シャドーイング練習: I learned English to a C2 level, so you can just copy me - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ

C2
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This video is brought to you by Squarespace.
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I learned English to a C2 level,
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and you can just copy what I did.
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Seriously.
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No secret formulas, no complicated methods,
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just a system that works.
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And the best part, you can adjust it to your own life.
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And to make it super easy for you,
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I put together a free guide with all of my best strategies.
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You'll get a daily immersion checklist,
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a structured system to follow,
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and the biggest mistakes that slow you down so that you can avoid all of them.
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The guide is totally free and you can get it right now by clicking the link in my description.
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So let's begin our conversation by talking about why traditional classes just didn't work for me.
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Like most people, I started learning English in a classroom when I was in elementary school.
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Then I went to middle school,
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high school, and obviously when I was a kid,
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I wasn't really interested in learning English.
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If somebody were to come up to me when I was like 10 and tell me,
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Veronica, you know that one day you would be speaking English and Spanish in your everyday life?
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I would be like, what are you saying?
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Like, I actually hate foreign languages and I don't want to study them.
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I am sure I will not need them.
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And I didn't have to wait too long for my words to be proven wrong,
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because when I turned 14,
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15, I realized that if I wanted to go to college,
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I actually needed English.
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And so I started thinking about how I was being taught this language
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and how I would actually want to learn it because I wanted to enjoy the process of language learning.
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I wanted to stop hating English as a subject.
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I remember when I was in high school,
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I attended all of my English classes.
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I did all of my homework,
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studied all of those grammar drills,
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but my listening skills were absolutely horrible.
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In fact, I was probably the worst in my class when it came to listening.
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I would pass all the written tests,
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but if somebody were to actually speak to me in English, I would freeze.
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It honestly wasn't until I got to college that I realized that if I wanted to be fluent,
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I needed to make English a part of my daily life.
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I needed to live and breathe English 24-7.
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And confidence in communication isn't just about speaking,
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it's also about how you present yourself online.
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showcasing your portfolio, or starting a business,
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Now let's talk about the actual system that got me to C2 in English.
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You can honestly just follow these steps and adjust them to your life.
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Step one is flood your life with English.
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What I did is I surrounded myself with English by watching TV shows and also reading books.
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That was honestly my foundation and I also remember that I was constantly on Reddit.
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That was another little tool that helped me produce the language because I was actively commenting,
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messaging with people on Reddit and just writing my own posts.
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And I know that you know that watching shows and reading books is amazing,
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but not just any shows or any books because I believe that comprehensible input is key.
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And comprehensible input is exactly something that made my foolproof method foolproof for me.
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Because if I was watching shows that I could not understand,
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you know, I would turn on the show and I would be like,
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what is happening here?
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Like, I have no idea what they're saying.
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The same thing with books.
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If I was reading very complicated books,
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I would give up because that would not be comprehensible input.
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And by comprehensible input, if you're new on my channel,
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what I mean is it has to be information that you can mostly understand.
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Like your current level plus one.
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Just plus one.
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Not plus 20, 30, 100.
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Basically when you're reading something or watching something,
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I think it's best to understand 95% of the information.
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At least that's what I did and this is something that worked great for me.
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Because the thing is, if something is too hard,
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and you're constantly looking up words,
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you'll get frustrated and quit.
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And we don't want that.
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We want you to enjoy it.
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And if you notice that you get bored because it's too complicated,
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like the book is too complicated,
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or the show is too complicated,
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then it is too complicated for you.
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Find something easier.
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So when I was in high school,
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I was probably already at this intermediate level and the show that I started watching was Desperate Housewives.
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Like these two shows were something that helped me so freaking much because they were fun,
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they were interesting, I could understand most of the information and the information that I couldn't understand.
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It was not too complicated, you know?
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I was actually interested in understanding that information.
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I would pause the show,
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I would look up the idiom or the phrase,
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and I would save it to my Anki deck,
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and this is basically how I progressed.
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And for books, I chose young adult fiction,
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because the language was engaging, but not too childish.
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And that is why I always talk about young adult fiction on my YouTube channel.
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It is something that is perfect if you're at this intermediate level,
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if you are experiencing this intermediate plateau and if you feel like everything is too boring,
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everything is too complicated, but you're not interested in watching Peppa Pig
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because it is also too boring because it's too simple, you know?
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The material can be too boring because it's either too simple for you
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or too complicated or if you're just completely not interested in it
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when it was my first year in college and I had to take a train from my apartment to my university,
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it was probably like 45 minutes to go there and also 45 minutes to go back.
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What I would do is I would read this series,
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Miss Peregrine's Peculiar Children.
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It's a book series that is a mix of fantasy,
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mystery, and adventure with a dark and eerie vibe.
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And guys, let me tell you,
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I was so freaking obsessed with those books
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that sometimes I would be reading the book so intently that I would just miss my stop.
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I like those books that much.
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The story in that series follows Jacob Portman,
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a teenager who discovers a hidden world of peculiars,
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children with strange and supernatural abilities,
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living in a time loop led by Miss Peregrine, a shape-shifting headmistress.
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And reason why this series became so known is for its creepy vintage photographs.
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Like, if you're actually gonna buy the books,
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you will see those interesting photographs and they inspired the story.
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Obviously, the language in those books was really informal, was really fun.
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I remember learning so many amazing expressions,
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so many amazing words, because there was a lot of dialogue in the books
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and usually the dialogue is how people actually speak.
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So that is why if you're right now stuck in this intermediate plateau,
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if you want to read something in English,
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I highly, highly recommend this book series.
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You have to make English your default mode.
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What I mean by that is that I basically imagined that I was a native speaker already.
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Like, let's play pretend for a second, okay?
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I switched all of my tech to English.
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My phone, my laptop, my social media, everything was in English.
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That is the first step,
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that is the most basic thing you can do.
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I'm a huge proponent of journaling,
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so I would journal exclusively in English.
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If there was something that I wanted to write in Russian in my native language,
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obviously I would do that,
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but most of my writing was done in English.
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I would also write my grocery lists in English.
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Like today, I have to go grocery shopping and here is what I have to get.
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Like literally guys, it is so easy to do in English instead of your native language
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and most of us go grocery shopping maybe every week or maybe even more than once a week.
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And I also planned my day in English,
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like everything I had to do today,
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maybe my workout plans, the videos I was watching to help me work out,
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to do yoga, maybe like a gym workout plan,
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like all of those things,
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they were all in English.
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And also, whenever I had a free moment,
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I consumed content in English instead of my native language.
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Of course, I still lived in Russia, right?
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So I didn't live in an English-speaking country.
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So I would still talk to people outside in Russian,
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I would hear Russian outside,
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I would talk to my family,
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my friends, only in Russian,
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but everything I had control over,
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I would do that in English.
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And the final step, step number three,
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is understanding the difference between active learning and passive learning.
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Because for a while, I was only relying on passive learning,
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and I couldn't really see results,
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especially when I hit that intermediate plateau.
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I was like, what is happening?
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I don't see any results,
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even though I'm watching stuff in English,
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TV shows, movies, I'm listening to podcasts,
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but I'm still not improving.
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Like, what do I do?
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And the thing is, watching shows is great,
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but for me, it wasn't enough.
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I had to be actively engaging with the material.
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Let's say I'm watching a show and instead of just kind of like watching it,
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being on my phone, responding to messages and at the same time listening to the show a little bit,
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I switched this approach and I became a hundred percent focused on the show I was watching.
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I would pause, I would practice shadowing,
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I would repeat the sentences after the speakers and yes,
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this approach makes your movie watching experience a little bit different because instead of just flopping on your couch and relaxing,
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you kind of have to study,
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like you're watching a show in this nerdy way.
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So for movies, to recap,
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what I did was I would replay scenes,
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I would mimic accents, and I would try to understand the conversation first with subtitles,
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and then I would turn the subtitles off,
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and then I would replay the same scene again to make sure that I could understand what they were saying without subtitles.
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And for books, I would read and listen at the same time.
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And then I would actually read the book out loud.
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I would use Audible.
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Honestly, I still use Audible.
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Like when I read books,
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I prefer to listen and read.
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I'm kind of reading my book and I have my audiobook playing and I kind of read with my eyes,
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if you know what I mean.
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But if I really want to practice my pronunciation,
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if there are some words I'm not sure how to pronounce,
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I would pause the audiobook and I would read the sentence out loud.
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This approach, when you are reading and listening at the same time,
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when you're trying to read the sentences out loud,
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helps you internalize all of the structures,
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all of the new words,
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all of the grammar you're learning by reading this book.
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So yes, I was practicing exposure.
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I was exposed to the language by reading books and watching shows,
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but it was a little bit more than that.
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I was actually absorbing the language like a sponge.
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And guys, you probably know that I'm a huge organization nerd and organizing all of my materials,
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my study sessions, keeping track of all of the new vocabulary is also something
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that helped me so much with my English learning journey.
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I have a notion template that I use for all of my languages,
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so if you want to check it out,
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I will leave a link to the Notion template in the description.
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So I think it's going to be it for today's video.
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If you liked it, please don't forget to give it a thumbs up and subscribe to my YouTube channel.
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I know that a lot of language learners also want to improve their accents,
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and as you can hear,
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I did change my accent from a very typical Russian accent to a more American one.
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And I did it consciously because I really wanted to sound more American.
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But in this process, there were a lot of moments that made me feel like I was losing a part of myself,
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a part of my identity.
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And that is something that I actually talked about in this video right here.
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So if you want to see my experience,
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just click right here and keep on watching.

