Showing posts with label embodiment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label embodiment. Show all posts

Thursday, February 26, 2026

EAPIC Lesson 2 - Fluency (and rise-fall and fall-rise hacks)

Important note:  As of tonight, March 4th, only 2 people had completed viewing of the L2 training video, and none had enrolled in the course officially yet, so there was no feedback session this evening. I will wait a week before uploading the L3 training video, to give time for others to get "caught up!" If you have viewed the L2 training video, feel free to email me with your questions or post a comment on the blog below. 

                   

                               Lesson 2 - Tai Chi  (Fluency 1)


 





Link to the L2 training video         (Google meet)

Link to L2 training video  (Youtube) 

Links to  the L2 feedback session 

Link to L1 training video                 

 Link to Introduction video


Objectives:

Basic rhythm and fluency

Haptic conversation hacks: 

                    Tai Chi Fluency, RISE-FALL ( / \ ) 

                    FALL-RISE ( \ /) tones 


           Warm up! (vowel lip shape up!)

Circles        (3 sided) boxes

 u                        i          
 U                        I          
                       e             
 Ɔ                       ɛ
 ʌ                     ae
       a         a    

a > i     a > u   Ɔ > i

i > i     e > i    u > u    o > u 


READ

Tai Chi Finger flow fluency: both hands move in clockwise circles.

    Finger tips touch very lightly on the most stressed syllable in the rhythm group.

    Arms, hands and fingers—and whole body as relaxed as possible.

RISE-FALL and FALL-RISE tone hacks, using bigger circles and energy


Tai Chi (Finger-flow fluency)Training

  • Fingers touch on the stressed syllable: X
  • Hands move in (soft ball size) clockwise circles!

Nice X
That’s nice. oX
Very nice.  ooX
That’s very nice.  oooX
Easy Xo
That’s easy. oXo
Very easy. ooXo
That’s ve-ry easy. oooXo
Beau-ti-ful Xoo
That’s beautiful. oXoo
Very beautiful. ooXoo
That’s very beautiful. oooXoo
Fascinating Xooo
That’s fascinating oXooo
Very fascinating ooXooo
That’s very fascinating oooXooo


RISE-FALL and FALL-RISE Hacks

  • RISE-FALL: Soccer ball size circles with both hands! 
    • Meaning: Enthusiasm or excitement, with more voice energy

  • FALL-RISE:  Right hand continues upward a little. Left hand continues down.
    • Meaning: You are bit curious or surprised about something, 
    • or you are a Canadian* who sometimes uses a FALL-RISE + "eh" at the end of a sentence.  
Nice X          / \        \ /
That’s nice. oX / \        \ /
Very nice.  ooX / \        \ /
That’s very nice.  oooX / \       \ /
Easy Xo / \       \ /
That’s easy. oXo / \       \ /
Very easy. ooXo / \       \ /
That’s ve-ry easy. oooXo  / \       \ /
Beau-ti-ful Xoo / \       \ /
That’s beautiful. oXoo / \       \ /
Very beautiful. ooXoo  / \       \ /
That’s very beautiful. oooXoo  / \       \ /
Fascinating Xooo / \       \ /
That’s fascinating oXooo / \       \ /
Very fascinating. ooXooo / \       \ /
That’s very fascinating.       oooXooo / \       \ /

*We lived in Canada | for twenty years | and love a Canadian accent! 

Lesson 2 EOR - Ducks on a plane! 

(Tai Chi, plus RISE-FALL and FALL-RISE hacks)

MOOD: VERY enthusiastic! (On a very noisy subway where you have to speak loudly!) 

1A: ExCUse me. Could you put my DUCK | in the Overhead?

            X / \                                             X / \                 X \ / or /

   B: SURE. GLAD to. THERE you are!

         X / \      X / \           X / \ 

2A: Thank you so MUCH!

                                X / \

   B: You're WELcome. Where're you FROM, EH?

                    X / \                                        X / \    \ /

3A: JapAN| but I’m a STUdent here now. 

             X / \                 X / \

    B: JaPAN?  WHERE in Japan?

              X \ /       X / \

4A: SENdai.  About two HOUrs | north of Tokyo by TRAIN. 

        X / \                         X / \ or /                                   X / \

   B: That's a REally nice area. 

                        X / \

5A: It certainly IS. But it’s beCOming | very CROWded. 

                        X \ /                  X / \                    X \ / or / \

B: I've HEARD that. How LONG | are you staying in CAnada?

              X / \                         X / \                                       X \ / or / \

6A: PERmanently! I'm going to be WORking | in ToRONto. 

       X/ \                                                X / \                     X / \ 

   B: WELL. Welcome to CAnada, EH!

         X / \                           X / \         X \ /


Rhythm First: Haptic Side-Step!  (plus Tai Chi)

(For activation of the body, going from left to right, like reading a book!
Each time you do it you will add a gesture!)

A-B-C-D-E-F!

Homework;
a. (Every day): Warm up (L1 and L2), training (3 days), EOR, new text (day 5). Notes (new targets and observations) and log of time spent and when!

b. (optional) If you want to enroll for Wednesday feedback, email me for a quick interview on Zoom. 

c. Check out Legalshield and IDshield on my website: williamacton.legalshieldassociate.com (If you sign up for Legalshield or IDshield, you get 3 more personal lessons, too!) 

