Language problems rarely appear in the first lecture. They appear in Chapter 9, when the concepts get hard and your brain is already overloaded. A demo is usually simple. Real lectures aren't. If you spend half your energy translating instead of understanding, you'll fall behind.
- If you're not comfortable with Hindi (especially many students from South India), don't assume "English, Hindi" means mostly English. Some faculties explain core concepts in Hindi and keep only technical terms in English. Watch enough of the course to judge the real balance.
- If you want pure English: if you struggle to follow long English lectures without mentally translating, a fast technical class will be even harder.
Language isn't just Hindi vs English. Accent and clarity matter too.
Ask Yourself
- Which language do I naturally solve problems in?
- Can I comfortably follow three hours of technical explanation in this language?
- Have I watched enough of the lecture to judge the actual language mix?
Red Flags
- The demo is in clean, simple language, but reviewers say the teacher drifts once real classes begin.
- You're picking English partly to improve your English. Don't turn your CA course into an English class. Learn accounting in the language you already think in.
Relevant Careviews Ratings
Expectation Match drops when the demo felt easy but real classes drift. Pair a low score with language complaints from reviewers who share your background.
One sentence to remember
Pick the language you follow on your worst day, not the one you follow in the demo.