The series grows with the student, starting from the Starter level (basic alphabet and "to be") all the way to Level 6 (advanced clauses and reported speech).

While many think "Go!" is the shortest, it is technically an elliptical sentence (the "you" is implied).

Unlike dry textbooks, Round Up uses colorful boxes, illustrations, and actual team games to teach everything from the alphabet to complex tenses.

The official Teacher's Guide is the "original GDZ," containing full answer keys and tests that educators use to track progress. 💡 Fun Grammar Facts for Your Post

10 Interesting Facts About the English Language that You Didn't Know