Shadowing-Übung: Land of the Lions | Making Nature: How we see animals - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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Over the last century, the way zoos have created their environments for the animals has changed dramatically.
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Over the last century, the way zoos have created their environments for the animals has changed dramatically.
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As we developed and our knowledge of animal care developed,
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making much more stimulating habitats for the animals,
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enriching the environments became very, very important.
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Now we are moving very much into creating habitats that still have that enriched environment for the animal,
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but also the enriched environment for the visitor,
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so that we have moved from commercial to medical and care to actually now it's very much about connection.
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We are connecting people through our animals and through our animal's environments.
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Animals bring the best out of people.
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Zoos have a great way to bridge that.
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Immersive exhibits have been done for some time in zoos
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but what's different about Land of Lions is the link that we provide from the zoos to the wild.
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It's been very very important to us to make that fundamental link
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that ZSL is working with animals and caring for animals in the zoo
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but also caring for animals in Gujarat and the stories that we put around
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here in the zoo about lions are from India
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and how close they live to people is vitally important in terms of the messaging
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and indeed the conservation work that we are doing.
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We understand our world for our five senses so from what we see,
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what we touch, what we smell, what we taste.
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And so the no-barrier design process is very much about cutting out all barriers.
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So, for example here, we've got vertical cables.
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So once you're standing face to face with the animal,
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you don't see the barrier at all.
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But also, you smell the animal,
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you can feel that low bass rumble,
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which is truly transformational as a human to another animal.
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Traditionally, spaces have been given over to visitors and operations more so than animals,
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but that's moving dramatically over towards the animals.
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And by creating immersive environments that we have here,
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by the nature of visitors being inside the spaces,
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but in the very nature then the animals have more space and all those benefits that come from there.
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But when you get that virtual circle of the humans,
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the visitors and the animals absolutely enjoying the environments together and
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that enjoyment may also be a little bit of terror as well because we are hardwired to fear and vice versa,
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which is interesting.
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It's not meant to be a sort of a walk in the park as it were.
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If you come face to face with a lion,
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something should happen to you and something should happen to the animal.
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So again, those things are very much considered with the balance of space
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but particularly in urban zoos where you have this almost limited defined space
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that becomes really a you know a primary consideration at the
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very start of any project the other thing of course is
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that you see animals from different vantage points
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and that's a different experience altogether I mean we love being
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even two meters higher as humans you know we ground well so being just high
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that spectacular which is why we always want to stand on our toes and look.
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But the other important thing we've tried to do here is actually get visitors in actually shot.
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So it's not just an animal theatre as it were,
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you've got actually people you know behind the animal and in
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that way it sets off a very very different experience
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and then again it comes back to that you know we're in the animals world as opposed to vice versa.
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We do spend a lot of time
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designing an environment that is flexible because animal personalities they do certainly have personalities
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but they change so the important thing in every environment
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that we design is flexibility
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so the animals can choose where they go they can choose
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the different substrates they want to be on they can choose
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which area they want to be on they can also choose whether they want to be on show
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or not if they want to get away from the visitors they can do one of our main
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learning outcomes was that the UK audience understand how closely people in Gujarat,
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in the Giyah forest, live alongside lions.
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You can wake up in the morning with a lion in your backyard.
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You really can.
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But people live alongside them.
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That is huge lessons for us in the UK.
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If people in India can live alongside lions,
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surely we can live alongside badgers.
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Surely we can live alongside hedgehogs and not destroy their habitats but promote it.
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So working to live alongside animals in a cooperative way,
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we've got lessons to learn from elsewhere.
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The vital role that zoos play in conservation is now recognised by conservation bodies across the globe,
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and it is essential.
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We are organisations that care not just for lions and tigers,
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but for the freshwater fish,
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for the snails, for the species that sometimes get ignored.
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But zoos have an immense role to play in just connecting people with nature.
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that ability to evoke emotions that people who might come to the zoo for a day out,
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they leave just loving animals a little bit more.
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And that is a huge,
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huge role, especially when most of our zoos are in urban environments.

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Warum das Sprechen mit diesem Video üben?

Das Video "Land of the Lions | Making Nature: How we see animals" bietet eine ausgezeichnete Gelegenheit, das Englisch sprechen üben in einem spannenden und lehrreichen Kontext zu verbessern. Die Verbindung zwischen Menschen und Tieren wird hier eindrucksvoll dargestellt, und das fördert nicht nur das Interesse, sondern auch die emotionale Verbindung zum Gesagten. Indem Sie die Inhalte nachsprechen, verbessern Sie Ihre Aussprache und Intonation. Zudem können Sie verschiedene Sprechstile und Ausdrucksweisen beobachten, die Sie in Ihren eigenen Sprachgebrauch integrieren können. Das Englisch lernen mit YouTube macht es zudem einfach, sich mit authentischen Dialogen auseinanderzusetzen, die in realistischen Szenarien stattfinden.

Grammatik & Ausdrücke im Kontext

Im Video finden wir mehrere interessante grammatikalische Strukturen und Ausdrücke, die wir näher betrachten können:

  • "have been changed dramatically" – eine hervorragende Verwendung des Present Perfect, um auf vergangene Ereignisse hinzuweisen, die bis in die Gegenwart Auswirkungen haben.
  • "moving very much into creating habitats" – hier sehen wir die progressive Form, die den kontinuierlichen Prozess des Wandels betont.
  • "animals bring the best out of people" – eine schöne Redewendung, die zeigt, wie Tiere das Verhalten und die Gefühle der Menschen beeinflussen können.
  • "cutting out all barriers" – es ist wichtig, idiomatische Ausdrücke zu lernen, um sich flüssiger ausdrücken zu können.

Diesen Strukturen sollte besondere Aufmerksamkeit geschenkt werden, da sie in alltäglichen Gesprächen häufig vorkommen und das Englisch sprechen üben erleichtern.

Häufige Aussprachefallen

Einige Wörter und Phrasen im Video können knifflig sein. Hier sind einige, auf die Sie achten sollten:

  • "immersive" – Achten Sie darauf, die Vokale richtig auszusprechen, um den richtigen Klang zu erzeugen.
  • "transformational" – Die Betonung auf der zweiten Silbe kann leicht überhört werden, was die Verständlichkeit beeinträchtigen könnte.
  • "vantage points" – Dies kann aufgrund der Kombination von Konsonanten herausfordernd sein. Üben Sie, es langsam und deutlich auszusprechen.

Durch aktives Englisch Shadowing dieser Passagen verbessern Sie nicht nur Ihre Pronunciation, sondern auch Ihr Hörverständnis erheblich. Nutzen Sie die Gelegenheit, um Ihr Englisch im Kontext von Tier- und Umweltschutz zu vertiefen.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

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