound feminine plural.
  4. Broken plural (جمع التكسير) and its well-known patterns.

Weeks 17–18: Everyday Particles & Tools

  1. Prepositions (حروف الجر) and their effect on meaning.
  2. Conjunctions (حروف العطف): و (and), ف (then/so), ثم (then), أو (or).
  3. Question words and how to form questions.
  4. Negation particles: لم، لن، لا، ما (did not, will not, no/not, not).

Weeks 19–20: Beginner Oral & Written Expression

  1. Adverbs of time and place (أمام، خلف، صباحًا، مساءً — in front of, behind, in the morning, in the evening).
  2. Speaking skill: how to introduce yourself and your family in Arabic.
  3. Writing a short paragraph (describing a place or a daily experience).
  4. Review and level-placement test before advancing to grammar.

Stage Three: Arabic Grammar (Nahw) & Syntactic Analysis (Weeks 21–40)

Goal: Understand the laws of the Arabic sentence and parse words correctly to protect speech from grammatical error.

Weeks 21–24: The Nominal Sentence (Jumlah Ismiyya) & Its Modifiers

  1. Subject (mubtada') and predicate (khabar): their original and derived case markers.
  2. Types of predicate: single word, clause, and quasi-clause.
  3. Kana and its sisters, and their effect on the nominal sentence.
  4. Inna and its sisters, and their effect on the nominal sentence.
  5. Kada and its sisters (verbs of approximation, hope, and commencement).
  6. Intensive parsing exercises on the nominal sentence.

Weeks 25–28: The Verbal Sentence (Jumlah Fi'liyya) & Its Nominatives

  1. The verb and the subject (fa'il): markers of the nominative case.
  2. The substitute subject (na'ib al-fa'il) and the passive voice (past and present).
  3. Parsing the present tense verb: the indicative mood and its markers.
  4. Particles that put the present tense verb in the subjunctive (nasb).
  5. Particles that put the present tense verb in the jussive (jazm) — affecting one verb.
  6. The jussive mood in conditional sentences — particles affecting two verbs.

Weeks 29–34: Accusatives & Genitives in the Sentence

  1. Direct object (maf'ul bihi) and its accusative markers.
  2. Absolute object (maf'ul mutlaq) and its types: confirming, specifying kind, and specifying number.
  3. Object of purpose (maf'ul li-ajlih) — purpose and cause.
  4. Object of circumstance (maf'ul fih) — adverbs of time and place in detail.
  5. Circumstantial qualifier (hal): conditions, types (single word, clause).
  6. Specificative (tamyiz): the difference between specificative of an entity and specificative of attribution.
  7. Exceptive construction and the rules governing the excepted noun with 'illa.
  8. The vocative (muna da) and its types and parsing rules.
  9. Genitive by preposition, and genitive by annexation (mudaf ilayh).
  10. Diptote nouns (mamnoo' min al-sarf): single and double reasons, and their case marker.

Weeks 35–37: Appositive Particles (Tawabi') in Arabic

  1. The adjective (na't): real and causal types.
  2. Coordinative conjunction ('atf): semantic and phonological types and rules.
  3. Emphasis (tawkid): verbal and semantic.
  4. Substitution (badal) and its types: full, partial, and inclusive.

Weeks 38–40: Local Parsing & Comprehensive Review

  1. Declinable and indeclinable nouns and verbs.
  2. Sentences that have a local parsing position and those that do not.
  3. Workshop: full parsing of passages from modern prose.
  4. Comprehensive grammar examination.

Stage Four: Arabic Morphology (Sarf) & Advanced Spelling (Weeks 41–52)

Goal: Understand word structure and its internal changes, and avoid common spelling errors in professional writing.

Weeks 41–44: The Morphological Scale (Mizan) & Derivation

  1. The morphological scale (ف-ع-ل) and how to weigh bare-root words.
  2. Augmented and bare-root words, and the augmentation letters (سَأَلْتُمُونِيهَا — S-A-L-T-M-W-N-Y-H-A).
  3. Active participle (ism al-fa'il): derivation from triliteral and non-triliteral roots.
  4. Passive participle (ism al-maf'ul): derivation and its grammatical function.
  5. Intensive forms (sighat al-mubalagha) and their five well-known patterns.
  6. Nouns of time, nouns of place, and nouns of instrument.
  7. Elative adjective (ism al-tafdi l): its states and conditions for derivation.

