Deliberate speaking practice

Recorded Readout vs Live Coach

Use a recorded readout when you need a stable review of one complete take. Use Live Coach when you need spoken roleplay, interruption, follow-up pressure and an immediate redo line.

What to review

  • Recorded readouts review pace, clarity, structure and filler after a take.
  • Live Coach asks, listens, challenges and prompts a spoken retry in real time.
  • Both modes are rehearsal tools; neither replaces a real subject-matter reviewer.

Four-step rehearsal

  1. Start with a recorded take to establish the baseline.
  2. Choose the single weakness with the greatest listener impact.
  3. Use Live Coach if the weakness appears under questions or pressure.
  4. Finish with another complete recorded answer for comparison.

Listener-focused checks

  • Did the selected mode match the practice need?
  • Was feedback applied in a new spoken attempt?
  • Did the full response improve, not only one score?
  • Are important claims independently verified?

Frequently asked questions

What is the first step for recorded readout vs live coach?

Start with a recorded take to establish the baseline.

Does the score guarantee better real-world results?

No. Use the score and written feedback as rehearsal signals, listen to the recording yourself, verify important claims and test the revision in another complete spoken attempt.

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