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by Jason R. Levine. Last updated March 28, 2016.

How to speak English fluently?

The Internet is teeming with suggestions, instructions, and procedures for how to speak English fluently and confidently. It’s overwhelming for learners and teachers to try to make sense of it all.

It’s especially difficult to know if the source of information is a person you can trust, someone with extensive knowledge and experience in English language teaching or learning.

To cut through the noise, I asked a number of the world’s leading language learning experts for their opinions. These are people I have been following, collaborating with, and learning from over the course of my 15-year career in English teaching.

34 of them were kind enough to help me. I asked them to answer the following question in 140 or fewer characters.

“What is the most important thing to achieve English fluency?”

My objectives were (1) to provide direct advice from a diverse group of English specialists in the field and (2) to create a short list of recommendations based on the responses I received.

What is English fluency?

Many popular dictionaries begin with this entry: The ability to speak or write a foreign language easily and accurately.

Scott Thornbury, one of our 34 experts, had this to say: “Fluency is an impression a speaker creates, and may only accidentally correlate with accuracy, speech rate, grammatical complexity, etc.”

Interestingly, a number of these same dictionaries offer this as their second entry: The ability to express oneself easily and articulately.

The notion of articulate expression is key, I believe, to the “impression” Scott Thornbury is talking about.

When English learners ask me about how to speak English easily, I usually say: Fluent users of English can be easily understood by readers and listeners; and they understand most of what they read and hear.

Now, over to our experts:

“What is the most important thing to achieve English fluency?”

How to speak English fluently
Tip #1

Andy Boon

“Give students a purpose to speak/write. Help them find the language to break the silence/empty page. Then, build from there.”

Andy teaches English at a university in Japan, has a PhD, and writes articles, books and graded readers. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #2

Barbara Hoskins Sakamoto

“Focus on a bit of language that interests you, practice until you know it, and then use it until you own it.”

Barbara is sometimes a teacher, trainer, or author, but always a learner. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #3

Cecilia Lemos

“Let go of self-consciousness; speak as much as you can. We make many mistakes when speaking our L1, but that doesn’t stop us from speaking.”

Cecilia is an English teacher, teacher trainer and materials writer, passionate about what she does. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #4

Chuck Sandy

“Practice builds accuracy. Accuracy builds confidence. Confidence builds fluency.”

Chuck is an author, teacher trainer, and community builder. He’s a cofounder of and curator of the new

How to speak English fluently
Tip #5

David Deubelbeiss

“The language must matter, be important-real and not an exercise. Interact with messages you genuinely want to hear and understand.”

David is an English teacher trainer, author, passionate ed.techpreneur, and Director of Education, EnglishCentral. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #6

David Dodgson 

“Engage with English everywhere-music, books, games, signs, t-shirt slogans – make notes & take it back to class, share, & collaborate!”

David is a language school coordinator, EAL tutor, and teacher trainer based in Gabon. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #7

Drew Badger

“Learn like native speakers and you’ll speak like one.”

Drew is The World’s #1 English Fluency Guide and the co-founder of EnglishAnyone.com. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #8

Eric Kane

“Learning to communicate in a new language is fun when you collaborate with others. Create a network and celebrate your successes.”

Eric is a teacher, teacher trainer and founder of ELF Learning, a children’s content creator based in Japan. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #9

Fiona Mauchline

“Willingness to take a leap into the unknown, geographically, personally, linguistically (experiment, make mistakes). Accuracy’s another story.”

Fiona is an ELT writer, ‘itinerant’ teacher trainer and, of course, English teacher. She blogs (and writes articles for the British Council, IATEFL TDSIG and ELT Magazine. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #10

Jack Askew

“Know why you want to reach fluency, set a goal, make a plan, and take consistent action every day.”

Jack helps English learners get on the road to fluency. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #11

Jason West

“Don’t waste your time, hope and money on a classroom course. Prepare properly and do focused speaking practice with friendly non-teachers.”

Jason is creator of the world’s first social media English course. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #12

Jennifer Lebedev

“A language learner must commit to a realistic study plan that makes use of quality resources and allows for meaningful practice.”

Jennifer has been teaching how to speak English in an easy way and creating instructional content for nearly 20 years. .

How to speak English fluently Tip #13

Juan Alberto Lopez Uribe

“The #1 thing to achieve fluency is to live language through meaningful and dynamic interactions in a caring, challenging, and interesting environment.”

Juan is a Teacher Educator in the area of affective language learning. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #14

Ken Beare

“Be patient, make many mistakes, speaking every day for fifteen minutes is better than once or twice a week, use your ear and your brain.”

Kenneth has taught online and off for over 30 years, as well as developing a wide range of interactive English learning materials to help you know how to speak English well. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #15

Kevin Stein

“Fluency requires automaticity which requires familiarity. Practice language you know. Because fluency = confidence to take the next step.”

Kevin is an English teacher who believes that learning is something that students and teachers create together through curiosity and respect. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #16

Larry Fabino

“Students need to feel safe to make mistakes & realize errors are wonderful learning opportunities and not something to be avoided.”

Larry teaches English Language Learners at Luther Burbank High School in Sacramento, California and writes a weekly post for The New York Times on teaching ELLs. He has written eight books on education issues. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #17

Luke Meddings

“Fluency isn’t the same as accuracy. Hesitation, reformulation and non-standard grammar are part of everyday English, so relax – it’s normal!”

Luke is an international speaker, award-winning author and teacher trainer; he co-founded Dogme in ELT with Scott Thornbury, started The Round with Lindsay Clandfield and blogs at lukemeddings.com. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #18

Mau Buchler

“You have to find out what kind of English speaker you are.”

