Myth 07 - You Don’t Have to Record Yourself to Improve Speaking

Myth #7: Do you really have to record yourself every day?
People swear by “record yourself daily if you want to speak well.” Recordings help-but they aren’t mandatory, and sometimes they crush motivation.
When recording backfires
- You replay the audio, hear every flaw, and become too shy to speak.
- You spot dozens of mistakes and have no idea which one to fix first.
- Without guidance, you listen... and still don’t know what to improve.
Speaking practice that doesn’t require recordings
- Outline before you talk. Planning your points keeps you on track.
- Focus on one target per session. Intonation today, past tenses tomorrow.
- Listen to yourself in real time. Catch the slip and adjust on the spot.
- Ask for live feedback. Tell your partner what you’re working on so the comments stay relevant.
When recordings earn their keep
- You want before-and-after evidence of progress.
- You’re polishing a presentation and need one last quality check.
- You don’t mind hearing your own voice and can stay objective.
Recording is a tool, not a rule. What matters most is using English often and getting feedback at the right moment.