Keep in touch! 

Bill

wracton@gmail.com
https://hipoeces.blogspot.com/
www.actonhaptic.com
www.williamacton.legalshieldassociate. com




Friday, February 13, 2026

EAPIC Lesson 1: Rhythm and FALL/RISE Sign-offs

 English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement Course (EAPIC)

Haptic - using gesture and touch

KINETIK – using the whole body to learn

Link to the Introduction video!

***

Link to Lesson 1 Training video


Lesson 1 – Rhythm and FALL/RISE Sign-offs

  • MT5 (movement, tone, touch and tempo) Technique
  • MT5 video uploaded every Week on Youtube.
  • (Optional) Zoom class meeting on Wednesday at 8 EST.

Homework: 

Do at least the 20-minute practice every morning for 5 days. 


Warm up (3x each)

1. Neck stretch (left side, right side, back, front)

2. Upper chest and shoulders (elbows touch) 

3. Nasal resonance (Ying! Yang! Young!) 

4. Back (‘Oh’ cone) and chest (Ooo-Wah!) 


Syllable Butterfly Training

Strong tap on the stressed syllable on right shoulder: X

Light tap on unstressed syllables on left forearm: o

 

Cool. X

That’s cool. oX

Really cool. ooX

That’s really cool. oooX

Awesome Xo

That’s awesome. oXo

Really awesome. ooXo

That’s really awesome. oooXo

Super cool. Xoo

That’s super cool. oXoo

Really super cool. ooXoo

That’s really super cool. oooXoo

Super awesome. Xooo

That’s super awesome. oXooo

Really super awesome. ooXooo

That’s really super awesome oooXooo


FALL/RISE Sign-offs: 

FALLing tone (  \ ) Usually at the end of a statement or certainty. Nice to meet you. \

RISEing tone ( / ) Usually at the end of a question or uncertainty. Are you coming? /

Lesson I – Embodied Oral Reading (EOR)

(Syllable Butterfly + FALL/Rise Sign-offs)


1A:  I THINK | we've GOT it | figured OUT.    

           •X                     •X•                    • •X    \

   B: Oh. Can you TELL me | what it IS? 

         X       •   •        X   •              • •X   /

2A: Your MUFfler | I THINK | has a small HOLE in it.    

           •    X•                 •X              • • •      X      • •    \

   B: Oh NO!  Does it NEED | to be rePLACED right now?   

          • X             • •     X            • •      • X                 •    •   /

3A: Yes, it DOES. It ISN’T going to | last much LONger     

        X      •  X         •   X •      •   •            • •           X•.  \

   B: Huh. How MUCH | will it COST?         

          X            • X            •  •       X   \

4A: A-BOUT | a hundred | and fifty DOLlars.        

          •X           •     X•          •     • •       X•    \

   B: Really. That's too BAD. Is there a less exPENsive way?       

          X•               ••     X                   • • • • •.  X    •        •   /

5A: You could MAYbe | rePAIR it, yourSELF.

             •   •     X•               •X     •         • X    \

   B: How LONG | exACTly | will that LAST?

             •  X                 •X•                • •     X   \

6A: If it works at ALL . . . MAYbe | for a couple of MONTHS?

               • • •   •   X             X•            • •     • •       •   X    /

   B: I'll DO that. SEE you | in a MONTH or two!

          •  X   •        X   •            • •     X         • •    \


Homework: 

1. Take notes!!!

2. Practice every day, in the morning, standing, with good gesture, using pleasing (beautiful) voice and volume. (Warm up, training and EOR)

    Friday: Do the training! Take notes!

    Saturday: Do warm up training and EOR) Take notes!

    Sunday: Take the day off! Take notes!

    Monday: Do warm up, traing and EOR. In your notes write down words or phrases you may have difficulty pronouncing well enough!

    Tuesday: Do warm up, EOR and find a dialogue or story about as long as an EOR and practice using the Butterfly MT5 with it. Take notes, lots of them!!!

    Wednesday: Do warm up, EOR, your text, take notes and come to the Feedback session (this one is frree!) 

    Thursday: Do new training video. 

3.  Check out: https://elsaspeak.com/en/ (vowels and consonants)

4.  Check out:https://speechling.com/ (general speech fluency)

5. Check out: www.williamacton.legalshieldassociate.com (for the optional identity protection app that I'll introduce during Week 3.)


Email me: wracton@gmail.com with questions or to enroll for EAPIC course feedback sessions: ($250 USD)




Wednesday, February 11, 2026

EAPIC Lesson 1 Feedback Meet at 8 p.m. EST tonight!

The live EAPIC Google Meets session is from 8 to 9 EST tonight. It is a follow up to last week's Lesson One video. (View that here!) The lesson Two training video will be uploaded tomorrow. 

Each week on Wednesday there is a live feedback session for students who are enrolled in the course. Tonight's session is free, See you tonight. 



