Speech Coach Tools can do more than show a transcript. It can turn your recording into a personalised English improvement report that helps you understand what you said, how to improve it, and how to practise better next time.
Instead of only seeing your original spoken words, you can also review clearer versions of what you said. This makes it easier to notice weak sentence structure, unclear wording, or ideas that make sense in your head but do not come out clearly when spoken.
A good report does not just show mistakes. It helps you understand your speaking patterns, recognise what you tend to struggle with, and focus on what to improve next. That is what makes this feature useful for real speaking practice, not just one-time feedback.
The English improvement report can include corrected English, a more natural version, a professional version, and short notes. Together, these help you compare your original speech with stronger versions that still keep your meaning.
What the report can include

How each version helps
Corrected English helps fix grammar, sentence structure, and wording while keeping the original meaning. This is useful when your sentence is understandable but still sounds incomplete, awkward, or slightly incorrect.
The natural version shows how the same idea could sound smoother in everyday English. This is especially useful if your speaking feels too direct, too literal, or influenced by the way you first formed the sentence in your mind.
The professional version is useful when you want a more polished tone for work, presentations, meetings, interviews, or formal communication. It helps you keep the same message while sounding clearer, calmer, and more professional.
Short notes give extra value because they explain the changes in a simple way. Instead of only seeing a better version, you can also understand why the sentence was improved. Over time, this helps you notice repeating habits in your own speech.
How the full flow works
To use the feature, start on the Record page. You can speak naturally, answer a question, read a short script, or practise with a tongue twister. If you want, you can also type your intended statement before recording so you can compare what you planned to say with what the app actually heard.
Before uploading, turn on English improvement and choose what you want included in the report. You can select corrected English, a more natural version, a professional tone, and short notes. This makes the feedback more useful for your own goals.
Once the Results page appears, you can review your report and compare the versions side by side. This makes it easier to understand what changed and which version helps you most. For some people, the corrected version is most useful. For others, the natural or professional version gives the biggest improvement.
One of the most practical parts of this feature is that you can practise the improved version again straight away. Under the corrected, natural, or professional result, you can choose to practise that version again. Speech Coach Tools sends you back to the Record page and fills the text box with that version so you can repeat it and build stronger speaking habits.
Print or share your report
If you want to keep a copy, you can print the English improvement report or save it as a PDF. This is useful if you want to review your speaking later, keep study materials, or build your own speaking improvement folder over time.
You can also share your report more easily with a teacher, mentor, friend, or colleague. That makes the feature more useful if you want outside feedback instead of keeping everything private. It also helps if you want to show your progress more clearly over time.
Why this becomes a practical learning tool
A simple way to use this feature is to record yourself, review the report, choose the improved version that helps you most, and then practise that version again. This turns the tool into a practical speaking loop rather than a one-time analysis.
If you often struggle to express your ideas clearly, this feature can be especially useful. It helps you move from what you actually said to a better version you can reuse. That is what makes the English improvement report more than just feedback. It becomes a practical learning tool you can return to again and again.
You can also keep your reports as part of your own learning history. When you look back over time, it becomes easier to notice repeated weaknesses, recognise progress, and understand how your speaking is improving. This can be motivating because it gives you something real to measure, not just a feeling that you may or may not be improving.