Weeks 45–48: Structural Changes in Words

  1. Verbal nouns (masadir): masadir of triliteral and non-triliteral verbs.
  2. Mimic verbal noun, noun of instance, noun of manner, and artificial verbal noun.
  3. Sound verbs (salim, hamzated, doubled) and weak verbs (mithal, ajwaf, naqis, lafif).
  4. I'lal (phonological modification): by substitution, by deletion, by vowelling.
  5. Substitution (ibdal) and assimilation (idgham) in morphology.

Weeks 49–52: Advanced Spelling & Writing Rules

  1. Hamzat al-wasl and Hamzat al-qat' in nouns, verbs, and particles.
  2. Rules for writing the medial hamza (according to vowel strength).
  3. Rules for writing the final hamza at the end of a word.
  4. Rules for the elision and addition of certain letters (e.g. the Alef of 'Amr, the elision of Ibn's Alef).
  5. Punctuation marks and their use in academic writing.
  6. Comprehensive morphology and spelling examination.

Stage Five: Rhetoric, Literature & Professional Mastery (Weeks 53–72)

Goal: Appreciate the aesthetic qualities of the language, understand Arabic literary styles, write creatively, and analyse both classical and modern texts.

Weeks 53–58: The Science of Figurative Expression ('Ilm al-Bayan)

  1. Introduction to rhetoric: the difference between literal and figurative language.
  2. Simile (tashbih) and its four pillars — types: full, abridged, confirmed, and concise.
  3. Complex simile: representational (tamthili) and implied (dimni).
  4. Metaphor: implicit (isti'ara makniyya) and explicit (isti'ara tasrihiyya).
  5. Metonymy (kinaya) and its types: of an attribute, of an entity, and of a relation.
  6. Metonymy (majaz mursal) and its well-known relationships (causative, local, totality…).

Weeks 59–64: The Science of Meaning ('Ilm al-Ma'ani) & Rhetorical Devices ('Ilm al-Badi')

  1. Declarative style (asloob khabari) and constructive style (asloob insha'i): requesting and non-requesting.
  2. The rhetorical uses of command, prohibition, and the interrogative.
  3. The restrictive style (qar) and its means: innama, negation-and-exception, and fronting-and-postposing.
  4. Concision (ijaz), elaboration (itnab), and equivalence (musawah).
  5. Verbal rhetorical ornaments: paronomasia (jinas), rhymed prose (saj'), and end-rhyme (tasri').
  6. Semantic rhetorical ornaments: antithesis (tibaq), contrast (muqabala), and double entendre (tawriya).

Weeks 65–68: Appreciating Literature & Its History (Analytical Reading)

  1. Pre-Islamic poetry: artistic features and analysis of a mu'allaqa (Imru' al-Qays or Zuhayr).
  2. The influence of the Quran and Hadith on the development of language and literature (the Early Islamic era).
  3. Literature in the Umayyad and Abbasid eras: evolution of poetic themes and prose.
  4. Modern literature: schools of poetry (Revival, Romanticism, Free Verse) and the short story.

Weeks 69–72: Professional Workshops & Graduation

  1. Literary criticism: how to analyse a literary text and identify its strengths and weaknesses.
  2. Functional and creative writing: the academic essay, oratory, and formal correspondence.
  3. Arabic dictionaries: how to look up a word in Lisan al-'Arab, al-Qamus al-Muhit, and modern dictionaries.
  4. GRADUATION PROJECT: presenting an analytical study or a high-level, fully vowelled creative text, followed by review and discussion.

Overall Evaluation of the Study Plan

Strengths

  • Rigorous progressive structure: The plan moves smoothly from initial reading and writing through to rhetoric and literature across five integrated stages — a wholly sound and scientific sequence.
  • Outstanding comprehensiveness: The plan covers all four areas of the language (foundations, grammar, morphology, rhetoric) in a unified curriculum, removing the learner's need for scattered resources.
  • Bridging theory and practice: The inclusion of practical lessons and workshops at the end of each stage reflects a sophisticated pedagogical awareness.
  • Graduation project as a final evaluation: Concluding the curriculum with an analytical study or a fully vowelled creative text is an ambitious and motivating goal for the dedicated learner.
  • Balance between classical and contemporary: Covering literature from the pre-Islamic era through to modern poetic schools gives the learner a broad literary horizon.

