Teaching English

When Students Never Become Fluent

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Written in

2025
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Reading time

5 min
When Students Never Become Fluent

"Insights from real conversations and real problems"

When learners never feel “fluent”

Often the issue is pace control, not vocabulary. Try this timing drill:

  1. Prepare a short script (ideally written by the learner).
  2. Time a first delivery at normal speed.
  3. Repeat more slowly, aiming to add a few seconds — building the habit of pausing and finishing ideas.
  4. Repeat faster than the baseline — building responsiveness.

Seeing the numbers change makes learners aware of tempo. Over time, speed becomes a choice, not a problem.

What do you think?

This article might've started as a scribble on the back of a receipt during a bus ride, a spark of something real after a conversation over a pint of Leffe, or notes from a Sunday afternoon client call that left me buzzing with ideas. However it came to be, I hope it found you at just the right moment.

If it stirred something in you, or if you're just curious about anything from automating the boring bits of your business to capturing your quiet magic in a coffee shop shoot — shall we pencil something into the diary?

I'd love to be on the other end of the conversation.

Thi Nguyen offers a wide range of marketing, automation consultancy for small, medium enterprises. Email: [email protected]. She's currently based in London, UK.
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