Register online for the standard edition of French Tutorial. Dedicate 20 to 30 minutes per day to language study. Learn the French alphabet and pronunciation rules. Click on the audio links, listen to pronunciation examples and repeat them. Practice the alphabet and sample phrases throughout your study. Study grammar, time and date and counting modules in the order presented in the tutorial. Read each module thoroughly. Learn the information in one module before you move on to the next one.
Go to the Imagiers channel on YouTube. Listen to the video "145 Minutes to Learn French Grammar" in increments of 15 minutes or less if desired. The Imagiers library includes more than 25,000 short instructional videos, including vocabulary lessons, quizzes, songs and French sayings. Watch two or three videos of your choice daily, paying attention to the words on the screen as you repeat words and phrases after the instructor. Repeat the videos until you pronounce words and phrases with ease.
Go to The Open University's LearningSpace website and click on "French: Ouverture (L120_1)." Navigate through the "Introduction," "Learning Outcomes" and modules 1.1 through 1.3, using the menu on the upper left-hand corner of your screen. Read the course materials for each module, watch the video and listen to the audio materials. Complete the written activities on the page for each module. Master the material in each module before you progress to the second Ouverture unit. The Ouverture units are excerpts from a full course offered by The Open University, the U.K's largest institution of higher learning. A third free French language unit titled "En ville" is also available in the LearningSpace's Languages section.
Visit the French Internet Television page on Multilingual Books. Select a French language channel, such as TVA Nouvelles and explore it for 15 to 20 minutes several times per week. Read articles of interest on the TVA Nouvelles channel website. Use the Google Translate tool to find the meanings of words and paragraphs that you don't understand. Watch short videos that interest you. These will help you get used to hearing native French speakers using the language at a normal, everyday pace.