シャドーイング練習: How to Make Anything - Learn to Think Like an Engineer - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ

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Most people treat starter kits like toys,
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Most people treat starter kits like toys,
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then they don't know how to start their first real project because they never learned how to build systems.
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In this video, I'm going to show you the mindset shift
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that you need to turn a $20 starter kit into a real engineering experience.
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This is how the pros do it,
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and if you start now, so can you.
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Hello and welcome to Fluxbench.
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My name's James and I'm a nerd and I hope you're a nerd too.
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okay so here's the problem you get your kit you follow the tutorial you plug in your light
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and wire it up exactly like they tell you to you run the code
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that they give you and it blinks wonderful
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and then you go on to the next lesson and another part
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but what did you actually learn by doing that like
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if i took away those instructions do you think you could honestly use
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that part in something else you're not learning electronics you're following recipes
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and that's copying and it's fine to get started but you're not going to get far past blinking lights doing that.
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What matters is connecting all these ideas together.
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Why does the LED actually work?
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What else could the LED respond to?
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What else could you swap in instead of using an LED?
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Here's how I look at it.
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Those lessons are giving you one tool at a time where you have things like buttons
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and sensors and those are just inputs and then you have your microcontroller in the middle
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and then you have LEDs and screens and stuff like that that are outputs.
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And what you need to do is chain the inputs to the outputs somehow.
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You need to build a system that links them all together.
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And that's where the real engineering is.
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If you begin thinking like this,
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then that $20 starter kit of yours,
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it's no longer a toy.
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It's a freaking laboratory to do whatever the heck you want
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with it it's your R&D laboratory you have all the tools
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all the sensors the buttons whatever you need to make what you want it should be in there
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so now we get to the fun cheesy part of it's
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not what you know it's how you think about it it's the real difference between a beginner
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and a builder is
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that a beginner looks at a starter kit as a bunch of individual demos
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that are separate and a builder looks at them as a bunch of individual tools
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that they're going to go link together in a system
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and they're just learning one at a time and
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so you got to have
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that mindset shift of it's not demos it's systems i want
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to show you the engineering ladder of mine it's got five rungs on it
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and in the beginning you start out with tutorials
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and in the end you're able to build whatever the heck you want this is the blinky stage where you follow tutorials,
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you plug in sensors, you just get results.
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But it's not the destination.
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Think of this as just learning individual words of a vocabulary.
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The magic really begins once you start to integrate these separate things.
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Once you start to combine a button with an LED or some sort of sensor with like a speaker,
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all of a sudden you're taking these individual tools and combining them into a system.
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It's like if you took these individual vocabulary words,
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started putting them together and they're starting to make like a fluid sentence.
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Now you're really starting to speak like a real engineer.
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Music isn't just one note,
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it's a arrangement of many.
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And it's the same thing with electronics and when you start to combine and integrate them,
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this is where that real electron jazz begins.
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I love modules, they're a great way to get started in electronics.
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You can just go and buy a kit of them for real cheap and they just work.
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But the problem is once you need a lot of them.
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This here is a infrared transmitter.
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It's probably a dollar or two dollars a piece
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but the problem is it's probably five or ten cents a piece for the actual parts.
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And then this thing here is a photoelectric light measuring module,
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but all these parts here are probably one penny a piece.
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They're just resistors, to be honest.
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And this bag of buttons,
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if you buy a button module,
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oh my goodness, well, you might need it,
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but it's just like a penny or two per button.
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So all these are great,
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but those $5 modules are probably just like 75 cents in parts.
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If you use enough of them,
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it's kind of like trying to water a tree with bottled water.
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You can definitely do it.
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It's just a really expensive way to go about doing it.
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Flip your board, read the chip,
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look up the part, own your circuit.
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So the real playground isn't in your 37-in-1 sensor kit or your modules.
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It's in the catalog.
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Check this out.
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A whole box or bag full of different microcontrollers.
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So you can take your ESP32
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and I can basically swap out any size of memory I want
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so I can get a $3 microcontroller or a $5 microcontroller depending on how much money I want to put into it.
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I can add all sorts of sensors.
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I can customize it however I want and that's what you get when you start working with a catalog compared to modules.
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Start browsing distributors like Mauser,
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DigiKey, L-C-S-C And you don't just search You really try to discover
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You sometimes find the part that just does exactly what you need,
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and other times you find a part so cool you end up changing your whole project around it.
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The real superpower is debugging,
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fixing, and just not panicking while you do it.
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Because by now, you don't expect things to work on the first try,
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and when something else breaks,
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you're used to it, and you just start hunting it down because you're ready for it and you know where to look.
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At this point, you're not copying anymore.
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You're building.
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You're solving.
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And if you actually manage to get here, you're dangerous.
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Most people don't get past level one.
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But the thing is, if you're feeling the itch to do something real,
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then this is your ladder.
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Climb it.
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I'm serious.
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By the time you get to the top,
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you will be dangerous because you're not going to need anyone else's help.
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Whatever the thing is that you want to do,
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you're going to know how to do it.
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You got to learn, integrate,
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replace, explore, and most of all, you got to persevere.
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If you don't know where to begin,
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then my previous video talks about how to actually get electronics,
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what to buy, where, how much,
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just get a starter kit.
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Any of them will do.
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And in the next video,
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we're going to start doing something crazy.
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I'm going to start a series where we're actually going take
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some of these first few lessons of any of these starter kits
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and we're gonna go all the way from idea all the way to income making a real product.
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This is something that you guys can do as well so follow along it's gonna get crazy.
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But for now whatever it is go out there make something awesome you got this.

