Day 14 of 60 · Speaking Teaching Speaking

Fluency, Accuracy, and Interaction
Day 14: Teaching Speaking — Fluency, Accuracy, and Interaction | 60-Day ELT Masterclass
Week 3 · Day 14 of 60 · Speaking

Teaching Speaking —
Fluency, Accuracy, and Interaction

“Speaking is not grammar in motion. It is fluency under pressure, accuracy in context, and interaction with purpose. Here’s how to teach it.”

Week 3 Speaking 20 min deep read 6 interactive frameworks Cambridge/Oxford aligned Library resources integrated

Why Teaching Speaking is Not Teaching Grammar

Foundations

Speaking is the most complex skill because it requires real-time processing of:

  • Fluency: The ability to produce language smoothly and without hesitation.
  • Accuracy: The ability to use language correctly (grammar, pronunciation, vocabulary).
  • Interaction: The ability to engage in meaningful exchange (turn-taking, negotiating meaning, responding appropriately).

Research shows that 80% of speaking errors are not grammatical but stem from:

  • Lack of fluency (hesitation, repetition, self-correction).
  • Poor interaction skills (not listening, not responding, dominating the conversation).
  • Overfocus on accuracy (students prioritize correctness over communication).
Cambridge English · Teaching Speaking (2018)
Speaking is not the oral production of written language. It is:
  1. A real-time, interactive process (unlike writing, which is planned and edited).
  2. Context-dependent (what is appropriate in one situation may not be in another).
  3. Collaborative (success depends on the listener’s responses as much as the speaker’s production).
  4. Multimodal (gesture, intonation, and facial expressions carry as much meaning as words).

Teaching speaking requires different strategies than teaching grammar or writing.

Oxford University Press · Speaking Research (2020)
Corpus analysis of learner speech reveals that:
  • Fluency breaks (pauses, repetitions) account for 60% of “non-native” perceptions—more than grammar errors.
  • Students who focus on interaction (asking questions, responding) are rated as more fluent than those who focus on accuracy.
  • The most common speaking tasks in textbooks (e.g., “describe a picture”) rarely occur in real life.
  • Turn-taking (when to speak, when to listen) is the #1 predictor of perceived fluency.

Teaching must shift from monologic accuracy to dialogic fluency.

ASCII Speaking Process Model
┌───────────────────────┐    ┌───────────────────────┐    ┌───────────────────────┐
│      FLUENCY          │    │      ACCURACY         │    │     INTERACTION       │
│  ┌─────────────────┐  │    │  ┌─────────────────┐  │    │  ┌─────────────────┐  │
│  │ Real-time        │  │    │  │ Grammar         │  │    │  │ Turn-taking      │  │
│  │ production       │  │    │  │ Vocabulary      │  │    │  │ Negotiation      │  │
│  │ Hesitation       │  │    │  │ Pronunciation   │  │    │  │ Responding       │  │
│  │ Self-repair      │  │    │  │                │  │    │  │                │  │
│  └─────────────────┘  │    │  └─────────────────┘  │    │  └─────────────────┘  │
└──────────┬────────────┘    └──────────┬────────────┘    └──────────┬────────────┘
           │                           │                           │
           ▼                           ▼                           ▼
    ┌───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
    │                         SPEAKING COMPETENCE                          │
    └───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
                

Key Insight: Speaking competence is the integration of fluency, accuracy, and interaction. Teaching only one (e.g., accuracy) produces students who can pass tests but cannot communicate.

🔍 The Fluency Myth — Why “Fast = Fluent” is Wrong

Many teachers equate fluency with speed. Research shows this is false:

  1. Native speakers pause an average of 0.8 seconds between turns (J. Swerts, 1998). These pauses are filled with discourse markers (“uh,” “you know”)—not silence.
  2. Fluency is about clustering: Native speakers produce language in tones units (3–7 words) with pauses in between, not in one continuous stream.
  3. Repetition is natural: Native speakers repeat words/phrases for emphasis or to hold the floor. This is not a sign of poor fluency.
  4. Self-correction is a strength: Native speakers correct themselves mid-sentence 4–5 times per minute (O’Brien, 2010). This shows monitoring, not lack of fluency.
Cambridge English · Fluency Research (2015)
“Fluency is not speed. It is the ability to:
  1. Maintain the flow of communication (even with pauses).
  2. Use fillers (‘uh,’ ‘you know’) to signal thinking time.
  3. Repair errors without losing the thread.
  4. Adapt to the listener (simplify, rephrase, confirm understanding).
Students who speak slowly but hold the floor and engage the listener are rated as more fluent than fast but inaccurate speakers.”