Thursday, February 5, 2026

English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement Course (EAPIC) Introduction

Here is the link to the video (Youtube)

(Note: The video quality of the text on the screen is a little fuzzy, but it is the same as what is below! Also, my voice with the cold is a little fuzzy, too! ) 

Better accent or pronunciation

Better expressiveness in speaking

More confidence in speaking

Good method for continuing to improve - Study at home, by yourself!

Works for anybody with a CLB or IELTS 5 and up

10 weeks, online (plus Introduction)

(Free) 20~30-minute training video uploaded to YouTube every Thursday

15~30 minutes of homework every day!

(Optional) live homework follow up meeting on Zoom Wednesday at 8-9 p.m. EST. 15-minute Zoom interview required to enroll ($250 USD additional fee)

Weekly syllabus:
1. Basic rhythm 1 (pronunciation grammar) 
2. Fluency 1 (body rhythm)
3. Consonants 1 (common problems, such as 'th' and 'r/l')
4. Vowels 1 (short)
5. Vowels 2 (long)
6. Consonants 2 (students’ “favorite” problems)
7. Melody 1 (little pieces, phrases)
8. Melody 2 (longer pieces, sentences)
9. Fluency 2 (Public speaking and classroom stye)
10. Rhythm 2 (Conversation style)

Typical weekly schedule: 

   Thursday: Do the video along with me (20+ minutes) and keep notes!

   Friday: Do the warm up, training, embodied oral reading (EOR) and keep notes!

   Saturday: Do the warm up, training, EOR and keep notes!
              Notes: Other words or phrases you have difficulty pronouncing well

   Sunday: Take the day off with me!

   Monday: Do the warm up, EOR, practice your target words (with MT5s) and keep notes!

   Tuesday: Do the warm up, EOR,  a new one-page story you have found with MT5s, 
                   practice your target words and keep notes!

   Wednesday: Come to the live feedback 60-minute class on Zoom (or practice by yourself!) 

       Here is what goes on in the feedback session: 
                       a. Go over the EOR
                       b. Check students' individual MT5s for accuracy
                       c. Questions from and help with target words of students
                       d. Preview of the next week's lesson

So . . . How does this course work? 

Gesture and touch make pronunciation easier to learn and remember

Using your whole body (embodied) makes is easier to pay full attention

Rhythm and gesture together help keep learning both relaxed and energetic

Embodied oral reading is great for bringing what you study into conversation

Practicing the EOR every day trains your mind and body to move and speak more like English speakers do. 

Use what you know . . . 

Email me: wracton@gmail.com for more information or to enroll (via Paypal or Venmo). To enroll requires brief Zoom chat (just to make sure the course is for you!) 

For a more in depth discussion of the basis of the EAPIC course, go to: https://www.actonhaptic.com/eapic

The Summer 2026 EAPIC course is being revised to include identity protection. Students will also be using IDentityshield system. For a preview of IDentityshield go to: IDentityshield introduction, or  www.williamacton.legalshieldassociate.com 

Homework for next week 

A. Tell me a little about yourself and why you think this course would be helpful for you.

B. Give me some idea of your weekly schedule, how much time you have to practice!

C. Tell me about your experience with music, playing an instrument, etc., or just enjoying it!

D. Tell me if you'd like to join the Wednesday Zoom feedback class. (If so, I'll set up a Zoom interview just with you as soon as possible. If I do, what would be a good time for you?)

Keep in touch!

Bill









Sunday, February 1, 2026

Embodied English Pronunciation and Identity Protection Course

Embodied English Pronunciation and Identity Protection Course (for nonnative speakers and their instructors) is a 12-week, practice-driven course that helps multilingual professionals and their instructors build clearer, more confident spoken English while learning to recognize and resist today’s AI enabled fraud and deepfake threats. It is designed for programs or individuals that want to strengthen students’ communicative impact and safeguard their digital and professional identities at the same time. [pronsig.iatefl+6] 

What this course does

Integrates haptic (movement  and touch based) pronunciation training so learners physically “map” stress, rhythm, and intonation, making clearer, more intelligible speech that transfers into real world communication. [jalt-publications+3]

Uses that same heightened awareness of voice, language patterns, and gesture to train students and instructors to detect persuasive language, suspicious vocal cues, and cultural “red flags” in scam calls and social engineering attempts. [hipoeces.blogspot+2]

Provides hands on practice with a comprehensive, web based identity protection platform (IDentityShield by LegalShield), so participants can see how technical safeguards and human judgment work together. [youtube]

Why this matters for educators

Deepfake audio and video are now realistic enough that even experienced professionals are being deceived by AI generated “colleagues” and executives in live video calls, resulting in multimillion dollar losses for institutions in places like Hong Kong or AI deep fakes such as Only Virtual, where you can communicate with the dead. Traditional awareness campaigns and generic fraud briefings are no longer sufficient; learners need repeated, language rich practice in spotting how fraudulent messages actually sound, look, and feel in interaction. [incode+5]

This course positions language educators as a first line of defense by turning everyday pronunciation work into a powerful lens on persuasion, credibility, and identity—skills that transfer directly to academic, workplace, and online contexts. [actonhaptic+4]

Structure and learning experience

12 week core program combining targeted pronunciation modules (vowels, stress, rhythm, intonation, fluency, key consonants) with parallel units on scam recognition and response. [wracton.wixsite+1]

