Speaking analysis means recording yourself speaking and then going back to analyze what you said. It separates the act of speaking (which requires real-time processing) from the act of analyzing (which requires careful attention) — and doing them separately makes both more effective.
Self-analysis: Simply listen to your recording and make notes. This builds your ability to hear your own mistakes — a skill that eventually transfers to real-time self-monitoring during conversation.
With a tutor: Play the recording during a lesson and have your tutor point out errors and explain corrections. This gives you expert feedback and deeper insight into what's wrong. You can also discuss corrections and alternate phrasings to learn more.
AI-assisted: Use an AI transcription tool to transcribe your audio, then feed the transcript into a writing corrector or AI chatbot. Words the AI transcribes incorrectly probably indicate pronunciation problems. Grammar errors in the transcript reveal patterns you can study.
Speaking analysis is introduced in Phase 5C and continues through Phase 7.