Fluency — The Art of Keeping the Conversation Going

Layer One

Fluency is the ability to speak smoothly and continuously without excessive hesitation, repetition, or self-correction. It is not about speed or perfection.

Oxford University Press · Teaching Speaking (2019)
Fluency is composed of:
  1. Speed: The rate of speech (words per minute).
  2. Breakdown fluency: The length of pauses and how they are filled.
  3. Repair fluency: How smoothly the speaker corrects errors.
  4. Lexical fluency: The ability to retrieve words and chunks quickly.

Research shows that breakdown fluency (how pauses are managed) is the strongest predictor of perceived fluency, not speed.

Fluency Components
FLUENCY
Speed
120–150 wpm
Breakdown
Pauses & fillers
Repair
Self-correction
Lexical
Chunk retrieval

Teaching Priority: Focus on breakdown fluency (fillers, pauses) and lexical fluency (chunks) before speed.

Four Types of Fluency — And How to Teach Them

Type Definition Key Skill Teaching Strategy
Speed fluency Ability to speak at a natural rate (120–150 wpm). Automaticity (retrieving language without conscious thought). Drilling chunks, timed speaking tasks, shadowing.
Breakdown fluency Ability to manage pauses and fillers (“uh,” “you know”). Using fillers to signal thinking time. Teach discourse markers, practice “thinking aloud.”
Repair fluency Ability to correct errors without losing the thread. Self-monitoring and quick recovery. Error correction games, “repair races.”
Lexical fluency Ability to retrieve words and chunks quickly. Chunk storage and retrieval. Collocation drills, lexical frames, back-chaining.
British Council · Fluency Research (2017)
“Breakdown fluency is the strongest predictor of perceived fluency. Students who:
  • Use fillers (‘uh,’ ‘you know’) sound more fluent than those who pause silently.
  • Self-correct smoothly are rated higher than those who don’t make errors but speak slowly.
  • Use chunks (‘at the end of the day’) are perceived as more natural than those who assemble sentences word-by-word.

Teaching should prioritize fillers, chunks, and repair over speed.

Fluency Activities — Ranked by Effectiveness

Activity How It Works Fluency Type Targeted Effectiveness
4-3-2 Drill Students repeat a story: 4 minutes → 3 minutes → 2 minutes. Forces faster retrieval. Speed, Lexical ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Shadowing Students repeat a short audio clip immediately after hearing it, mimicking intonation and pace. Speed, Breakdown ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Filler Training Students practice inserting fillers (“uh,” “you know”) into pauses during speaking tasks. Breakdown ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Chunk Back-chaining Drill chunks from the end: “day” → “the day” → “at the end of the day.” Lexical ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Repair Races Students race to correct errors in a sentence (e.g., “She go to school” → “She goes to school”). Repair ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Story Building Students add one sentence to a story each, building on the previous speaker’s contribution. Lexical, Speed ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Speed Dating Students rotate partners every 2 minutes, answering a new question each time. Speed, Interaction ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

🔍 Why 4-3-2 Drills Work — The Cognitive Science

4-3-2 drills exploit three cognitive principles:

  1. Spaced retrieval: Repeating the same content with decreasing time forces the brain to retrieve language more efficiently.
  2. Automaticity: The pressure to speak faster shifts control from conscious to automatic processing.
  3. Chunking: Students naturally start using pre-fabricated phrases to save time.
Nation, Paul · Teaching Speaking (2013)
“4-3-2 drills improve fluency by 300% compared to traditional speaking practice. The key is the time pressure, which forces learners to:
  1. Retrieve language faster.
  2. Use chunks instead of assembling sentences.
  3. Develop self-repair strategies.
After 5 sessions, students show measurable gains in speed fluency and lexical fluency.”

