Junagadh sits at the foot of the Girnar hills, with an economy built on agriculture, food processing and a fast-growing tourism trade — and in each of these, spoken English is becoming the skill that opens better roles. The district is one of Gujarat's biggest producers of groundnut, garlic and the GI-tagged Gir Kesar mango, and its coastal belt near Veraval runs a busy seafood-processing and export business that ships to markets like Singapore, Japan and Dubai; those export and buyer-facing roles need conversational English. As the gateway to the Gir National Park and the Girnar ropeway, Junagadh is also a major tourism hub, where hotels, resorts, tour operators and travel agencies increasingly serve domestic and international visitors who expect to be dealt with in English. Add the city's growing education, banking and retail sectors, and the pattern is clear: for a graduate from a Gujarati- or Hindi-medium school, the grammar is usually already there — what is missing is the confidence to speak without translating first.
EEC has been part of Gujarat's education story since July 15, 1997, and although we do not run a physical branch in Junagadh, our Spoken English course reaches Junagadh students fully through the Online Live batch on Zoom — taught by the same EEC faculty, with the same curriculum and the same live speaking practice as our classroom centres. The course uses the original Cambridge Interchange Level 1 book — the communicative-English curriculum trusted by learners worldwide — across three months of 2-hour classes, Monday to Saturday. Each session pairs an Interchange lesson and real speaking practice with a second hour of basic grammar explained in Hindi and Gujarati, so a beginner is never left behind. The fee is ₹7,500, and your original Cambridge book is delivered free to your door anywhere in Junagadh.
The academic picture reinforces the demand. Junagadh hosts Junagadh Agricultural University, Bhakta Kavi Narsinh Mehta University and the historic Bahauddin College, where advanced coursework, seminars and placement interviews increasingly run in English — yet a large share of students arrive from Gujarati-medium schools and hit a steep transition. EEC's Spoken English course closes that gap by training learners to think and speak directly in English rather than translate. By the end, students handle daily conversation, college presentations, campus-placement group discussions, government-job and bank interview rounds, and the unscripted questions of a visa interview with composure. You receive an EEC completion certificate — but the lasting outcome is fluency, and since Spoken English is the foundation EEC builds before IELTS, PTE, or TOEFL, that fluency carries straight into whatever you pursue next.