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このビデオで話す練習をする理由

この動画では、英語を第二言語として学ぶ過程が紹介されており、特にspeakingの重要性が強調されています。多くの学習者が言語学習の際に直面する問題の一つは、実際に話す場面での自信の欠如です。このビデオを利用して、shadowspeakを実践することで、聞き取ったことを即座に再現する力を鍛えることができます。毎日の生活に英語を取り入れることが、流暢さと自信を高めるための鍵です。また、このビデオを通じて、愉快な言語学習の実践方法を学ぶことができるでしょう。

文法とコンテクストにおける表現

  • 「I learned English to a C2 level」:この表現は、達成したレベルを具体的に示しており、履歴書や面接での自己アピールにも役立ちます。
  • 「no secret formulas, no complicated methods」:学習方法がシンプルであることを強調しており、英語学習に対する恐怖感を減らします。
  • 「you can just copy what I did」:模倣を奨励することで、学習者にとって身近な成功体験を提供します。
  • 「make English a part of my daily life」:英語を日常生活に統合することの重要性を示しており、英語シャドーイングの実践に役立つフレーズです。

よくある発音の罠

このビデオの中で注意すべき発音のポイントはいくつかあります。特に「schedule」や「realize」などの語は、地域によってアクセントが異なるため、学習者にとって混乱を招く可能性があります。また、流暢に話すためには、ストレスとイントネーションを正しく理解し使うことが不可欠です。特に、IELTS スピーキング対策としては、オープンな発音を心がけ、自然なリズムを意識しましょう。ビデオ内の講者の発音を模倣することで、正しい発音を身につける助けになります。

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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