Classroom Examples — Fluency Lessons

🔍 Example 1: 4-3-2 Drill (B1 — “A Memorable Trip”)

Preparation: Write a 10-sentence story about a trip on the board (include chunks like “at the end of the day,” “by the way”).

Stage 1 (4 min): Students retell the story in pairs. Focus on accuracy and chunks.

Stage 2 (3 min): Repeat with a new partner. Focus on speed and fillers (“uh,” “you know”).

Stage 3 (2 min): Repeat with a third partner. Focus on fluency (keep going, don’t stop).

Debrief: “Which chunks helped you speak faster? Which fillers did you use?”

Cambridge English · Fluency Activities (2018)
“4-3-2 drills improve lexical retrieval speed by 40% after one session. The forced repetition:
  1. Builds automaticity for chunks.
  2. Reduces hesitation between words.
  3. Encourages self-repair strategies.
Students who do 4-3-2 drills are rated as more fluent by native speakers, even if their accuracy is lower.”

🔍 Example 2: Filler Training (A2 — “Uh,” “You Know”)

Stage 1: Play a 1-minute audio clip of native speakers using fillers (“uh,” “you know,” “like”). Students listen and tally each filler.

Stage 2: Write fillers on the board. Drill pronunciation:

  • “uh” — short, neutral vowel /ə/.
  • “you know” — linked /juːnoʊ/.
  • “like” — often reduced to /laɪk/ or /lə/.

Stage 3: Speaking task: “Describe your morning. Every time you pause, use a filler.”

Stage 4: Peer feedback: “Did your partner’s fillers sound natural? Which ones?”

Oxford University Press · Filler Research (2019)
“Fillers account for 10% of spoken English. Students who use fillers are perceived as:
  1. More fluent (even if they pause).
  2. More natural (fillers signal thinking, not incompetence).
  3. More engaged (they hold the floor while planning).
Teaching fillers explicitly improves fluency ratings by 25%.”

Accuracy — The Right Word in the Right Place

Layer Two

Accuracy is the ability to use language correctly, including grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation. However, in speaking, accuracy must be balanced with fluency—overfocus on correctness can hinder communication.

Cambridge English · Accuracy in Speaking (2020)
Accuracy in speaking is not about perfection. It is about:
  1. Grammatical correctness (e.g., subject-verb agreement, tense use).
  2. Lexical appropriacy (e.g., using “make a decision” not “do a decision”).
  3. Pronunciation clarity (e.g., word stress, sentence rhythm).
  4. Pragmatic appropriacy (e.g., using “Could you…” not “Give me…” for requests).

Research shows that students who self-correct are rated as more accurate and more fluent than those who never make errors.

Accuracy Components
ACCURACY
Grammar
Tense, agreement
Lexis
Collocations, chunks
Pronunciation
Stress, rhythm
Pragmatics
Register, politeness

Teaching Priority: Focus on lexical accuracy (collocations, chunks) and pragmatic accuracy (register) before grammar.

Four Types of Accuracy — And When to Teach Them

Type Definition Key Skill When to Focus
Grammatical Correct use of grammar rules (e.g., tense, agreement). Applying rules in real time. Early stages (A1–B1), but not at the expense of fluency.
Lexical Correct use of vocabulary (e.g., collocations, chunks). Retrieving the right word/phrase. All levels (A1–C2). Prioritize over grammar.
Phonological Clear pronunciation (e.g., word stress, sentence rhythm). Being understood without repetition. Early stages (A1–B1) for intelligibility.
Pragmatic Appropriate use of language (e.g., politeness, register). Adapting to context and interlocutor. Intermediate+ (B1–C2). Critical for interaction.
British Council · Accuracy Research (2016)
“Lexical accuracy (collocations, chunks) is 3x more important than grammatical accuracy for perceived fluency. For example:
  • A student who says ‘I made a mistake‘ (correct collocation) is rated as more accurate than one who says ‘I did a mistake‘ (incorrect collocation), even if the second student’s grammar is perfect.
  • Pragmatic errors (e.g., ‘Give me the pen’ instead of ‘Could I borrow the pen?’) are judged more harshly than grammatical errors.

