Lonny Gold

Lonny Gold

Manager/Animator at Resonance Learning

Bio:

Lonny hated school with a passion… and went into education with a vengeance. Originally Canadian, Lonny runs exuberant language and teacher training seminars worldwide where he develops techniques to speed up learning by communicating directly with the unconscious mind. He has been at the core of Suggestopedia since 1978 and has written EFL curricula for audiences in America, Europe, the Middle East and China and worked there. Lonny’s ambition is to help create a new culture of communication where people inspire and nurture each other, thereby enabling humanity to transcend existing norms and lead more fulfilling lives.

Session Synopsis:

Teaching Languages like an Undercover Spy

Spies are invisible. That’s why they’re effective. They remain unseen. And this is how language coaches should operate: Fixing problems but leaving no trace of our passage. Leaving learners with the feeling that “We did it all ourselves!”

Drawing on Suggestopedia, this session will provide coaches with mantles of invisibility.

There will be two main take-aways: A subversive technique for correcting mistakes and
a way of inducing telepathic intuition. For this to work, the coach must become a
colourless, odourless catalyst. This fun experience, with lots of physical movement, will
show you how to “vanish” and get out of the way of the breakthroughs you have
catapulted into motion. We will look at how to set the stage for unexpected things to
just bubble up to the surface.

Gaëlle Miani

Gaëlle Miani

Bio:

Gaëlle Miani is the founder of les mots, a language coaching practice based in Nyon, Switzerland, where she offers personalized French and English coaching. A certified Neurolanguage Coach® and trainer accredited by the International Coaching Federation, she integrates neuroscience and coaching techniques to empower both learners and educators. 

With a career in education spanning over 25 years, Gaëlle has taught in the UK and Switzerland, and has collaborated with international organisations including the United Nations, Collège du Léman, and Aiglon Collège. She holds a Licence in English from Paris X Nanterre, a PGCE from the University of Bath, a diploma from the Chartered Institute of Linguists. 

In addition to her professional practice, Gaëlle is actively engaged in community leadership, having served on the municipal council of Eysins and as president of several educational associations. Passionate about languages, neuroscience, and education, she is dedicated to helping others thrive by first cultivating self-awareness and resilience as coaches and learners.

Session Synopsis:

“The Mirror Effect: Why Self-Awareness Is Your Greatest Coaching Tool”

Before we can effectively guide others, we must first look in the mirror. This keynote explores how self-awareness forms the foundation of neurolanguage coaching, shaping the way we manage ourselves, connect with learners, and thrive in our profession. Through practical insights and interactive reflection, participants will discover how knowing themselves more deeply can unlock greater impact in their coaching practice.

Ana Costa

Ana Costa

Bio:

Ana Costa is a Certified Advanced Neurolanguage Coach and a language professional with over 20 years of experience teaching English and French. She holds a degree in European Studies and a certification in Dyslexia and Foreign Language Teaching. Ana is passionate about supporting individuals who need languages for work and living, as well as adolescents facing neurodiverse challenges, including dyslexia, dysgraphia, and ADHD. Her work focuses on applying the Neurolanguage Coaching® framework to transform theoretical knowledge into personalised strategies that foster autonomy and intrinsic motivation, guiding learners toward verifiable success in one-on-one contexts. At this year’s conference, she is presenting a compelling case study illustrating how a neurodiverse learner harnessed deep internal motivation to co-create brain-friendly study materials and achieve measurable academic progress.

Session Synopsis:

When Motivation Meets Dyslexia – Transforming Barriers into Breakthroughs.

Description and Objectives: Dyslexia is often viewed as a barrier to language learning, yet with motivation and the right support, learners can turn challenges into strengths. This workshop presents a compelling case study on achieving extraordinary academic success with a neurodiverse learner, reframing the condition from a limitation to a catalyst for growth. The core objective is to demonstrate how deep intrinsic motivation, “Motivision”, and fully coached learner autonomy (core principles of Neurolanguage Coaching) empower students to bypass neurological learning blocks and achieve top results. 

