Dear Educators,
Over the past two years, we’ve been rethinking a simple question:
What actually causes language learning to happen?
As we’ve built ImmerseMe 2.0, we’ve grounded our thinking in cognitive science—particularly research into memory, working memory, and retrieval practice.
One idea stood out above all:
“Memory is the residue of thought.”
— Daniel Willingham
Students don’t learn by exposure alone. They learn by thinking, retrieving, and using language.
This insight has shaped everything we’re building next.
A Simple Model: Effort → Growth → Fluency
We believe language learning can be understood through three core pillars:
💪 Effort
The cognitive work students put in
Effort isn’t just time spent—it’s the quality and intensity of thinking.
We focus on:
Responses attempted
Words spoken (total output)
Minutes speaking
Scenario difficulty
Response length and complexity
Retry attempts and persistence
Because without effort, nothing else happens.
🌱 Growth
The language that actually sticks
Growth is what moves into long-term memory.
When students actively process and use language, they begin to acquire it.
We track:
New vocabulary encountered and successfully used
Grammar development over time
Pronunciation improvement trends
Error reduction rates
Success with unfamiliar language
Real-world scenario coverage
This is where learning becomes visible.
🗣️ Fluency
The ability to use language automatically
Fluency is not just knowing—it’s being able to perform.
It develops through repeated retrieval and use.
We measure:
Response latency (how quickly students begin speaking)
Speech rate and flow
Hesitation frequency
Sentence length and complexity
Vocabulary diversity
Accuracy in spontaneous communication
This is where language becomes usable.
How This Aligns with Cognitive Science
Each pillar maps directly to how the brain learns:
Pillar
💪 Effort
🌱 Growth
🗣️ Fluency
Brain System
Working Memory
Long-Term Memory
Retrieval Systems
What’s Happening
Active processing and cognitive load
Encoding and retention
Speed, automaticity, recall
This also aligns with established language research, including the CAF model (Complexity, Accuracy, Fluency) (Housen & Kuiken, 2009).
Why This Matters
Many language tools still rely heavily on recognition:
Multiple choice
Matching
Passive review
But research consistently shows:
Effortful retrieval leads to stronger, longer-lasting learning.
This concept—known as “desirable difficulty” (Bjork & Bjork, 2011)—explains why harder, more active learning leads to better outcomes.
When students must retrieve and produce language:
learning becomes deeper
retention improves
fluency develops faster
This is why ImmerseMe focuses on situational speaking and active production, not passive interaction.
What We’re Building with ImmerseMe 2.0
ImmerseMe 2.0 is not just a feature upgrade.
It’s a shift toward a more intelligent, measurable, and future-ready learning platform.
We are:
🧠 Grounding everything in cognitive science
Embedding principles like retrieval practice, cognitive load, and automaticity into everyday learning
🤖 Using AI to measure real performance
Tracking how students actually use language—speech, timing, structure, and fluency
📊 Turning data into meaningful insight
Moving beyond “activity completed” to show real progress in Effort, Growth, and Fluency
🎯 Focusing on real-world communication
Designing immersive, situational experiences that reflect how language is used outside the classroom
🚀 Building for the next decade
Creating a platform that can adapt, personalise, and scale with the future of education
🌍 Working with forward-thinking educators
Partnering with teachers who want to shape what language learning becomes next
A Key Milestone
After months of building, we’re approaching an exciting moment:
📅 6–10 July 2026 — Migration Week
This is when ImmerseMe 2.0 will fully replace our current platform.
It marks a major step forward in how students learn—and how teachers measure progress.
An Invitation
We’re opening early access to a small group of educators.
If you’re interested in:
shaping the future of language learning
exploring new ways to measure student progress
giving feedback on what we’re building
We’d love to work with you.
👉 Simply email hello@immerseme.com with “Early Access” and we’ll be in touch.
Looking Ahead
We believe the next decade of education technology will focus on:
measuring real learning—not just activity
aligning product design with cognitive science
helping students build true, usable fluency
That’s the direction we’re committing to.
And we’re here to build it - with you.
🙏 Thank you for the work you do every day - helping students find their voice in another language!
Scott Cardwell
Co-founder & CEO, ImmerseMe
🌏 immerseme.com