Weekly Zoom feedback sessions for students that focus on intelligibility, professional identity, and real play practice with scam and deepfake scenarios. [wracton.wixsite]

Separate weekly Zoom sessions for instructors that model classroom techniques, debrief cases, and adapt materials to different proficiency levels and institutional needs. [pronsig.iatefl+3]

Throughout the course, learners repeatedly rehearse short, authentic style scripts—such as “urgent” calls from supposed supervisors or financial institutions—using haptic techniques to anchor both accurate pronunciation and a critical awareness of how persuasive attacks are constructed. [jalt-publications+3]

Outcomes for students and programs

By the end of the course, participants will be able to:

Speak with clearer, more consistent pronunciation and rhythm, improving comprehensibility in academic and professional settings. [actonhaptic+4]

Analyze and respond appropriately to suspicious calls, messages, and video interactions, drawing on linguistic, vocal, and cultural cues rather than relying solely on intuition or technology. [coverlink+4]

Use IDentityShield tools more effectively to monitor, document, and report potential identity fraud, integrating language skills with concrete protective actions.[youtube]

For institutions, adopting this course means adding a distinctive, future oriented offering that simultaneously advances core language outcomes and addresses a fast emerging area of digital risk that directly affects students, staff, and partner organizations. [getclarity+7]

EEPAIP Course will be available as described beginning May 2026. Most of the basic structure, less the IDentityshield components, is present in the current English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement course, beginning this week, on February 5th. 







Sources: 

1. https://pronsig.iatefl.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Haptic-Pronunciation-Teaching-IATEFL-Webinar-FINAL.pdf       
2. https://incode.com/blog/25-million-deepfake-fraud-hong-kong/    
3. https://jalt-publications.org/sites/default/files/pdf-article/jalt2012-042.pdf         
4. https://coverlink.com/case-study/case-study-25-million-deepfake-scam/    
5. https://www.actonhaptic.com/about     
6. https://www.getclarity.ai/ai-deepfake-blog/25m-deepfake-ceo-scam-shakes-hong-kong-firm    
7. https://hipoeces.blogspot.com/p/hapticteaching-tips-a.html       
8. https://wracton.wixsite.com/acton-haptic        
9. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eu0lyPJmhE0  
10. https://www.cnn.com/2024/02/04/asia/deepfake-cfo-scam-hong-kong-intl-hnk 
11. https://www.trendmicro.com/en_us/research/24/b/deepfake-video-calls.html  
12. https://www.cnn.com/2024/05/16/tech/arup-deepfake-scam-loss-hong-kong-intl-hnk   
13. image.jpg 
14. https://hipoeces.blogspot.com 
15. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pwzrLUnrdLc 
16. https://www.facebook.com/SRteachingandlearning/videos/haptic-pronunciation-teachinghaptic-its-basically-using-more-gesture-in-teaching/2793189254227565/ 

For additional information on the course: wracton@gmail.com
See also www.williamacton.legalshieldassociate.com for specifics on IDshield system. 

DISCLAIMER: This course description was created with the assistance/collaboration of Perplexity AI.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Bill Acton's Haptic EAPIC course, featuring Perplexity AI, beginning on February 5th!

 The Spring 2026 “Haptic” English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement Course (EAPIC) starts next week on February 5th. This term, participants will use Perplexity AI to tailor their homework and practice activities—creating a truly individualized learning experience. 

The course training videos and materials are free on Vimeo.com and here on the blog, as usual; enrolment required to participate in the weekly feedback sessions.and receive supplementary materials. 

For full course details, go here!

Bill

Feel free also, to contact me directly! wracton@gmail.com

l


Thursday, January 22, 2026

Spring 2026 English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement Course (EAPIC)


Beginning two weeks from today! 

Spring 2026 English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement Course (EAPIC)

(EAPIC: pronounced "EPIC!") 

Beginning February 5, 2026 

  • Better accent or pronunciation
  • Better expressiveness in speaking
  • More confidence in speaking
  • Good method for continuing to improve
  • Works for anybody with a CLB or IELTS 5 and up

10 weeks, online (plus Introduction video on 2/5/2026)
(Free) 20~30-minute training video uploaded to YouTube every Thursday
15~30 minutes of homework every day!
(Optional) live homework follow up meeting on Zoom Wednesday at 8-9 p.m. 
EST. 

  •      15-minute Zoom interview required to enroll
  •     $250 USD additional fee. 

Weekly syllabus:

1. Basic rhythm 1 (pronunciation grammar) 
2. Fluency 1 (body rhythm)
3. Consonants 1 (common problems, such as 'th' and 'r/l')
4. Vowels 1 (short)
5. Vowels 2 (long)
6. Consonants 2 (students’ “favorite” problems)
7. Melody 1 (little pieces, phrases)
8. Melody 2 (longer pieces, sentences)
9. Fluency 2 (Public speaking and classroom stye)
10. Rhythm 2 (Conversation style)

Typical weekly schedule: 
   Thursday: Do the video along with me (20+ minutes) and keep notes!
   Friday: Do the warm up, training, embodied oral reading (EOR) and keep notes!
   Saturday: Do the warm up, training, EOR and keep notes!
              Notes: Other words or phrases you have difficulty pronouncing well
    Sunday: Take the day off with me!
   Monday: Do the warm up, EOR, practice your target words (with MT5s) and keep notes!
   Tuesday: Do the warm up, EOR,  a new one-page story you have found with MT5s, practice your target words and keep notes!
   Wednesday: Come to the live feedback 60-minute class on Zoom (or practice by yourself!) 

