Principal-ready one-page brief
BrightSpeaker 30-day classroom pilot
BrightSpeaker is a browser-based speaking-practice demo for K–5 classrooms. Students try short prompts and get kid-friendly feedback while the teacher collects a simple local evidence trail for a pilot conversation.
What it is
A low-setup way for one teacher to test whether students benefit from more oral-language reps before presentations, read-alouds, or class discussions.
How it runs
One classroom uses the browser demo during a free 30-day pilot. The teacher decides whether the classroom evidence is useful before any next-step conversation.
What it is not
Not a district analytics platform, surveillance tool, paid contract, roster system, or replacement for teacher judgment.
Pilot flow
1. Pick one teacher and classroom
Start with a teacher-led test, not a building-wide rollout. The pilot is meant to answer whether short speaking reps fit the classroom routine.
2. Try short practice sessions
Students use the public browser demo for prompts and feedback on pacing, filler words, volume, and eye contact. No install or new student account is required for this demo path.
3. Review evidence at day 30
The teacher can use local session history and the browser-only teacher report/export to summarize prompts practiced, scores, filler words, words per minute, and eye-contact feedback.
Evidence the teacher gets
BrightSpeaker's browser-only teacher report summarizes local demo sessions from the current device: total sessions, prompts practiced, average score, filler-word trend, words per minute, eye-contact feedback, and a local CSV export.
Evidence stays framed as a pilot conversation, not a formal student record or promised principal dashboard.
Privacy posture
- Student video stays on the device for on-device face/eye-contact feedback.
- Current demo session history is stored in browser localStorage on the device being used.
- There are no student accounts, rosters, district analytics, or production teacher dashboards in this pilot demo path.
- Audio transcription depends on the browser's speech-recognition capability; school device permissions can affect availability.