Mau is the creator of www.tripppin.com, a great site to help you learn how to speak English fast. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #19

Michael Marzio

“Smartest starting point is intensive listening on very regular basis, with pictures or video providing some semblance of context or meaning.”

Michael started making English educational videos in the sixties and hasn’t stopped yet. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #20

Minoo Short

“Fluency is about building reflexes, and reflexes are built by listening to and repeating common collocations and phrases.”

Minoo is the founder of Anglo-Link. Her videos for English learning have been viewed over 40 million times. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #21

Nik Peachey

“You need to have a reason to learn that will impact your life.”

Nik is Head of Learning at EnglishUp, an online school for English language learners dedicated to helping them learn how to speak English clearly. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #22

Paul Maglione

“You can’t learn a language unless you start by maximizing your input. Hearing and seeing leads to understanding, then skills building, and finally proficiency.”

Paul co-founded English Attack in 2009 with the vision of bringing the power of online entertainment to English language learning. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #23

Philip Shigeo Brown

“Know what kind of fluency you wish to achieve then take decisive steps to move towards your goal, stay motivated, and enjoy getting in flow.”

Philip is a Lifelong learner & Coeditor of “Exploring EFL Fluency in Asia” (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014). .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #24

Rachel Smith

“Repetition!”

Rachel’s How-To videos on English Pronunciation have been viewed over 25 million times. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #25

Rob Howard

“Just express yourself! Speak up and say what you feel to make your opinion understood as precisely and easily as possible.”

Rob is the owner of EFLtalks and Online Language Center. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #26

Scott Thornbury

“Learn some useful sentence starters. Act as if you are fluent, even if you’re not. Use your hands.”

Scott teaches on the MA TESOL at The New School, NY. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #27

Sean Banville

“Read, listen to, talk or write about things you are really interested in, things you love to read, listen to, etc. in your own language.”

Sean makes the English lessons for Breaking News English.com (and 9 other websites). .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #28

Shelly Sanchez Terrell

“We learn language by communicating with others. Connect on the World Wide Web with other language learners!”

Shelly is an author, international speaker, education thought-provoker, elearning specialist and the founder of 30Goals.com. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #29

Stephen Krashen

“The only way to develop fluency is to get plenty of compelling comprehensible input. Comprehensible input is the cause: Fluency is the result.”

Stephen is professor emeritus at the University of Southern California. He is a linguist, educational researcher, and activist. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #30

Steven Herder

“Data and determination – Decide to focus on your fluency. Record yourself, count words per minute and track your progress – you’ll improve!”

Steven is an EFL teacher in Japan exploring leadership with young college minds. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #31

Sylvia Guinan

“Learn though multi-media, multi-sensory, hands-on social fun.”

Sylvia is an English teacher, writer and blogger who uses brain-friendly techniques to help students and teachers around the world. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #32

Tyson Seburn

“Involving yourself with the language at every appropriate opportunity helps build awareness and confidence needed for fluency.”

Tyson is the author of Academic Reading Circles (#tleap founder, and EAP instructor at the University of Toronto. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #33

Vicki Hollett 

“What’s #1 to achieve fluency? M-O-T-I-V-A-T-I-O-N-!”

Vicki is a teacher, teacher trainer, writer, and video producer at Simple English Videos, designed to help you learn how to speak English like a native speaker. .

How to speak English fluently
Tip #34

Vicky Loras

“In my opinion, fluency comes with repetition and listening to speakers of the L2 all the time around you!”

Vicky is the Co-Founder and owner of the Loras Network, an English school in Switzerland. .

What are the Essentials for English fluency?

As you can see, the tips cover a large area including learning, planning, speaking, grammar, conversation, lesson organization and motivation. I closely studied them all as I wanted to reduce them to something easy to digest and remember. By focusing on the important ways these 34 tips converge and overlap, I was able to create my short list of recommendations. I’m calling it “7 Essentials For English Fluency”.

Here is the list again:

    Have a geniuine purpose and motivation for learning and using English. Notice English around you, and engage with English that really interests you. As much as possible, read and listen to English that is easy and comfortable for you. Practice English in deliberate and meaningful ways. Communicate and collaborate often with others, in person and through media. Plan and set realistic goals for yourself. Try out new things without worrying about mistakes.

Now, over to you.

As a learner or teacher of English, do any of these tips resonate with your experience? If you have a favorite (or favorites), please share them!

Do you agree with the “7 Essentials For English Fluency”? Would you add to the list? Delete from it? Are any of the suggestions more (or less) important than others? Do you think it’s possible to achieve true consensus on this issue?

I highly value your feedback and hope to stimulate discussions and conversations among learners and teachers alike on how to speak English fluently and confidently. Please let me know what you think in the comments below.

Finally, I extend my heartfelt thanks to the 34 specialists for agreeing to contribute to this article. The English language teaching community is a giving and vibrant one, and their participation was further evidence of this. These individuals are doing extraordinary work as English teachers, researchers, and writers. I look forward to continuing to draw inspiration from them.

Jason R. Levine (also known as Fluency MC) helps English learners around the world practice their way to fluency. He is the creator of the new online speaking practice program, the Weekly English Workout. Both English learners and teachers can try his Jason is currently doing Rhyme On Time student workshops at schools across Europe and teacher development with Linguaid and Gallery Languages. For further information and booking, please write to him at support@fluencymc.com. - Follow Me:
How to speak English fluently – 34 experts give their tips

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