The session will dissect the journey of a neurodiverse young learner who, driven by a powerful desire for self-worth and to prove her capability, refused lower marks and successfully co-created her own brain-friendly materials, ultimately earning A-grades in all subjects, including languages.

Lynne Reid-McConnell and Jennie Reed

Lynne Reid-McConnell and Jennie Reed

Bio:

Lynne combines a background in psychology, business, and accounting with years of experience raising a family. After completing her CELTA in 2017, she trained as a Neurolanguage Coach® and now runs her Glasgow-based business, helping learners navigate Scottish English while building confidence in their own voice. Her focus on clear, practical communication stems from understanding that speech clarity – whether from international or native English speakers – is key to effective interaction.

Jennie is a Neurolanguage Coach and pronunciation specialist with a DipTESOL (2019), and is certified as a Neurolanguage Coach®. Having taught English since 2010, Jennie has supported teachers through her own business since 2020, helping them develop confidence and practical pronunciation skills. Jennie has presented at international conferences including Bridge International (2024), IATEFL (2025), PronSIG (2025), and IATEFL Themes (2025), and has a published article in University Grapevine (Issue 29, September 2025).

Together, Lynne and Jennie combine research-informed practice, real-world experience, and a learner-centred approach to empower teachers and learners to make pronunciation a confident, actionable skill.

Session synopsis:

Teaching Pronunciation with Confidence: From Awareness to Action

This interactive workshop (50 minutes) helps Neurolanguage Coaches feel more confident integrating pronunciation into their everyday sessions. We’ll explore key aspects of pronunciation including intelligibility, word stress, connected speech and intonation. Participants will experiment with classroom-friendly techniques, such as shadowing, mouth yoga, chants and minimal pairs, leaving with adaptable tools to use in their coaching sessions, to help their learners communicate more clearly and confidently.

Audience Takeaways:
– Understand the distinction between accent and pronunciation
– Recognise the importance of listening and awareness before production
– Explore practical ways to teach word stress, rhythm and intonation
– Gain ready to use classroom activities for pronunciation work- Build confidence in addressing pronunciation in everyday sessions.

Clare Crawford​

Clare Crawford​

Licensed Neurolanguage Coach Trainer

Bio:

Before becoming self-employed in 2016, Clare spent two decades working as a department head and teacher mentor, both in UK secondary education and French training agencies. Clare now divides her working time between
coaching professionals in language and communication skills, and training
Neurolanguage Coaches. She’s been on a personal journey to discover what successful work-life balance looks and feels like!

AKA: MC Clare

Amanda Croft

Amanda Croft

Bio:

Amanda Croft founded English with STILE to bridge the gap between formal CELTA training and the realities of classroom teaching and coaching. Her mission is to empower language professionals to integrate storytelling, theatre skills, and improvisation into their teaching, creating dynamic learning experiences both online and in person.

With three decades of experience blending acting and EFL teaching, Amanda holds an MA
in TESOL, specialising in gesture and language acquisition. Her interactive STILE workshops have been featured at international conferences including IATEFL, ELTABB in Berlin, TESOL Spain-North, BESIG Athens, and the Neurolanguage Coaching®️ Conference in Sitges 2024, where the seeds for her company were first sown.

Amanda’s work on storytelling was recently showcased in TUG (The University Grapevine), curated by Robert Stoud. This year, she returns to Sitges to present “Listening: the heart of improvisation”, an immersive workshop exploring the art of listening with our wholeselves—a testament to her commitment to active, embodied learning.

Session synopsis:

Listening is at the heart of Improvisation.

There are two key elements at the heart of active listening: one is attention and the other is presence. In this workshop especially created for Sitges 2026, we will explore through whole group exercises the attention required to listen not just with your ears, but with your whole being.