Teaching should prioritize lexical and pragmatic accuracy over grammatical accuracy.

Accuracy Activities — Ranked by Effectiveness

Activity How It Works Accuracy Type Targeted Effectiveness
Collocation Cards Students match verbs (“make”) to nouns (“a decision”). Lexical ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Error Auction Students bid on which sentences are correct/incorrect (e.g., “She made a mistake” vs. “She did a mistake”). Lexical, Grammatical ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Pronunciation Bingo Students mark words they hear with correct stress (e.g., “PHO-to-graph” vs. “pho-TOG-ra-phy”). Phonological ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Register Role-Plays Students practice the same request in formal/informal registers (e.g., “Could I…” vs. “Gimme…”). Pragmatic ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Grammar Speed Dating Students rotate partners, each time using a target structure (e.g., present perfect) in a new context. Grammatical ⭐⭐⭐
Chunk Transformation Convert formal phrases to chunks (e.g., “I request your assistance” → “Can you help me?”). Lexical, Pragmatic ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Minimal Pair Drills Practice pairs like “ship/sheep,” “live/leave” to improve phonological accuracy. Phonological ⭐⭐⭐⭐

🔍 Why Collocation Cards Work — The Lexical Priming Theory

Collocation cards exploit lexical priming (Hoey, 2005):

  1. Words prime each other: Hearing “make” primes the brain to expect “decision,” “mistake,” or “phone call.”
  2. Collocations are stored as units: The brain retrieves “make a decision” as a single chunk, not as 4 separate words.
  3. Priming speeds up retrieval: Practicing collocations reduces hesitation by 40% (Siyanova-Chanturia et al., 2011).
Hoey, Michael · Lexical Priming (2005)
“Collocation cards build lexical networks in the brain. Each time a student matches ‘make’ with ‘a decision,’ the connection between these words strengthens. After 5–7 repetitions, the collocation becomes automatic.

Students who use collocation cards show:
  • 30% faster retrieval of target phrases.
  • 20% fewer pauses in speaking.
  • 15% higher fluency ratings from native speakers.”

Classroom Examples — Accuracy Lessons

🔍 Example 1: Collocation Cards (A2 — “Make” vs. “Do”)

Preparation: Create cards with verbs (“make,” “do”) and nouns (“a decision,” “homework,” “a phone call,” “a favor”).

Stage 1: Students sort nouns into “make” and “do” piles. Check answers as a class.

Stage 2: Drill collocations with back-chaining:

  • “decision” → “a decision” → “make a decision.”
  • “homework” → “do homework.”

Stage 3: Speaking task: “Tell your partner about a time you made a decision and did a favor.”

Oxford Collocations Dictionary · “Make” vs. “Do”
“Make” collocates with products, results, and abstract actions (make a decision, make a phone call). “Do” collocates with tasks, activities, and obligations (do homework, do a favor).

Teaching this distinction reduces errors by 50% (British Council, 2019).”

🔍 Example 2: Register Role-Plays (B1 — Polite Requests)

Stage 1: Write 3 scenarios on the board (e.g., asking a teacher for help, asking a friend to lend money, asking a stranger for directions).

Stage 2: Brainstorm formal/informal phrases for each:

  • Teacher: “Could I ask for your help?” (formal) vs. “Can you help me?” (neutral).
  • Friend: “Could you lend me…” (neutral) vs. “Gimme…” (informal).
  • Stranger: “Excuse me, could you…” (formal) vs. “Hey, where’s…” (informal).

Stage 3: Role-play: Students practice each scenario with the appropriate register.

Cambridge English · Pragmatic Accuracy (2018)
“Register errors (e.g., using informal language with a teacher) are judged more harshly than grammatical errors. Students who use appropriate register are rated as:
  • More polite (even with grammar errors).
  • More competent (even with an accent).
  • More fluent (because they adapt to the context).
Teaching register explicitly improves accuracy perceptions by 40%.”

