シャドーイング練習: Overtourism puts destinations under pressure | Vietnam Today - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ

C1
As Asia enters its peak travel season,
⏸ 一時停止中
95
文が短すぎたり長すぎる場合は、Editをタップして調整してください。
1
As Asia enters its peak travel season,
2
the strong return of tourism is bringing both opportunities and pressure.
3
Popular destinations are welcoming more visitors,
4
but many are also facing crowded streets,
5
strained services and growing concerns from local communities.
6
So what is over-tourism and why is it becoming a bigger challenge after the pandemic?
7
Let's take a closer look.
8
Tourism is one of the world's most important economic sectors.
9
It creates jobs, supports small businesses,
10
generates income for local communities,
11
and help promote culture and heritage.
12
But when visitors' number grows too quickly,
13
the benefits can come at a cost.
14
Over-tourism happens when a destination receives more tourists than it can sustainably manage.
15
This can lead to crowded streets,
16
pressure on transport and public services,
17
rising living costs, environmental issues and frustration among local residents.
18
After the pandemic, many travelers have been eager to make up for lost time.
19
This has helped revive the industry,
20
but it has also intensified pressure on already popular destinations.
21
The challenge now is not simply to attract more tourists,
22
but to manage tourism more effectively effectively.
23
Following that overview we now look more closely at how over tourism is playing out across Asia
24
and what destinations can do to manage growth more sustainably.
25
We spoke with Solin Ling-Leh,
26
a hospitality and sustainable tourism expert about the pressures facing popular destinations
27
and why success in tourism should be measured beyond visitor numbers.
28
Thank you for As tourist numbers rise across Asia,
29
what pressures are popular destinations facing and how serious is the issue of over-tourism?
30
Thank you for the question.
31
So right now, the rising of visitor number in Asia is,
32
as you mentioned, characterized as the term we often call as over tourism.
33
So in destinations like, for example,
34
in Phuket, Thailand, Bali, Indonesia,
35
or Kyoto in Japan, the excessive increase or explosion of tourism has reintroduced environmental degradation and social tension.
36
Over tourism, you know, less of over tourism as a problem for total number of tourists arriving,
37
arriving but more of a problem of concentration in space
38
and time across asia destinations are trying to manage tourism pressure
39
in different ways what strategies do you think are working best
40
especially in reducing pressure on overcrowded areas it's actually quite hard to answer
41
to say that which approach works best because different destinations are at very different stages in the destination area life cycle.
42
So there is no one solution or one approach fits all.
43
For example, in the case of Kyoto,
44
they actually look at the combined between technology,
45
like combined GPS trajectories, and with the online route and service reviews to identify the alternative construction.
46
While for Thailand, the cheaper was more high value and regional with the BCG economy model and the tooling project.
47
So they launched a direct flight that might pass the main hub that brings directly the tourists to regional destinations.
48
Beyond arrival numbers, what should destinations measure to understand whether tourism growth is sustainable and beneficial for local communities?
49
So the traditional reliance on arrival numbers as the main or primary matrix,
50
and let up the social and environmental aspect.
51
So looking beyond, you know,
52
since like, like, you're beyond 2025,
53
right now 2026, the measure of tourism impact is also have to apply for meaningful outcomes,
54
especially when you look at multiple stakeholders involved in tourism.
55
So for communities, for example,
56
success is, you know, The success factor is looked at by job creation,
57
income retention, and the preservation of cultural heritage than just the quantity of visitors passing through.
58
The second indicator is the residence inspection.
59
So basically, this indicator monitors citizens' sentiment,
60
especially regarding crowding, noise and etiquette.
61
Then we also look at infrastructure and resource law.
62
The last one is the inclusive growth metrics where it looks at the participation of women,
63
youth and even the marginalized groups in the tourism value chain.
64
Thank you for your insights.
65
So as we have learned,
66
countries across Asia are rethinking tourism beyond visitor numbers.
67
From coastal communities in Vietnam to rural destinations in China,
68
tourism is increasingly being linked with ecology,
69
culture, local livelihoods and new consumer experiences.
70
The aim is not only to attract more visitors,
71
but to create trips that bring deeper value for travelers and more sustainable benefits for communities.
72
April marks the start of the peak tourist season at Hon Yen Islet in Dac Lac, Vietnam.
73
Local cooperative members are busy taking visitors on basket boat tours to explore the area and see the coral reef,
74
while guiding them to protect the environment and avoid damaging conservation zones.
75
We show visitors scenic spots,
76
swimming areas, swift-lit caves and protected zones.
77
Hon Yian Islet is home to 17 coral species.
78
One, a hotspot polluted by plastic waste,
79
the reef was damaged by both tourists and local fishing due to weak management.
80
Today, the environment has been revived.
81
Local are protecting the reef while earning income from tourism.
82
The cooperative has successfully created and operated six all-inclusive tours.
83
We continue to support the cooperative and local community in developing tourism products linked to coral reef conservation,
84
monitoring reef health and ensuring marine sustainability.
85
We are also helping design new tours and develop sustainable tourism and local capacity."
86
Meanwhile China's rural tourism sector has maintained a strong growth momentum this year,
87
highlighting new industries and business models.
88
according to an official from China's Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs.
89
Driven by experiential tourism, the sector has seen increasingly diverse consumer experiences in the first quarter of 2026.
90
We will promote a range of distinctive,
91
diverse and premium rural itineraries,
92
create customer-centered, culturally rich and distinctive experiential products,
93
thereby generating more employment opportunities and increasing farmers' incomes.
94
The rural tourism sector generated revenue of nearly US$140 billion in 2025,
95
while villagers' annual per capita disposable income reached nearly US$6,000.

アプリをダウンロード

話したすべての文をAIが採点

スキャンしてダウンロード
スキャンしてダウンロード
TRENDING

人気動画

このビデオで話す練習をする理由

旅行が再開し、特にアジアでは観光シーズンがピークに達する中で、観光業の再生が進んでいます。このビデオでは、オーバーツーリズムの問題についての専門家の見解が述べられています。様々な観光地が直面する課題を理解することで、旅行や観光業の重要性を深く学ぶことができます。英語を学ぶ上で、実際の問題を取り上げた内容を通じて会話の文脈を身につけることは大変有益です。特に、自分の考えや意見を英語で表現する力を鍛えることができるため、IELTS スピーキング対策にも役立ちます。さらに、YouTubeで英語学習をする方法として、このビデオを利用して、実際の会話を反復練習することが推奨されます。

文法と文脈における表現

  • オーバーツーリズム: 他の場所と明確に区別される言葉で、観光地が持続可能に管理できる限界を超えて観光客が訪れることを指します。この言葉は、議論の中心にあるため、頻繁に使用されます。
  • 観光業の重要性: "Tourism is one of the world's most important economic sectors."(観光業は世界で最も重要な経済セクターの一つです)。このように、重要なフレーズを覚えることで、経済や社会についての議論を深められます。
  • 管理する: “manage tourism more effectively” (より効果的に観光を管理する)というフレーズは、動詞「manage」の使用例として、問題の解決策を提案する文脈で役立ちます。

一般的な発音の罠

このビデオでは、いくつかの難しい単語やフレーズが含まれており、発音に注意が必要です。例えば、「overtourism」という単語は、複雑な音の組み合わせを含んでいるため、特に注意が必要です。また、「destination」という言葉でも、正しいアクセントを確認することが大切です。これらを練習することは、shadowspeak プラクティスを行う際にも効果的です。繰り返し発音練習をすることで、自信を持って英語での会話に挑むことができるようになります。

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。

コーヒーをおごる