The content will involve whole group exercises which will promote listening with your senses and your entire being. Improvisation teaches us to observe carefully, provide support for the others in the group and listen with attention and presence both to ourselves and others. The aim is that the audience will participate in an experience which will highlight the above key features, but also take away ideas that they can use in their physical learning spaces. It will be a workshop format, ideally an hour or 1hr 15 depending on time constraints.

Engagement plan: 1. Warm up exercises 2. Moving to a whole group exercise 3. Then 3 large groups, each with one leader who will change spontaneously and without any kind of discussion 4. These 3 large groups will then divide into 6 groups, but will work together observing physical characteristics. From these physical characteristics short 2 player improvised scenes will arise which are then supported by the rest of the group. The scene will be given a title/ general context by the group. 5. The final exercise, in small groups, involves preparing a short scene in which a sentence is hidden (not strictly improvisation) . A couple of these can be performed for the whole group. The aim for the watching audience is to uncover the ‘hidden sentence’. It’s listening all the way!

Marie Claire Berkmans

Marie Claire Berkmans

Neurolanguage Coach

Bio:

Experienced and qualified professional in the field of coaching and teaching english, with a career spanning over two decades. 

I am currently an independent trainer and neurolanguage coach®, with a particular focus on the preparation of job interviews in English for French professionals. My expertise is reflected in my range of competences and certifications, in both therapy ( master practitioner in NLP, practitioner in hypnosis, transactional analysis theory) and Neurolanguage Coaching.

Since 2013, I have worked as an independent trainer and coach, specializing in the creation, implementation, and evaluation of training programs for French companies and english groups (Kingfisher, Compass, IVC). I am Qualiopi certified (French quality certification for training centers), demonstrating my commitment to high standards in professional training.

I hold a Master’s degree in Translation Studies from the Lille Université, focusing on the translation of African American English in Uncle Tom’s Cabin and how to translate vernacular English into French.

In addition to my professional career, I serve as the President of the Board of Directors at QUANTA, a support and work assistance establishment for the Autistic near Lille. I represent the association in public institutions and private sector partnerships, further demonstrating my commitment to social responsibility, community development, using my coaching and interpersonal skills.

I have built a career dedicated to the advancement of education and the development of language skills with my 325 coachees!

Session synopsis:

Unlocking Language Learning Through Metaphor: Clean Language and Neurolanguage Coaching®

As neurolanguage coaches, we understand that language learning is never just about grammar or vocabulary—it’s about the way the coachee makes sense of his/her learning in a brain friendly way.

One powerful tool we can also bring into our sessions is the use of Clean Language—a questioning technique developed by David Grove that invites learners to explore their inner world through their own metaphors.

This 50 minute workshop will focus on the 12 clean language questions and will contain 3 group activities.

Patricia Bergström

Patricia Bergström

Bio:

Patricia Bergström is a multilingual Professional Neurolanguage Coach® and Licensed Teacher Trainer with over 26 years of experience guiding learners and educators through transformative change. Her work explores the intersection of language, emotion, identity, and intercultural awareness, informed by professional certifications in mindfulness, emotional intelligence, NLP, and laughing medicine, and grounded in neuroscience. Founder of Effective Learning 4 Life, Patricia holds an MA in TESOL and an MA in Modern Foreign Languages from the University of St Andrews. She serves as Project Officer for Alumni Relations for the UN SDSN Global Schools Programme and co-coaches the IHE micro-credential in Solutionary Teaching and Learning, supporting educators worldwide to create meaningful, sustainable impact.

Session synopsis:

From Wobblies to Grounded: Navigating the Emotional Slumps of Self-Employment

Becoming your own boss is often framed as freedom, flexibility, and fulfilment, yet the emotional and cognitive “wobblies” that accompany self-employment are rarely spoken about. Slumps in motivation, self-doubt, comparison, and identity confusion are common, particularly in the age of social media, where curated success stories distort reality and amplify inner pressure.