       Here is what goes on in the feedback session: 

                       a. Go over the EOR
                       b. Check students' individual MT5s for accuracy
                       c. Questions from and help with target words of students
                       d. Preview of the next week's lesson

So . . . How does this course work? 
  • Gesture and touch make pronunciation easier to learn and remember
  • Using your whole body (embodied) makes is easier to pay full attention
  • Rhythm and gesture together help keep learning both relaxed and energetic
  • Embodied oral reading is great for bringing what you study into conversation
  • Practicing the EOR every day trains your mind and body to move and speak more like English speakers do. 
  • Use what you know . . . 





Email me: wracton@gmail.com for more information or to enroll (via Paypal or Venmo). To enroll requires brief Zoom chat (just to make sure the course is for you!) 

For a more in depth discussion of the basis of the EAPIC course, go to: https://www.actonhaptic.com/eapic

The Summer 2026 EAPIC course is being revised to include identity protection. Students will also be using IDentityshield system. For a preview of IDentityshield go to: IDentityshield introduction, or  www.williamacton.legalshieldassociate.com 

Homework for next week 

A. Tell me a little about yourself and why you think this course would be helpful for you.

B. Give me some idea of your weekly schedule, how much time you have to practice!

C. Tell me about your experience with music, playing an instrument, etc., or just enjoying it!

D. Tell me if you'd like to join the Wednesday Zoom feedback class. (If so, I'll set up a Zoom interview just with you as soon as possible. If I do, what would be a good time for you?)




Friday, January 9, 2026

Spring 2026 English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement Course (EAPIC)!

The EAPIC is a10-week online course for non-native adult English speakers who want to improve their accent and pronunciation, especially those who are disciplined and prefer independent study. It is a very active "haptic" course, using lots of movement, gesture and touch! It has been offered three times a year since 2015. 

View short introductory video!

Beginning February 9, 2026

  • Much better accent or pronunciation
  • Much better expressiveness in speaking
  • More confidence in speaking
  • Training for continuing to improve
  • Works for anybody with a CLB or IELTS o5 and up

10 weeks, online
(Free) 20-minute training video uploaded every Thursday
15-30 minutes of homework recommended every day!
(Optional) live individualized homework follow up meeting Wednesdays 8-9 p.m. EST ($225 USD). Zoom interview required to sign up. 

Weekly syllabus:

1. Basic rhythm 1(pronunciation grammar) 
2. Fluency 1 (basic rhythm)
3. Consonants 1 (common problems)
4. Vowels 1 (short)
5. Vowels 2 (long)
6. Consonants 2 (students’ “favorites”)
7. Melody 1 (little pieces of speaking)
8. Melody 2 (longer pieces of speaking)
9. Fluency 2 (conversation rhythm)
10. Rhythm 2 (public speaking)

For more information or to enroll: wracton@gmail.com

Bill Acton's CV

Bill Acton's website

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Monday, December 22, 2025

Celebrating 20 years of Haptic and the "virtual peaceful-of-mind" of the road ahead!


Hard to believe it was over 20 years ago that we stumbled into the idea that touch would immeasurably complement use of gesture in pronunciation teaching. The concept has now evolved to v8.0 and will be offered, as usual, as an online course, beginning the week of February 9th. Please pass on the word; if you have a group of students, contact me directly. (wracton@gmail.com)

In addition, as suggested above, I'm now associated with LegalShield and company, among the top providers of subscriber-based legal, identity and dark web protection. It is very affordable and, depending on the extent of your life on the web and the rapid emergence of the threat of AI, is becoming more and more essential/critical for many of us. (Here's my website: williamacton.legalshieldassociate.com) . Check it out and/or get in touch and I'll be happy to give you the tour! (Here's a nice 10-minute link that describes the Legal and Identity Shield systems: https://ltl.is/djkyfqn89)

Keep in touch!

Bill


Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Reminder: English Accent and Pronunication Improvement course (EAPIC) Wednesday Nite L4 Feedback session.

 The session starts at 8 EST on Google Meets. Lesson 4 focuses on single vowels in English and basics of (remembering) word stress. Even if you have not been attending the course, feel free to drop by and see what it is about. Tonight is the last free feedback session.

Link to the feedback session.

See you in an hour!

Bill




Friday, September 19, 2025

14 reasons, according to Perplexity.ai, to do an English Accent and Pronunication Improvement Course - other than pronunciation!

Our terrific haptic English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement Course begins next week. (Go here for details on the course!) 

In preparing the introductory video, focusing on the "embodied, full-body nature" of the haptic pronuciation course, I gave Perplexity.ai the following prompt. Although most of the conclusions do have backing, more or less, in the current research literature in the field, as will be obvious, some of the sources cited by Perplexity (listed below) are not the ones most frequently cited! Nonetheless, in it's defense, the references cited within the sources listed are generally credible. 

