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
- Start with a recorded take to establish the baseline.
- Choose the single weakness with the greatest listener impact.
- Use Live Coach if the weakness appears under questions or pressure.
- 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.