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コンテキストとバックグラウンド

このビデオでは、エンジニアリングのマインドセットを学ぶことがどのように重要かについて説明されています。エンジニアとしての思考を持つことで、初心者としての限界を突破し、実際にプロジェクトを構築する力を身につけることができるのです。英語を学ぶ上でも、このような論理的な思考は非常に役立ちます。特に、IELTS スピーキング対策においては、自分の意見を整理し、効果的に表現する力が求められます。

日常会話のためのトップ5フレーズ

  • 「ライトをつけるにはどうするか?」
  • 「LEDはどうやって動くのか?」
  • 「ボタンを使うと何ができる?」
  • 「このセンサーはどのように機能する?」
  • 「システムをどうやって作る?」

これらのフレーズは、YouTubeで英語学習をする際に役立ちます。映像の中で登場する言葉を覚え、実際に口に出してみることで、日常会話に自信を持つことができるでしょう。

ステップバイステップシャドーイングガイド

このビデオの内容を効果的に学ぶために、次のステップに従ってシャドーイングを行ってみましょう:

  1. まず、ビデオを通して一度視聴し、全体のコンセプトを把握します。
  2. 次に、特に重要なフレーズや表現を抜き出して書き留めます。上述したトップ5フレーズがその例です。
  3. その後、各フレーズを何度もリピートして発音を練習します。この時に、shadowspeaksなどを使ってイントネーションやリズムを意識しましょう。
  4. 最後に、実際に自分の考えをまとめて発表する練習をします。この過程が、英語シャドーイングの力を高める鍵となるでしょう。

このように、エンジニアの思考法を応用することで、英語の学びもより深まります。ぜひこれらのステップを実践して、自分の言葉で表現できるようになりましょう。

シャドーイングとは?英語上達に効果的な理由

シャドーイング(Shadowing)は、もともとプロの通訳者養成プログラムで開発された言語学習法で、多言語習得者として知られるDr. Alexander Arguelles によって広く普及されました。方法はシンプルですが非常に効果的:ネイティブスピーカーの英語を聞きながら、1〜2秒の遅延で声に出してすぐに繰り返す——まるで「影(shadow)」のように話者を追いかけます。文法ドリルや受動的なリスニングと異なり、シャドーイングは脳と口の筋肉が同時にリアルタイムで英語を処理・再現することを強制します。研究により、発音精度、抑揚、リズム、連音、リスニング力、そして会話の流暢さが大幅に向上することが確認されています。IELTSスピーキング対策や自然な英語コミュニケーションを目指す方に特におすすめです。

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