What follows is copied directly from the Bot's answer, with only some slight formatting changes. Notice that I did not refer directly to the EAPIC course, just the generic, well designed and taught!

"In addition to improving one's accent in a second language, what are some of the important other physiological, psychological and socio-cultural benefits to the individual that accompany systematic study of the pronunciation of the language?"

Physiological Benefits
  • Enhances speech motor control, strengthening articulatory muscles and coordination for clearer, more accurate speech production.
  • Improves auditory discrimination, enabling learners to perceive subtle phonetic distinctions, which benefits overall listening skills.
  • Supports cognitive development through increased neural flexibility and adaptation, fostering improved phonological processing abilities.
Psychological Benefits
  • Builds self-confidence as clearer pronunciation reduces communicative anxiety and fear of misunderstanding.
  • Reduces stress, with research showing that better pronunciation correlates with decreased anxiety and better emotional well-being.
  • Boosts motivation for language learning and social interaction, as learners feel empowered to speak up and connect with others.
  • Enhances self-awareness, helping individuals monitor and improve their own speech patterns, leading to greater language mastery.
Socio-Cultural Benefits
  • Improves comprehensibility and intelligibility, facilitating smoother integration into new communities and broader social circles.
  • Fosters cross-cultural sensitivity and respect by enabling learners to better grasp speech nuances, intonation, and cultural aspects of communication.
  • Opens professional and academic opportunities, as strong pronunciation skills are valued in presentations, interviews, and global workplaces.
  • Reduces bias and stereotyping, enabling learners to express ideas without undue focus on accent, thus promoting equity and inclusion.
  • Supports positive identity formation, allowing learners to navigate sociolinguistic factors and decide how much of their native accent to retain or adapt for context.
Additional Benefits
  • Cultivates more meaningful relationships, with clearer pronunciation leading to fewer barriers in personal and professional communications.
  • Promotes lifelong learning and adaptation, as pronunciation study encourages ongoing personal growth and language refinement.
  • These multifaceted benefits develop resilient, confident communicators who are better equipped for successful second-language use across diverse contexts.
Sources consulted by Perplexity:

EFL Magazine. (2025, January 21). Pronunciation in ESL - Why It Should Be Top Priority. Retrieved from https://eflmagazine.com/pronunciation-esl-why-it-should-be-top-priority/

Frontiers in Psychology. (2023, August 15). The impact of automatic speech recognition technology on second language pronunciation learning. Retrieved from https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1210187/full

Frontiers in Education. (2023, May 17). The efficacy of the type of instruction on second language pronunciation learning. Retrieved from https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/education/articles/10.3389/feduc.2023.1182285/full

McCollege. (2024, June 6). The Importance of Pronunciation in English Language Learning. Retrieved from http://mccollege.edu/english-as-a-second-language/about-english-as-a-second-language/the-importance-of-pronunciation-in-english-language-learning/

Nature Humanities and Social Sciences Communications. (2025, March 26). A scientometric study of computer-assisted pronunciation training in English as a Foreign Language. Retrieved from https://www.nature.com/articles/s41599-025-04474-y

OJS SIN-CHN. (2024, December 18). Dynamic relationship between oral English pronunciation standard and psychological well-being. Retrieved from https://ojs.sin-chn.com/index.php/mcb/article/view/833

QQEnglish. (2023, August 14). Learn English Pronunciation Online: Top 7 Reasons to Improve it. Retrieved from https://qqeng.net/reasons-to-improve-your-english-pronunciation/

SciEduPress. (2024, June 2). Exploring Pronunciation Development Strategies for Learners of English as a Second Language. Retrieved from https://www.sciedupress.com/journal/index.php/wjel/article/download/25480/16099

Tandfonline. (2025, August 4). Effects of Anxiety Levels on English Pronunciation Learning in Different Classroom Environments. Retrieved from https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10447318.2025.2539457?src=

5 Minute English. (2025, June 25). The Impact of Cultural Experiences on English Pronunciation. Retrieved from https://5minuteenglish.com/the-impact-of-cultural-experiences-on-english-pronunciation/

IDC.edu. (2025, January 20). The Importance of Pronunciation and Accent Reduction. Retrieved from https://idc.edu/blog/importance-accent-reduction-pronunciation/

You'll get all that and more,  promise!



Sunday, September 14, 2025

Beginning next week! (Haptic) English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement Course

 If you have students, or colleagues  (or yourself!) who 

  • have an IELTS speaking score of 5 or above, and 
  • still have some accent or pronunciation issues that can still interfere with communicating well, 
  • and are to busy to take a regular course with a school,

do this EAPIC course. The description and landing page are here. As you will see, the basic course is free. If you want more personal feedback, that is available, too, for $200 USD. No limit on number of students but it is important to get in from the begining if you can, for about 30-minutes a day, 6 days a week. 

See you there!

Bill

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Fall 2025 (KINETIK) English Accent and Pronunciation Course!