In this 60-90 minute experiential workshop, participants will explore the neuro-emotional dynamics behind entrepreneurial slumps and the identity shift from employee to self-directed professional where participants will learn how to recognise, normalise, and navigate these wobblies with greater self-compassion and clarity.
The session offers a safe space to name what is usually hidden, reframe internal narratives, and develop practical tools to remain grounded, resilient, and aligned, even when motivation dips and external validation is absent.

Natassa Manitsa

Natassa Manitsa

English Educator, Teacher Trainer, Digital Marketing Specialist, and Author, Co-founder of EdSkills Academy and Founder of EduMarketing Agency

Natassa Manitsa is an English Educator, Teacher Trainer, Digital Marketing Specialist, and Author with over 25 years of experience in language education. She is the Co-founder of EdSkills Academy and Founder of EduMarketing Agency, specializing in teacher training, educational marketing, and content creation.

She has trained educators worldwide and has held key roles in academic consulting, communication, and social media management. A published author, she has co-written books on literature, writing, and CLIL and has contributed numerous articles and essays to various academic platforms and magazines. Her academic background includes studies in School Psychology, Translation, British Studies, Marketing, and Communication, and she is currently pursuing an MA in Philosophy & the Arts. She is also Webmaster and Social Media Coordinator for IATEFL TEASIG, focusing on trends in language assessment.

Session Synopsis:

Beat Imposter Syndrome in Your Classroom Through Your Lessons: A Confidence-Boosting Experience Using Vocabulary and Communication Activities

“Low self-esteem is like driving through life with your hand brake on.” — Maxwell Maltz

What are these agonising self-doubts and dark thoughts that appear in the middle of the night? Does the fear of failing ever make you want to give up? Yet, sometimes just a little failure can become the foundation of success. After all, it all comes down to self-confidence, something that can be learned and built, even though the demanding world of business, studies, expectations, and life in general can easily deflate it.

In this workshop, we will explore the causes behind this growing “teacher/student self-doubt epidemic” and examine practical ways to boost self-confidence through teaching techniques that simultaneously enhance vocabulary development and communication skills.

Katarzyna Bieniecka-Drzymała

Katarzyna Bieniecka-Drzymała

Bio:

Katarzyna Bieniecka‑Drzymała, PhD, ACC ICF, bridges the worlds of academia and coaching to support learners and professionals in building autonomy and confidence. As a senior lecturer and LSP instructor at Adam Mickiewicz University, she has shaped language education for over two decades. She founded KOUCZ Studio to bring individual coaching and workshops to students, and leads BIEN Language & Coaching, collaborating internationally with universities, companies, and private clients. Director of the ICF Chapter in Poznań, she is the author of From Self‑Reflection to Autonomy and an active contributor to international educational projects. Her work has been recognized by the Polish Ministry of Education and Science and the British Council.

Session synopsis:

Language Coaching: Evidence-Based Benefits for Academia

Despite decades of research and practice in foreign language education, persistent challenges such as speaking anxiety, lack of learner autonomy, and high dropout rates remain. Language coaching – a structured, non-directive dialogue that empowers learners to take ownership of their learning offers a promising solution. Drawing on over 25 years of experience in language teaching and a completed doctoral project, this presentation explores the effectiveness of language coaching as an intervention to enhance metacognitive awareness, self-regulation, and attitudes toward language learning. The longitudinal study of six linguistic majors confirmed the autonomising potential of coaching dialogue, highlighting the critical role of metacognitive development and the teacher/coach-student relationship. Beyond pedagogical benefits, the findings provide compelling arguments for institutional stakeholders: language coaching improves communicative competence and learner engagement.

Participants will gain research-based insights and practical strategies to advocate for integrating coaching into educational and corporate contexts.

Format and duration: ca. 40-45 minutes talk with interactive activities and Q&A session