The Scientific Retention and Acquisition System (SRAS) is a structured framework for accelerating adult second language acquisition through the application of established principles from cognitive psychology, memory science, and second language acquisition research. Recognizing that adult learning often fails to bridge the gap between theoretical understanding and practical application, SRAS addresses this issue by focusing on active exposure, daily micro-structure, and context switching, ensuring learners can see tangible progress while maintaining motivation. The system does not propose a new linguistic theory but operationalizes existing scientific foundations into a unified learning architecture designed to improve early-stage conversational efficiency. SRAS is based on three core mechanisms: Early Automaticity, Contextual Density, and Compressed Time. These mechanisms are implemented through the 6+1 Layered Contextual (Usage) Switching model, which systematically cycles identical linguistic units across multiple contextual frames to increase encoding variability and retrieval strength. The system is operationalized through nine structured learning variations that integrate vocabulary activation, contextual sentence construction, spaced retrieval, structured production, and immersive exposure. The framework seeks to accelerate the transition from passive knowledge to functional conversational use while maintaining long-term retention. The present white paper outlines the theoretical foundations, core architecture, operational framework, implementation model, and proposed evaluation protocol of SRAS, providing a fully operationalized working model (v1.0). Empirical validation is currently being pursued through controlled intensive language-learning implementations, including structured challenge-based learning formats, and future community-based data collection initiatives.
Salih Zeki AYDIN (Thu,) studied this question.