SWOT Analysis
for language learners
Where are you in your English-learning journey? This worksheet helps you look at what’s working, what isn’t, what could help, and what might get in the way. Be honest with yourself — nobody else needs to read it.
No. 01 — Context
Designed for B1+ · useful at all levelsWhat is a SWOT?
SWOT is a tool from the business world, but it works perfectly for language learners. It helps you take a clear look at four things: what you’re good at, what’s hard for you, what could help you grow, and what could stop you. Fifteen minutes with this page can change how you study for the next six months.
The English skills, habits, and qualities that already work in your favour.
The skills you avoid, the mistakes you keep making, the habits that slow you down.
Apps, people, films, courses — things outside you that could push you forward.
Things outside you that could slow you down: time, money, environment, mood.
No. 02 — The worksheet
Click a quadrant. Answer in your own words.
There’s no right answer. Click each letter and write what’s true for you. The questions use everyday English. If a question doesn’t fit your situation, skip it. When you’re done, you can print or save the page.
Strengths — what’s already working
Don’t be modest. Small wins count.
Weaknesses — the honest list
This is just for you. Be specific, not harsh.
Opportunities — what’s around you
Look at your day. English is probably closer than you think.
Threats — what could stop you
Naming what blocks you is the first step to moving past it.
No. 03 — Pay attention
A few things to watch out for.
Be specific.
“My grammar is bad” is too vague. “I get confused with past tenses when I tell stories” is something you can actually fix.
Inside or outside?
A weakness is inside you (you forget vocabulary). A threat is outside you (you don’t have anyone to practise with). Different problems, different solutions.
Match each weakness with an opportunity.
Weak at speaking? Find an opportunity — a tandem partner, a language meetup. That’s how a SWOT becomes a plan.
Don’t write what you “should” say.
Forget what a “good” student would write. Write what’s true for you, today.
Use a dictionary if you need it.
You’re learning — using your tools is a strength, not a weakness. Write in the language you have, not the language you wish you had.
Come back in three months.
Save this page. The next time you fill it in, you’ll be amazed how many of today’s weaknesses have moved into “strengths.”
No. 04 — What next
Now do something with it.
- Pick the most useful quadrant. Don’t try to fix everything at once. Choose the one square where one small change could make the biggest difference for your English.
- Choose one weakness and one opportunity. Pair them. Example: “I’m shy when I speak (W) → I’ll join one online English meetup this month (O).”
- Set a real date. “Next month” is too vague. Write the exact date in your phone calendar before you close the page.
- Tell someone. Your teacher, your study partner, a friend. When someone knows your plan, you’re more likely to follow it.
- Bring it to your next lesson. Show your teacher. They’ll help you turn it into a study plan that actually fits your life.
Your English level is not fixed. It moves every week. This page is a snapshot of today — come back to it, update it, and watch yourself grow.