KINETIK – using the whole body to learn (especially gesture and touch)

The EAPIC course is an innovative 10-week online program designed for non-native adult English speakers who want to improve their accent and pronunciation, even without everyday conversational practice. Using embodied oral reading and haptic-based methods, students build fluency and confidence through structured private practice. The course suits learners with IELTS 4.0+ reading ability and lower intermediate English listening skills, especially those who are disciplined and prefer independent study. Skills gained in EAPIC empower ongoing improvement beyond the course, supporting personal, academic, and professional English communication needs.

Beginning September 25, 2025

  • Much better accent or pronunciation
  • Much better expressiveness in speaking
  • More confidence in speaking
  • Good method for continuing to improve
  • Works for anybody with a CLB or IELTS 5 and up

10 weeks, online
(Free) 20-minute training video uploaded every Thursday
15-30 minutes of homework every day!
(Optional) live homework follow up meeting on Wednesday at 8-9 p.m. EST ($200 USD)

Weekly syllabus:

1. Basic rhythm 1(pronunciation grammar) 

2. Fluency 1(body rhythm)

3. Consonants 1 (common problems)

4. Vowels 1 (short)

5. Vowels 2 (long)

6. Consonants 2 (students’ “favorites”)

7. Melody 1 (little pieces)

8. Melody 2 (longer pieces)

9. Fluency 2 (Conversation)

10. Rhythm 2 (Public speaking)


A sample from Lesson 1

Warm up!  

1. Neck stretcher (left side, right side, back, front)

2. Upper chest and shoulders stretcher (elbows touch) 

3. Nasal resonance BUZZ (Ying! Yang! Young!) 

4. Back (‘Oh’ cone) and chest expander (Ooo-Wah!) 


 Syllable Butterfly Training

Strong tap on the stressed syllable: X

Light tap on unstressed syllables: o

Cool. X

That’s cool. oX

Really cool.  ooX

That’s really cool.  oooX

Awesome Xo

That’s awesome. oXo

Really awesome. ooXo

That’s really awesome. oooXo

Super cool. Xoo

That’s super cool. oXoo

Really super cool. ooXoo

That’s really super cool. oooXoo

Super awesome. Xooo

That’s super awesome. oXooo

Really super awesome. ooXooo

That’s really super awesome. oooXooo


Lesson I – Embodied Oral Reading (EOR)

1A:  I THINK | we've GOT it | figured OUT.    

           •X                     •X•                    • •X    

   B: Oh. Can you TELL me | what it IS? 

         X                      X   •              • •X   

2A: Your MUFfler | I THINK | has a small HOLE in it.    

 •    X•                 •X                   • • •      X      • •    

   B: Oh NO!  Does it NEED | to be rePLACED right now?   

          • X             • •     X            • •      • X                 •    •   

3A: Yes, it DOES. It ISN’T going to | last much LONger     

        X    •  X         •   X•        •   •             • •           X•.  

   B: Huh. How MUCH | will it COST?          

          X            • X            •  •        X   

4A: A-BOUT | a hundred | and fifty DOLlars.         

          •X           •     X•          •     • •       X•    

   B: Really. That's too BAD. Is there a less exPENsive way?       

          X•               ••     X                      • • • • •X    •        •   

5A: You could MAYbe | rePAIR it, yourSELF.

             • •       X•               •X     •         • X    

   B: How LONG | exACTly | will that LAST?

            •  X                 •X•                 • •     X   

6A: If it works at ALL . . . MAYbe | for a couple of MONTHS?

               • • •   •   X             X•            • •     • •       •   X    

   B: I'll DO that. SEE you | in a MONTH or two!

          •  X   •        X   •            • •     X         • •    


Homework: 

1. Practice the warm up, training and Embodied Oral Reading every day in the morning for 15-30 minutes, standing, with good posture and gesture!

2. Practice using pleasing (beautiful) voice, good breathing and confident volume.

3.  Keep a "learning conversation" journal with your favorite AI Bot!





Email me: wracton@gmail.com for more information or to enrol.

For a more in depth discussion of the basis of the EAPIC course, go to: https://www.actonhaptic.com/eapic



Saturday, June 21, 2025

EAPIC AI, AI, AI, AI! (Summer 2025, English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement Course)

The summer course begins with a short recorded introduction available on Youtube, June 26th! (See fuller course description here.)  It includes a new AI-generated personalized homework feature (AI, AI, AI, AI!) The link and outline will be available here on the blog. 

In about two months make good progress in improving your English accent or pronunciation and be trained in how to keep on after the course--in about 30 minutes a day.  This is a 10-week course: 

  • The recorded, 20-minute weekly training lessons are free, available Thursdays on Youtube and Vimeo.
  • Personalized homework is created by students using Gen-AI (your choice of program; I use Perplexity.) Here is an example of what the AI-generated homework looks like. 
  • The next week on Wednesday at 8 p.m. EST there is a live, optional 60-minute Zoom feedback session on that lesson for those students enrolled in the course (for $200 USD) or teachers who'd like to learn more about the system. The feedback sessions are also recorded.

To really benefit from the course, you should do the assigned daily homework and attend the optional feedback sections. The course officially begins Thursday June 26th, but you can join it anytime and still get caught up!  For more info or to enrol, contact me directly: wracton@gmail.com

Keep in touch!

Bill



Saturday, June 14, 2025

AI, AI, AI, AI! (AI takes over creating personalized, haptic pronunciation teaching homework!)