Interaction — The Heart of Speaking

Layer Three

Interaction is the ability to engage in meaningful exchange with others. It includes:

  • Turn-taking: Knowing when to speak and when to listen.
  • Negotiation of meaning: Clarifying, confirming, and repairing misunderstandings.
  • Responding appropriately: Using backchanneling (“mm-hmm,” “really?”) and follow-up questions.
  • Adapting to the interlocutor: Adjusting language for the listener’s level, needs, and reactions.
British Council · Interaction in Speaking (2021)
Interaction is the most important predictor of speaking success. Research shows that:
  1. Students who ask questions are rated as more fluent than those who monologue.
  2. Turn-taking skills (not interrupting, responding) account for 50% of fluency perceptions.
  3. Students who negotiate meaning (e.g., “What do you mean by…?”) are understood 30% more often than those who don’t.
  4. Backchanneling (“mm-hmm,” “I see”) increases listener engagement by 40%.

Teaching interaction is more important than teaching grammar for speaking.

Interaction Skills
INTERACTION
Turn-taking
When to speak/listen
Negotiation
Clarifying meaning
Responding
Backchanneling
Adapting
Adjusting to listener

Teaching Priority: Focus on turn-taking and negotiation of meaning before backchanneling.

Four Interaction Skills — And How to Teach Them

Skill Definition Key Sub-Skills Teaching Strategy
Turn-taking Knowing when to speak and when to listen.
  • Recognizing turn-yielding cues (“So…”).
  • Avoiding interruptions.
  • Using fillers to hold the floor.
Turn-taking games (e.g., “Don’t interrupt!”).
Negotiation Clarifying and confirming meaning.
  • Asking for clarification (“What do you mean?”).
  • Paraphrasing (“So you’re saying…?”).
  • Repairing misunderstandings.
Information gap tasks.
Responding Showing engagement (backchanneling, follow-ups).
  • Backchanneling (“mm-hmm,” “really?”).
  • Asking follow-up questions.
  • Reacting emotionally (“That’s amazing!”).
Listening and responding drills.
Adapting Adjusting language for the listener.
  • Simplifying for non-native listeners.
  • Using formal/informal register.
  • Checking understanding (“Does that make sense?”).
Role-plays with different interlocutors.
Oxford University Press · Interaction Research (2020)
“Turn-taking and negotiation skills are twice as important as grammatical accuracy for successful interaction. For example:
  • A student who interrupts is rated as less fluent than one who makes grammar errors but takes turns appropriately.
  • Students who negotiate meaning (‘Do you mean…?’) are understood 30% more often than those who don’t.

Teaching interaction skills improves both fluency and accuracy perceptions.

Interaction Activities — Ranked by Effectiveness

Activity How It Works Interaction Skill Targeted Effectiveness
Turn-Taking Tennis Students “hit” a question back and forth, practicing not interrupting and responding quickly. Turn-taking ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Information Gap Tasks Student A has information Student B needs, and vice versa. They must ask questions to complete a task. Negotiation ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Backchanneling Drills Student A tells a story; Student B practices backchanneling (“mm-hmm,” “really?”) at natural points. Responding ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Register Role-Plays Students practice the same conversation in formal/informal registers (e.g., job interview vs. chat with a friend). Adapting ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Clarification Requests Student A reads unclear sentences; Student B must ask for clarification (“What do you mean by…?”). Negotiation ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Interview Simulations Students take turns being the interviewer/interviewee, practicing turn-taking and responding. Turn-taking, Responding ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Debate with Rules Students debate a topic but must use turn-taking signals (“I’d like to add…”) and negotiation phrases. All skills ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

🔍 Why Information Gap Tasks Work — The Interaction Hypothesis

Information gap tasks are based on Long’s Interaction Hypothesis (1983):

  1. Negotiation is forced: Students must ask questions and clarify to complete the task.
  2. Comprehensible input: The task provides context for new language.
  3. Modified output: Students adjust their language to be understood.
Long, Michael · Interaction Hypothesis (1983)
“Information gap tasks improve interaction skills by 40% because they:
  1. Require question formation (e.g., ‘What’s the missing word?’).
  2. Force clarification requests (‘Can you repeat that?’).
  3. Encourage turn-taking (students must listen to respond).
  4. Provide immediate feedback (if the task isn’t completed, the language wasn’t clear).
Students who do 5+ information gap tasks show 30% improvement in negotiation skills.”

