Silent Currents, Strategic Shifts: The Octopoidal Maneuver as a Model in AI-Enhanced English Language Teaching

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Abstract

Leadership and language acquisition share a fundamental principle: transformation often occurs beneath the surface. The Octopoidal Maneuver, originally conceptualized for political leadership, offers a compelling framework for understanding silent recalibration in AI-driven English Language Teaching (ELT). While its foundations lie in political strategy, where leaders maintain outward composure while orchestrating unseen shifts, this maneuver has equally strong implications for education and teaching. This paper establishes the maneuver as a model in ELT, integrating Adaptive Leadership (Heifetz et al., 2009), Strategic Agility (Vrontis et al., 2022), Resilience & Crisis Management (Kremer Sott & Sott Bender, 2025), Universal Design in Education (Eslit, 2025), and Orchestrated Influence (Mintzberg, 1987). By applying these principles to AI-enhanced second language acquisition, this study demonstrates how learners and educators engage in tentacular adaptation, adjusting linguistic strategies without cognitive overload. The Octopoidal Maneuver introduces a fluid, adaptive learning model, refining traditional theories such as Krashen’s Input Hypothesis and Selinker’s Interlanguage Theory, while integrating AI-driven personalization, multimodal engagement, and resilience strategies. This paper argues that silent recalibration, tentacular engagement, and strategic agility are essential for fostering sustainable language acquisition in dynamic educational environments.

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