Pratica di Shadowing: give me 5 minutes, i'll make you more interesting - Impara a parlare inglese con YouTube

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If you want to be interesting, you have to be interested.
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If you want to be interesting, you have to be interested.
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And incorporating these five simple things into my week really helped me to start to feel like I was having better conversations, that I felt excited about life again, and overall just this general sense that I was actually using my brain and not just letting it rot away.
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If you're new here, my name is JC and I post all about small things that will make a big difference in how you feel in your everyday life.
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I made a part one to this video and there were hundreds of comments asking for a part two.
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So here are five more things that I think will help you live a more interesting life.
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The first one is a really cool way to go a little bit deeper into the things that you're already consuming.
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We are all consuming things, books, TV shows, movies, songs, video games, and often we just take them at face value and we don't really know what went in behind the scenes.
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Start by taking something that you love, the book you're reading, the video game that you're playing, a song that you love listening to, and start to look up the person that created it and what inspired them to bring it to life.
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Maybe you can watch a video of the video game and see how the developers created the world, or you listen to the author that you're reading give a talk on how she thought about creating the characters or you watch a video of a music producer bringing that song to life and all the different little elements that they use to create the music.
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Once you start doing this you will be absolutely fascinated behind the minds of your favorite things and it will help you to appreciate all of the little tiny details that you probably didn't notice at first and I guarantee it will make you love it even more.
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Second is to use primary sources.
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I feel like we learned this when we were in school when you were writing essays that you had to cite primary documents, but then somewhere along the way of social media and hearing like thousands of people's opinions a day, we kind of forgot how to formulate our own opinions on something.
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Next time you're scrolling or you're online and you hear a take on something, instead of just absorbing that opinion as your own, try to find the source that they're talking about.
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Find the original article, find the original video, go to the library and read about the topic, and practice making your own opinion about things.
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I find that when I do this, I am so much more confident in the conversations that I'm having because I actually know the reasoning behind my opinion rather than just regurgitating someone else's.
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Third is to keep a running list of questions and resist the urge to immediately Google them or chat to BT them.
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Curiosity is one of my favorite traits about myself and about other people.
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And I noticed that in conversations I was having, if someone were to pose a question, immediately one of us would just look it up and the conversation would be killed right away.
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And of course, we've all kind of been trained to want instant gratification, but I actually kind of miss the meandering, wandering thought process or conversation that comes when you don't know the answer to something.
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And keeping this running list of the things that you're curious about is kind of like planting seeds that become the way that you look at the world.
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If you start to do this and you let questions just sit there without finding the answers, I guarantee you will have such interesting conversations.
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You will start to use it as a filter for the way that you're looking at the world and you'll piece together all of these tiny little details to start to figure it out.
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There's been a lot of studies about learning and memory and they say that if you wanna remember something, it has to be implanted into your frame of reference of the world.
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If you just Google something and get an answer, you didn't really do anything to like go through the journey to learn it.
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We used to have to go to the library, look for a book on that topic and that whole process really helped us to cement the information.
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Now we're consuming so much that I find for myself I get frustrated because it was just an instant answer and there was no real work I had to put in to get there.
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So keeping this list of questions also leads right into my next idea which is to create a curiosity map.
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I had so much fun making this.
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I did this off a book I was reading and I started to pull out all of the topics that I felt that I wanted to know more about and maybe they're not really related at first.
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So you'll just start to make bubbles on your page of topic one, topic two, topic three, topic four, topic five, and then you'll start to make branches off of each of those bubbles and link them to other topics.
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And all of a sudden you'll have this huge map of things that you're interested in that probably relate to some of the questions that you're curious about.
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And you can spend time going really deep on each of these bubbles, or maybe it's just a lifelong process.
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There doesn't need to be any stress or deadlines.
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I I feel like having a topic or project that you're continuously engaged in really adds so much depth into your life.
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Talking about curiosity and learning and making your life feel more interesting is one of my favorite topics.
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So I can make this into a whole series if you guys want another part or a deeper dive into any of these ideas.
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The last one for today is to learn how to ask better questions.
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If you're having boring conversations, it's probably because you're stuck in like the small talk.
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And I feel like learning about a person in that way also helps you to learn more about yourself too.
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So if you guys need help asking good questions, I love this card game called Candid.
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And I know there's a lot of conversation card games that help you to get to know someone new.
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But what I love about this card game in particular is that it's actually designed to help you get to know the people that you know really well even better.
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So these questions are a mix of serious and silly and playful.
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One of my favorite questions from this deck is if you had to give your whole brain and consciousness to someone else, what is a thought pattern that you would want to eradicate before you gave it to them?
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and there's also like many silly ones when i first read that question i was like wow if i had to give my consciousness to my best friend what thought would i never want them to have and then that really led me to think like oh well why do i still think that thought then because it's me and me for the rest of my life there are so many good ones in here i literally always keep this in my bag when i'm going out because you never know when you're gonna need something like this okay that's enough for today if you're new here my name is jc i post videos every single week on how to make your life feel more fulfilling more joyful more interesting so follow for more and the next one's coming soon.
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Hey.