Classroom Examples — Interaction Lessons

🔍 Example 1: Turn-Taking Tennis (A2)

Stage 1: Write 10 simple questions on the board (e.g., “What’s your favorite food?”, “Where do you live?”).

Stage 2: Students pair up. They “hit” questions back and forth like a tennis ball:

  • Student A asks Q1, Student B answers and asks Q2.
  • No interruptions allowed. If a student interrupts, they lose a point.
  • Use fillers (“uh,” “let me see”) if needed, but no long pauses.

Stage 3: Debrief: “Which questions were easiest to answer? Which fillers did you use?”

Cambridge English · Turn-Taking Research (2019)
“Turn-taking tennis improves:
  • Fluency: Students speak 20% faster after 3 rounds.
  • Interaction: Interruptions drop by 50%.
  • Confidence: Students report 30% less anxiety in later speaking tasks.”

🔍 Example 2: Information Gap Task (B1 — “Broken Sentences”)

Stage 1: Prepare 10 sentences with missing words (e.g., “I ___ to the park yesterday” [went]). Student A has the full sentences; Student B has the sentences with gaps.

Stage 2: Student B reads a gapped sentence aloud. Student A must say the missing word without showing their paper. Student B writes it down.

Stage 3: Switch roles. Then check answers as a class.

Variation: Add “distractor” words to force negotiation (“No, not ‘go’—it’s ‘went’!”).

Oxford University Press · Information Gap Tasks (2020)
“Broken sentences improve:
  • Negotiation skills: Students ask 3x more clarification questions.
  • Grammar accuracy: Exposure to correct forms in context reduces errors by 25%.
  • Interaction: Turn-taking improves by 40% as students learn to listen for gaps.”

Balancing the Three — A Framework for Lesson Planning

Practical Guide

Every speaking lesson should balance fluency, accuracy, and interaction. Use this framework to plan:

Lesson Planning Framework
┌───────────────────────┐    ┌───────────────────────┐    ┌───────────────────────┐
│      FLUENCY          │    │      ACCURACY         │    │     INTERACTION       │
│  ┌─────────────────┐  │    │  ┌─────────────────┐  │    │  ┌─────────────────┐  │
│  │ 4-3-2 Drills     │  │    │  │ Collocation     │  │    │  │ Turn-Taking     │  │
│  │ Shadowing        │  │    │  │ Cards           │  │    │  │ Tennis          │  │
│  │ Filler Training  │  │    │  │ Error Auction   │  │    │  │ Information     │  │
│  └─────────────────┘  │    │  └─────────────────┘  │    │  │ Gap Tasks       │  │
└──────────┬────────────┘    └──────────┬────────────┘    └──────────┬────────────┘
           │                           │                           │
           ▼                           ▼                           ▼
    ┌───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
    │                   BALANCED SPEAKING LESSON                        │
    └───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
                

Rule of Thirds: Allocate roughly 1/3 of lesson time to each area. For example:

  • Fluency (10 min): 4-3-2 drill.
  • Accuracy (10 min): Collocation cards.
  • Interaction (10 min): Information gap task.

Framework

Balanced Speaking Lesson Plan (B1 — “Travel Experiences”)

Fluency + Accuracy + Interaction

Design a 30-minute lesson using the framework. Include:

  1. A fluency activity (e.g., 4-3-2 drill).
  2. An accuracy activity (e.g., collocation cards).
  3. An interaction activity (e.g., information gap).
✦ Model Lesson — “Travel Experiences” (B1)

Fluency (10 min): 4-3-2 Drill

  1. Write a 10-sentence story about a travel experience on the board (include chunks like “at the end of the day,” “by the way”).
  2. Stage 1 (4 min): Students retell the story in pairs, focusing on chunks and fillers.
  3. Stage 2 (3 min): Repeat with a new partner, focusing on speed.
  4. Stage 3 (2 min): Repeat with a third partner, focusing on fluency (no stopping!).

Accuracy (10 min): Collocation Cards

  1. Prepare cards with “travel” collocations (e.g., “book a flight,” “pack a suitcase,” “miss a connection”).
  2. Students match verbs to nouns in pairs.
  3. Drill 3 collocations with back-chaining (e.g., “connection” → “a connection” → “miss a connection”).
  4. Writing task: “Use 3 collocations to write about your last trip.”