Points for Review

  • Terminology error — Lesson 28: The text reads 'the letters of the present tense (Aneet)'; this should read 'the letters of the present tense, grouped in (أَنَيْتُ — A-N-Y-T)' to avoid ambiguity.
  • Density of Stage Three (Grammar): Spanning Weeks 21–40 with 30 lessons over 20 weeks, this stage is very intensive. It is suggested either to split it into two stages or to increase the lesson frequency during this period.
  • Absence of a mid-stage assessment in Stage Three: Stage Three ends with only one examination (Lesson 72), despite its length. It is advisable to add a mid-stage test at the end of the accusatives section (Lesson 64).
  • Spelling error — Lesson 99: التاخير was written without a hamza; the correct form is التأخير.
  • Absence of listening and conversation skills: The curriculum focuses on reading and writing, but there are no lessons dedicated to listening and speaking as an independent skill, especially in the early stages.
  • No reference textbook specified: The plan does not mention the adopted textbook or source (such as Ibn 'Aqil's commentary, Mughni al-Labib, or al-Nahw al-Wafi), which makes practical implementation difficult.

Development Suggestions

  • Add a mid-stage grammar test: Place it after Lesson 64 to distribute the assessment load.
  • Incorporate a conversation unit: Add two structured oral expression lessons in each stage.
  • Specify reference materials: Mention the adopted textbook and enrichment references for each stage.
  • Correct the hamza in Lesson 99: Change التاخير to التأخير.
  • Add stage-level learning objectives: Formulate measurable behavioural objectives for each stage.
Overall Verdict: An outstanding and comprehensive plan that ranks among the most coherent and in-depth Arabic-teaching curricula available. Once the observations above are addressed — particularly splitting the grammar stage and adding a conversation skill — it will become a complete, professional educational reference.

Learning Objectives by Stage

Total Programme Hours: 504 hours (for those following the daily schedule)

Stage One: Foundations — Reading & Writing (Weeks 1–8) | 56 hours

By the end of this stage, the learner will be able to:

  • Pronounce all twenty-eight Arabic letters correctly from their articulation points, and distinguish between letters that are similar in shape or sound.
  • Write each letter in its three positions (initial, medial, and final) correctly.
  • Vowel words correctly with short and long vowels, tanween, and sukoon when reading.
  • Distinguish between Ta' Marbuta and Ta' Maftuha and Ha', and between Alef Maqsura and Alef Mamduda at the end of words.
  • Read short vowelled words and sentences aloud clearly without hesitation.
  • Write a short dictation passage in clear handwriting with correct vowelling and no spelling errors.

Stage Two: Vocabulary & Grammatical Structures (Weeks 9–20) | 84 hours

By the end of this stage, the learner will be able to:

  • Distinguish between the three parts of speech (noun, verb, particle) and identify the marker of each.
  • Use demonstrative pronouns and relative pronouns correctly in written and spoken sentences.
  • Conjugate verbs in all three tenses (past, present, imperative) with all pronouns, both orally and in writing.
  • Form the dual, the sound masculine plural, and the sound feminine plural from a given singular noun.
  • Use prepositions, question words, and negation particles in correct, meaningful sentences.
  • Introduce themselves and their family orally in Arabic in a connected paragraph of no fewer than five sentences.
  • Write a short paragraph describing a place or a daily experience within ten grammatically correct sentences.

Stage Three: Arabic Grammar (Nahw) & Syntactic Analysis (Weeks 21–40) | 140 hours

By the end of this stage, the learner will be able to:

  • Parse the subject (mubtada') and predicate (khabar) in their various forms, and apply the effect of Kana and its sisters and Inna and its sisters on the nominal sentence.
  • Distinguish between the subject (fa'il) and the substitute subject (na'ib al-fa'il), and correctly form the passive voice from past and present tense verbs.
  • Identify the particles that put the present tense verb in the subjunctive and the jussive, and apply them in conditional sentences and elsewhere.
  • Parse the five objects, the circumstantial qualifier, the specificative, the vocative, and the excepted noun correctly, stating the case marker and its reason.
  • Identify the four appositive particles (adjective, conjunction, emphasis, substitution) and parse them in accordance with what precedes them.
  • Distinguish diptote nouns (mamnoo' min al-sarf) and know their case marker in a given text.
  • Provide a complete parsing of an entire prose passage, including the local parsing position of embedded sentences.