 A core component of the English Accent and Pronunciation Improvement Course is the weekly embodied oral reading. Each week students are trained in a "Movement, tone, tempo and. touch technique" (MT4) that is then practiced in the oral reading in various ways. Part of the process is the student applying the MT4 to a ~300 word text. The personalized text will be generated by AI (I use Perplexity currently, but any Chat-GPT arrived at a similar "solution.") Here is a simple example. (The basic prompt, fill-in-the-blank format is provided for students each week. In this case, the career discipline or context area, accounting, and the proficiency level and L1 of students are filled in.) 

  • Generate a word list that includes 20 technical terms used in accounting that can be difficult to pronounce for advanced adult learners of English whose native language is Korean. Include the phonetic transcription of each along with the word, itself. 
  • Create an engaging, 300 word story with as much dialogue as possible, using those 20 words, where the basic theme is where an accountant is probably stealing from one of the firm's clients.
WHAT FOLLOWS IS WHAT PERPLEXITY PRODUCED: 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Case of the Missing Revenue

At the prestigious firm of Ledger & Logic, the morning began as usual: the aroma of coffee mingled with the faint scent of freshly printed balance sheets. But today, something was off. Ms. Park, the head accountant, was hunched over her desk, eyes darting between the income statement and the cash flow report, her fingers nervously tapping the edge of the fiscal calendar.

“Strange variance in the revenue again,” she muttered, highlighting numbers with the intensity of a forensic auditor. The asset manager, Mr. Kim, peeked over her shoulder. “Did you check the subsidiary accounts? Last month’s reconciliation didn’t quite add up.”

Ms. Park nodded, flipping through a stack of inventory reports. “I did. But there’s an expense entry for ‘Mystery Amortization’—and I can’t find any supporting documents.” She frowned, recalling the audit last quarter, when a similar anomaly appeared under ‘depreciation’ for office plants.

As the team gathered for their weekly consolidation meeting, the boss announced, “We need to address the liability on our client’s books. The equity position looks weaker every month.” The room fell silent. Even the intern, who had just learned the difference between accrual and actual cash, sensed trouble.’

Suddenly, Mr. Kim spoke up. “I noticed the same thing in the reconciliation for our biggest client. The audit trail leads to a fiscal black hole—right into Mr. Cho’s office.” All eyes turned to Mr. Cho, who was busy pretending to do a subsidiary inventory count.

With a dramatic flourish, Ms. Park produced the incriminating balance sheet. “It’s clear: someone is siphoning off assets and hiding them under bogus expense and depreciation entries. The only question is—how long has this been going on?”

The office buzzed with whispers. In accounting, numbers never lie—but sometimes, accountants do.

The word list: 

Here is a list of 20 technical accounting terms that can be challenging for advanced adult English learners whose native language is Korean. Each term includes its standard IPA phonetic transcription, highlighting sounds that are often difficult for Korean speakers (such as /r/, /l/, /v/, /f/, /θ/, /ð/, /z/, and certain vowels).

Term IPA Pronunciation
  • accounting /əˈkaʊn.tɪŋ/
  • asset /ˈæ.sɛt/
  • liability /ˌlaɪ.əˈbɪl.ə.ti/
  • equity /ˈɛk.wɪ.ti/
  • revenue /ˈrɛv.əˌnuː/
  • expense /ɪkˈspɛns/
  • depreciation /dɪˌpriː.ʃiˈeɪ.ʃən/
  • amortization /əˌmɔːr.taɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/
  • accrual /əˈkruː.əl/
  • reconciliation /rɪˌkɒn.sɪl.iˈeɪ.ʃən/
  • inventory /ˈɪn.vənˌtɔːr.i/
  • audit /ˈɔː.dɪt/
  • balance sheet /ˈbæ.ləns ʃiːt/
  • income statement /ˈɪn.kʌm ˈsteɪt.mənt/
  • cash flow /kæʃ floʊ/
  • fiscal /ˈfɪs.kəl/
  • variance /ˈveə.ri.əns/
  • subsidiary /səbˈsɪd.iˌɛr.i/
  • consolidation /kənˌsɒl.ɪˈdeɪ.ʃən/
  • reconciliation /rɪˌkɒn.sɪl.iˈeɪ.ʃən/
Notes on Pronunciation Challenges:
  • /r/ and /l/ distinctions (liability, reconciliation, accrual, balance)
  • /v/ and /b/ (revenue, variance)
  • /f/ and /p/ (fiscal, profit)
  • /θ/ and /ð/ (method, although not in this list, is common in accounting)
  • Vowel differences, especially /æ/, /ɪ/, /ʌ/, /ə/
  • Stress patterns in multisyllabic words (depreciation, amortization, consolidation)
  • These terms are essential in accounting and are frequently sources of pronunciation errors for Korean speakers due to the differences in sound inventories and syllable structure between English and Korean.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Not bad, eh! For this lesson, the MT4 is breaking up the sentences into rhythm groups, identifying the word with the most emphasis and then gesturing (jesturing!) on that word with the left hand tapping on the right deltoid muscle, termed the Syllable Butterfly. (You can see the training for that in this lesson from the Spring 2025 course.)