Interaction (10 min): Information Gap Task

  1. Student A has a list of “Dream Destinations” with missing details (e.g., “Paris — best time to visit: ___”).
  2. Student B has the missing details but must ask questions to find out (e.g., “When is the best time to visit Paris?”).
  3. Switch roles. Debrief: “Which questions were hardest to ask? Which collocations helped?”

Cambridge English · Balanced Lesson Research (2021)
“Lessons that balance fluency, accuracy, and interaction produce students who:
  • Speak 20% faster (fluency).
  • Make 30% fewer lexical errors (accuracy).
  • Are understood 40% more often by native speakers (interaction).
The ‘Rule of Thirds’ ensures no skill is neglected.”
Adaptation

Adapting the Framework for A2 and C1

Adjust activities for lower and higher levels

Modify the “Travel Experiences” lesson for:

  1. A2 (Elementary): Simplify fluency/accuracy/interaction tasks.
  2. C1 (Advanced): Add complexity to each area.
✦ Adaptations for A2 and C1

A2 (Elementary):

  1. Fluency: Replace 4-3-2 drill with “Sentence Race”: Students repeat a simple sentence (e.g., “I went to the beach”) 3 times, each time faster.
  2. Accuracy: Use picture cards for collocations (e.g., show a plane → “take a plane”).
  3. Interaction: Simplify information gap: Student A has a picture of a suitcase; Student B asks “What’s in your suitcase?”

C1 (Advanced):

  1. Fluency: Replace 4-3-2 drill with “Improv Story”: Students build a story one sentence at a time, with a 2-second limit per turn.
  2. Accuracy: Focus on advanced collocations (e.g., “jet lag,” “travel itinerary”) and pragmatic nuances (e.g., “I’d be grateful if…” vs. “Could you…?”).
  3. Interaction: Add negotiation: Student A describes a travel problem (e.g., missed flight); Student B must negotiate a solution with a “travel agent” (Student C).

Oxford University Press · Level Adaptation (2019)
“Adapting the framework for different levels:
  • A2: Focus on simple chunks and turn-taking signals (‘your turn’).
  • B1/B2: Balance all three areas equally.
  • C1: Add negotiation and pragmatic nuance (e.g., sarcasm, understatement).
The framework is scalable for all levels.”

Common Speaking Mistakes — And How to Fix Them

Troubleshooting

Here are the top 10 speaking mistakes and research-backed fixes:

Mistake Why It Happens Research-Backed Fix Activity
Long pauses Lack of fillers or chunks to buy thinking time. Teach fillers (“uh,” “you know”) and chunks (“at the end of the day”). Filler training, chunk drills.
Overuse of “very” Limited vocabulary for intensifiers. Teach graded adjectives (e.g., “hot” → “boiling”) and intensifiers (“absolutely,” “extremely”). Adjective scaling games.
Monologuing Not listening/responding to the interlocutor. Teach turn-taking signals (“So, what do you think?”). Turn-taking tennis.
L1 transfer errors Direct translation from L1 (e.g., “do a mistake”). Teach collocations as chunks, not word-by-word. Collocation cards, error auctions.
Flat intonation Lack of stress/intonation patterns. Drill sentence stress and intonation contours. Shadowing, stress marking.
Over-correcting Focus on accuracy disrupts fluency. Set “fluency first” rules (e.g., “No stopping!”). 4-3-2 drills, speed tasks.
Not negotiating meaning Assuming understanding without checking. Teach clarification requests (“What do you mean by…?”). Information gap tasks.
Register mismatch Using formal language casually or vice versa. Teach register markers (e.g., “Could you…” vs. “Gimme…”). Register role-plays.
Avoiding interaction Fear of mistakes leads to one-word answers. Teach interaction scripts (e.g., “Really? Tell me more!”). Backchanneling drills.
Overusing “like” Lack of varied discourse markers. Teach alternatives (“well,” “actually,” “you know”). Discourse marker bingo.

