For parents
Is your child learning Russian outside a Russian-speaking country? Here you find a school, choose a class for their age and level, and enrol them — with a result that actually means something on completion.
1. Find a school
Choose an accredited school. Accreditation means the school is recognised to teach and assess to one shared standard.
2. Choose a class
A class for your child’s age and level — with the schedule and the price. No jargon: you see what, when and how much.
3. Enrol your child
You add your child and enrol them yourself. The parent stays the responsible adult — your child doesn’t need their own login.
4. Learning begins
Your child starts classes and works towards a certificate — from first words (A1) to confident use (B2).
Four stages — from first words to an exam and a certificate. Open any stage to see its units, goals, and a sample lesson.
On completing the programme and passing the final assessment, your child is awarded a KSR certificate, issued by CEA — an independent educational association (UK), not by the school itself. The level maps to the Common European Framework (A1–B2), and every certificate can be confirmed in an open registry. In plain terms: a recognised result, not just a note from a club.
The network of accredited schools is still forming. If there isn’t an open class in your area yet, register your interest and we’ll get in touch when a suitable class opens.
KSR (Key Stages of Russian) is the standard set by CEA (Cultural Educational Association): four stages from A1 to B2 on the CEFR (Common European Framework of Reference for Languages). A KSR certificate confirms your child has reached a stage; the final assessment is carried out by a CEA-accredited school.
Open the schools directory and choose your region and city. Every school listed is accredited by CEA to teach and assess the KSR standard.
No. RusJAz is the network operated by CEA. Teaching happens at accredited schools; CEA owns the standard and issues the certificates.