Stage Four: Morphology (Sarf) & Advanced Spelling (Weeks 41–52) | 77 hours

By the end of this stage, the learner will be able to:

  • Weigh Arabic words using the morphological scale (ف-ع-ل) and distinguish bare-root from augmented words and identify the augmentation letters.
  • Derive the active participle, passive participle, intensive forms, and elative adjective from triliteral and non-triliteral roots.
  • Differentiate between sound verbs and weak verbs in all their types, and conjugate the weak verb in the present tense and the imperative.
  • Apply the rules of phonological modification (by substitution, deletion, and vowelling) to given words.
  • Write the hamza in all its three types (conjunctive, disjunctive, medial, final) correctly in all contexts.
  • Use punctuation marks correctly in writing an academic paragraph or a report.

Stage Five: Rhetoric, Literature & Professional Mastery (Weeks 53–72) | 147 hours

By the end of this stage, the learner will be able to:

  • Distinguish between literal and figurative language, and identify the types of figurative language (linguistic and metonymic).
  • Analyse simile into its four pillars and differentiate between its types (full, abridged, confirmed, concise, representational, and implied).
  • Distinguish between implicit and explicit metaphor and metonymy in its various types within diverse poetic and prose texts.
  • Identify the restrictive style (qar) and its means, and distinguish declarative from constructive style, stating its rhetorical purpose.
  • Extract verbal and semantic rhetorical ornaments (paronomasia, antithesis, contrast, rhymed prose, double entendre) from given texts.
  • Write a complete academic essay with an introduction, body, and conclusion, observing the rules of grammar, spelling, and punctuation.
  • Analyse a literary text — poetic or prose — extracting the main idea, rhetorical images, and points of beauty and weakness.
  • Present an analytical study or a fully vowelled creative text demonstrating mastery of all levels of the Arabic language.

Teaching Methodology & Learning Tools

Early Stages (Beginners)

In the initial stages — particularly for young learners — the curriculum draws on interactive and playful methods designed to sustain engagement and build confidence:

  • Educational games and gamification technology: Making learning enjoyable through interactive play.
  • Riddles and problem-solving activities: Stimulating logical thinking within a language context.
  • Educational storytelling: Presenting language rules within memorable narrative frameworks.
  • Arts and crafts activities: Cutting, colouring, and puzzle-solving to reinforce letter recognition.
  • Interactive whiteboard lessons: Clear visual demonstrations of letter forms and structures.
  • Educational video content: Engaging multimedia materials to support pronunciation and comprehension.
  • Supplementary digital programmes: Additional software tools tailored to young and beginner learners.

Intermediate & Advanced Stages

As learners progress into the intermediate and advanced stages, the methodology shifts towards deeper analytical engagement:

  • Educational video content: Structured instructional videos reinforcing grammar and morphology concepts.
  • Question-and-answer sessions: Targeted exercises that test comprehension and application.
  • Guided discussion and dialogue: Structured conversation tasks to develop both accuracy and fluency.
  • Brainstorming sessions: Open-ended tasks encouraging creative and critical thinking in Arabic.
  • Whiteboard-based instruction: Direct teaching of complex grammatical and rhetorical rules.

Arabic Language Learning Curriculum • Five Stages • 72 Weeks • 504 Hours

Islamic Studies Councils

A structured Islamic studies pathway connecting Quranic themes, prophetic biography, manners, and daily practice in a clear family-friendly learning sequence.

Quranic Themes Prophetic Biography Islamic Manners & Practice Family-Friendly Study Circles
Families and learners seeking a balanced, applied understanding of Islam.
  • Quran themes, prophetic biography, causes of revelation, and daily manners
  • Family-friendly circles with age-appropriate explanation and discussion
  • Faith, conduct, understanding, and applied Islamic awareness
  • Structured lessons that connect knowledge to worship and character
Detailed Curriculum

Programme Overview

This programme offers a balanced Islamic studies sequence for children, youth, and adults who want more than scattered information. It combines Quranic understanding, prophetic biography, Islamic manners, and practical religious awareness in lessons that are suitable for family-based learning and individual development.