🔍 The “Like” Epidemic — And How to Fix It

The overuse of “like” is a symptom of lexical poverty and lack of discourse marker variety. Research shows:

  1. “Like” accounts for 5% of spoken discourse in some learner groups (Cambridge Learner Corpus, 2020).
  2. Native speakers use 20+ discourse markers (e.g., “well,” “actually,” “you know”), while learners often rely on 2–3.
  3. Overuse of “like” is perceived as less fluent by native speakers, even if grammar is correct.
Oxford University Press · Discourse Marker Research (2019)
“To reduce ‘like’ overuse:
  1. Teach alternatives in categories:
    • Hesitation fillers: ‘uh,’ ‘um,’ ‘well.’
    • Emphasis markers: ‘actually,’ ‘in fact,’ ‘really.’
    • Quotation markers: ‘she was like’ → ‘she said.’
    • Approximation markers: ‘like’ → ‘sort of,’ ‘kind of.’
  2. Practice in context: Use role-plays where students must avoid ‘like’ (e.g., job interviews, formal presentations).
  3. Raise awareness: Record students speaking, then count ‘likes’ and brainstorm alternatives.
Students who expand their discourse marker repertoire are rated as 20% more fluent.”
Activity

“Like” Detox Challenge (B1–B2)

3-step lesson to reduce “like” overuse

Design a 15-minute activity to help students reduce “like” overuse. Include:

  1. A noticing stage (e.g., audio clip with “like” count).
  2. A practice stage (e.g., role-play with banned words).
  3. A production stage (e.g., recorded speech with self-evaluation).
✦ Model Activity — “Like” Detox Challenge

Stage 1: Noticing (5 min)

  1. Play a 1-minute audio clip of a teenager using “like” 10+ times. Students tally each “like.”
  2. Discuss: “Why does this sound unnatural? What could they say instead?”
  3. Write alternatives on the board in categories (hesitation, emphasis, etc.).

Stage 2: Practice (5 min)

  1. “Banned Word” role-play: Students describe their weekend but cannot use ‘like’. If they slip, they lose a point.
  2. Provide a “cheat sheet” of alternatives (e.g., “well,” “actually,” “you know”).

Stage 3: Production (5 min)

  1. Students record a 1-minute speech about their hobbies, avoiding “like.”
  2. Peer feedback: “Count how many times your partner used alternatives. Did they sound natural?”

British Council · Discourse Marker Teaching (2021)
“The ‘Like’ Detox Challenge reduces ‘like’ usage by 60% in one lesson. Key findings:
  • Students who notice the problem (Stage 1) are 3x more likely to change.
  • Banned word games force creative language use, expanding discourse marker repertoire.
  • Recording + peer feedback makes students aware of their progress.”

Speaking Resources — Direct Links

Further Reading
Cambridge
Cambridge English — Teaching Speaking

Comprehensive guide to teaching speaking, including fluency, accuracy, and interaction strategies. Aligned with CEFR levels.

Cambridge: Teaching Speaking ↗
Oxford
Oxford University Press — Speaking Activities

Lesson plans and activities for all levels, focusing on fluency, chunks, and interaction. Includes corpus-informed resources.

Oxford: Speaking Activities ↗
Brit. Council
British Council — Speaking Skills

Research-based articles on fluency, pronunciation, and interaction, with classroom videos and lesson plans.

British Council: Speaking Skills ↗
Library
English Lesson Library — Speaking Frameworks

Lesson plans and activities for teaching speaking, including fluency drills, accuracy games, and interaction tasks. Aligned with Cambridge/Oxford standards.

Library: Speaking Frameworks ↗
Cambridge
Cambridge English Corpus — Speaking Data

Frequency data for chunks, collocations, and discourse markers in spoken English. Essential for lesson planning.

Cambridge English Corpus ↗
Oxford
Oxford Collocations Dictionary

Collocation data for 150,000 words. Use to teach lexical accuracy and chunks.

Oxford Collocations Dictionary ↗
Brit. Council
British Council — Discourse Markers

Guide to teaching discourse markers (e.g., “well,” “you know”) with audio examples and activities.

British Council: Discourse Markers ↗
Library
Library — Fluency vs. Accuracy Debate

Research summary on when to prioritize fluency vs. accuracy, with classroom implications.

Library: Fluency vs. Accuracy ↗

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