Contesto e Sfondo

Nel video intitolato "Dammi 5 minuti, ti renderò più interessante," il relatore, JC, esplora l'idea che per essere interessanti bisogna prima essere curiosi e interessati. Condivide cinque semplici modi per arricchire la propria vita quotidiana e migliorare le conversazioni. La chiave è approfondire il mondo che ci circonda, rendendo così le interazioni più significative e stimolanti. Per gli studenti di inglese, questo approccio non solo incoraggia a scoprire di più sull’inglese parlato, ma offre anche un'incredibile opportunità per migliorare le proprie competenze attraverso la pratica di conversazione in inglese.

Top 5 Frasi per la Comunicazione Quotidiana

  • "Che ne pensi di...?": Un ottimo modo per avviare una conversazione profonda.
  • "Mi piacerebbe sapere di più su...": Indica curiosità e interesse per l’altro.
  • "Hai mai considerato...?": Stimola il pensiero critico e coinvolge l'interlocutore.
  • "Cosa ne pensi della situazione attuale riguardo a...?": Rende le conversazioni più rilevanti e attuali.
  • "Qual è la tua opinione su...?": Incoraggia scambi di idee e punti di vista.

Guida Passo Passo per la Pratica di Shadowing

Per affrontare con successo il contenuto di questo video e sviluppare le tue abilità, segui questa guida passo passo utilizzando la tecnica del shadowspeak.

  1. Ascolta il video attentamente: Concentrati sulle frasi e sull'intonazione di JC. Prendere appunti può aiutarti a memorizzare espressioni chiave.
  2. Ripeti in tempo reale: Mentre ascolti, prova a ripetere le frasi subito dopo averle sentite. Questo metodo, noto come shadow speech, aiuta a migliorare la pronuncia e il ritmo.
  3. Analizza le espressioni: Focalizzati sulle frasi che hai annotato. Scopri il contesto in cui possono essere utilizzate nelle conversazioni quotidiane.
  4. Pratica con un partner: Condividi le frasi e i concetti con un amico che sta anche migliorando il proprio inglese. In questo modo, potrete confrontare idee e opinioni.
  5. Riflettete insieme: Dopo aver praticato, discutete delle vostre esperienze su come i vostri punti di vista sono cambiati e su cosa avete imparato. Questo passaggio è fondamentale per ottenere un'esperienza di shadowspeaks più ricca e coinvolgente.

Seguendo questi passaggi, non solo migliorerai la tua competenza linguistica, ma svilupperai anche abilità di conversazione più profonde e significative. L’attitudine a essere curiosi migliorerà sicuramente le tue interazioni in inglese!

Cos'è la tecnica dello Shadowing?

Shadowing è una tecnica di apprendimento delle lingue supportata da studi scientifici, originariamente sviluppata per la formazione dei traduttori professionisti e resa popolare dal poliglotta Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Il metodo è semplice ma potente: ascolti un audio in inglese di madrelingua e lo ripeti immediatamente ad alta voce — come un'ombra che segue il parlante con un ritardo di solo 1–2 secondi. A differenza dell'ascolto passivo o degli esercizi di grammatica, lo shadowing costringe il tuo cervello e i muscoli della bocca a elaborare e riprodurre simultaneamente i modelli di discorso reale. La ricerca dimostra che migliora significativamente la precisione della pronuncia, l'intonazione, il ritmo, il discorso connesso, la comprensione dell'ascolto e la fluidità del parlato — rendendolo uno dei metodi più efficaci per la preparazione alla prova di speaking dell'IELTS e per la comunicazione reale in inglese.

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