Library shelves filled with books for study and research
Students study Islam through connected themes, guided reading, discussion, and clear explanations rather than isolated facts.

Core Study Areas

  • Quranic themes: titles of surahs, major meanings, causes of revelation, and selected moral and practical lessons.
  • Quran history: revelation, preservation, collection, and the way Muslims received the Quran through trustworthy transmission.
  • Prophetic biography: the life of the Prophet, key turning points, and lessons in patience, wisdom, service, and leadership.
  • Stories of the prophets: faith, perseverance, الدعوة, and the ethical lessons that speak to modern learners.
  • Islamic manners: speech, respect, worship etiquette, family conduct, and habits that shape a Muslim character.

How The Programme Is Taught

The curriculum is delivered through guided explanation, contextual storytelling, discussion, memorisable key points, and consistent application to real situations faced by children, families, and adult learners.

  • Age-appropriate explanations for young learners and family groups.
  • Question-and-answer discussion that turns memorised information into understanding.
  • Practical examples that connect belief to worship, conduct, and decision-making.
  • Regular revisiting of key values so that the learner remembers and applies them.
Interior of a mosque reflecting calm spiritual learning
The aim is not only to know religious information, but to build a calm, thoughtful, and reverent relationship with Islam.

Learning Outcomes

  • Understand the broad themes of the Quran and selected reasons for revelation.
  • Know the major events of the Prophetic biography and relate them to personal conduct.
  • Recognise foundational Islamic manners and practise them in family and community life.
  • Connect Islamic knowledge to worship, character, and balanced day-to-day judgement.
  • Develop a more confident and coherent Islamic worldview rooted in understanding rather than isolated memorisation.

Ijazah & Memorization Track

A disciplined long-term pathway for learners pursuing memorization, structured revision, riwayah-focused supervision, and eventual readiness for ijazah-level recitation.

Memorization Planning Layered Revision Riwayah-Focused Supervision Ijazah-Oriented Assessment
Committed youth and adult learners aiming for memorization, revision, and ijazah-level discipline.
  • Memorization planning, revision cycles, and consistent recitation testing
  • Riwayah-focused supervision with long-term teacher follow-up
  • Clear checkpoints for fluency, retention, and vocal precision
  • Suitable for serious youth and adult learners pursuing sanad-based excellence
Detailed Curriculum

Programme Overview

This track is designed for committed learners who want a disciplined memorization journey rather than a casual reading plan. It combines new memorization, layered revision, riwayah-conscious recitation supervision, and regular assessment so the student builds both retention and quality.

Student holding the Quran in focused recitation
The programme prioritises steadiness, accuracy, and long-term consistency over rushed quantity.

Main Components

  • Memorization planning: the student follows a realistic weekly portion based on age, level, and available revision time.
  • Layered revision: recently memorized portions, medium-range review, and long-cycle revision are combined so that retention does not collapse as the amount grows.
  • Recitation correction: every page is tied to vocal correction so memorization never drifts away from proper Tajweed and accurate wording.
  • Riwayah awareness: the student is supervised according to the recitation track being studied, with attention to consistency and transmission discipline.

How Progress Is Managed

The teacher monitors not only how much the student memorizes, but also how stable that memorization remains over time.

  • Scheduled checkpoints for recent memorization and cumulative revision.
  • Oral testing to detect hesitation, weak retention, or repeated mistakes early.
  • Adjustment of pace when quality begins to drop.
  • Long-term planning for students who may later qualify for ijazah-oriented evaluation.
Hands holding the Quran with prayer beads during recitation practice
Memorization is paired with reverence, review discipline, and a clear relationship between text, sound, and responsibility.

Who This Track Fits

  • Students preparing for serious memorization goals.
  • Learners who already memorize but need stronger revision control.
  • Adults and youth seeking structured supervision rather than irregular self-study.
  • Students aiming over time toward sanad-based excellence and possible ijazah readiness.

Learning Outcomes

  • Build a sustainable memorization routine with realistic weekly targets.
  • Strengthen retention through layered and cumulative revision.
  • Improve recitation quality while preserving memorized text accurately.
  • Develop the seriousness and consistency required for advanced Quran study.
Reserve A Trial Class

Choose the right starting point.

We recommend the first class after reviewing the age, goals, and Arabic background of the learner.