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In a recent video, I talked about how to read more books,
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In a recent video, I talked about how to read more books,
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but I want to shift the focus a little bit
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because I would argue that there's something even more valuable to you as a reader and perhaps as a person,
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and that is your ability to read well.
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Quantity isn't always quality, and you could read for several hours a day every day,
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but that doesn't necessarily mean that you're going to understand
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or connect with the heart and soul of what an author or a book is really saying.
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I'm reminded of Donna Tartt's novel, The Secret History.
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One of the characters, Julian Morrow,
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he said something like, It's better to know one book intimately than to know a hundred superficially.
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I believe in that, at least in spirit.
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and I believe that becoming a better reader is a worthwhile pursuit.
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So today I want to shift the focus from how you can read more to how you can read better.
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You know people have a lot of different ideas about what it means to be a good reader or a better reader.
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You know for me it has nothing to do with being able to read faster
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and a lot of people will also tell you that to be a good reader
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you have to read the really hard and really challenging books.
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Now, challenging yourself matters, of course,
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and as you grow as a reader,
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you'll naturally gravitate toward, you know,
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more demanding books, but becoming a good reader usually happens by working with material that's just beyond your current level.
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You know, challenging enough to stretch you a little bit,
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but not so difficult that comprehension becomes a problem.
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Reading extremely hard books tends to be what skilled readers can handle you know after they've developed the necessary vocabulary
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or or the the attention or the processing ability you know in
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that sense reading very difficult books is more often the outcome
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of having strong reading skills rather than the primary method for building them
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so
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when you boil it down being a good reader is primarily
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about three different things it's about understanding more it's about remembering more
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and then being able to do these two things flexibly across different kinds of texts.
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Now, another thing that you'll often hear people say is
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that you can build reading comprehension skills just by reading lots of books.
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And there are grains of truth to that.
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The more you read, the more vocabulary you absorb,
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the more familiar you become with how sentences and stories tend to work.
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But there's a limit to how far just simple exposure will take you.
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You know, it helps, sure, but it helps slowly.
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And that kind of undirected practice mostly improves comprehension in a sort of broad or general way.
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But one thing that can really accelerate your progress is deliberate, focused practice.
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We have decades of research showing that when you focus on specific reading skills,
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things like summarizing or noticing how a text is organized or,
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you know, making inferences, your comprehension improves and it improves more quickly.
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And this holds true for adults or more developed readers as well.
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So my first suggestion is not just that you practice,
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but that you practice in a way that'll help you isolate those cognitive processes.
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Now, to help with this for most people,
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I would recommend How to Read a Book by Adler and Van Doren.
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This is a classic.
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For me, it was assigned reading when I was an undergraduate it,
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but honestly, I would recommend it for anyone,
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whether you're a student or a serious reader or even a casual reader.
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If you're interested in improving your reading comprehension,
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then this is a great resource.
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In a way, it kind of reads like a manual for active and intentional reading.
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The main gist of this is that reading isn't just one skill.
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It's really a set of progressively deeper levels of cognitive processing.
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So they structure the whole book around these levels.
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There's four of them all together,
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and each has its own goals and its own techniques.
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And there's a lot here also for both fiction and nonfiction.
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It's a really fantastic resource.
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I can't recommend it enough.
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You know, making notes is probably the most effective thing you can do for remembering what you read.
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However, it's only going to help when you do something new with the information.
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Simply copying over sentences word for word,
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that's not really gonna move the needle.
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You need to transform the text in some way.
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For example, you could write a basic one-page summary for each chapter,
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or maybe for the whole story,
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you know, whenever you're finished.
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A really small and simple thing to do,
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but memory strengthens when you have to reconstruct the story and the characters in your own mind.
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Other things you could do is maybe restate an idea from the book in your own words,
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or you could jot down a quick reaction,
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or you could pose questions about what you're reading, you know, make inferences.
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You know, those moments of mental effort are what's going to make the story stick.
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And the same is true for underlining and highlighting.
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I mean, don't get me wrong.
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I underline too.
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There's nothing wrong with that.
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But on its own, that kind of passive marking has a surprisingly small effect on long-term memory.
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So if you do mark or highlight something on a page,
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follow it up with a brief note in the margin
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or even some kind of simple that you've designated in advance to kind of note something that's meaningful,
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an asterisk or a question mark,
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anything that leaves a breadcrumb trail for your mind to return to later.
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But keep it simple.
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You want to still enjoy reading without making it feel like homework.
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You just want a visible record of your thinking.
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Now, another thing that you can do that has really nothing to do with note-taking,
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but another thing
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that you can do is spread your reading out across several
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different sessions instead of trying to cram it all into a single long session.
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When you do this, you're taking advantage of what psychologists call the spacing effect.
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It sounds a little counterintuitive,
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but actually a little forgetting between sessions is actually good for memory because each time you return to the book,
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your brain has to reconstruct the ideas.
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It has to reconstruct the characters and kind of rebuild the world.
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and that act of rebuilding is what makes the memory stick.
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So if you're like me and you actually enjoy reading during these really long and uninterrupted sessions,
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try to take a break once in a while.
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Get some air, make some coffee, make some tea.
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Just spend a few moments reflecting on what you've read.
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Even brief spaced out sessions create stronger,
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more durable understanding than one giant push.
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You know, different types of books make different demands on your attention.
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You don't read a poem the same way that you read a mystery novel,
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and you wouldn't read philosophy the same way you would, say, a memoir.
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And even within fiction, you know,
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a plot-driven thriller asks for something very different than,
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say, you know, Toni Morrison or Virginia Woolf.
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One of the easiest ways to start practicing this is simply to notice what kind of text you're reading
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and then let that shape your approach.
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For example, with plot-heavy fiction,
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you might focus on maybe tracking events or character motivations.
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You know, what do people want?
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What do they fear?
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What do they choose?
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With literary fiction, your attention might shift toward language or theme or symbolism.
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And then with nonfiction, you might look for structure,
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how arguments are built, how evidence is organized,
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or what problem is the author trying to solve?
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I mentioned how to read a book earlier.
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Not only is this a great resource for the kind of focused practice I mentioned already,
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but it's also an excellent guide for helping you understand these different types of books.
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For example, how to read practical books,
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how to read imaginative literature,
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reading stories, plays, and poems,
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how to read history, how to read science and mathematics,
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how to read philosophy, how to read social science.
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This is a wonderful guide for how to navigate all of those different kinds of books.
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I can't recommend it enough.
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And it's great because it does get easier.
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You know, over time, your brain begins to recognize these patterns automatically.
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You know, when you encounter a dense passage, you'll naturally slow down.
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Or when you hit a familiar genre,
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you'll pick up cues more quickly.
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When the writing gets abstract or philosophical,
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you'll instinctively switch to a more critical or reflective mode.
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Ultimately, being a flexible reader is about awareness.
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Awareness of the text, awareness of your thinking,
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an awareness of when to lean in and when to slow down.
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And that's when reading becomes not only easier,
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but richer and deeper and far more rewarding.

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이번 수업에서는 독서 능력을 향상시키기 위한 방법에 대해 이야기합니다. 많은 사람들이 독서량에 집중하지만, 독서의 질 또한 중요합니다. 특히, 특정 독서 기술을 학습하고 연습하는 것이 comprehension(이해력)을 높이는 데 얼마나 도움이 되는지 설명할 것입니다. 독서를 통해 더 많은 어휘를 습득하고, 복잡한 텍스트를 이해할 수 있게 되도록 하는 것이 최종 목표입니다. 이런 과정에서 shadow speak와 같은 기법을 활용하면, 본인의 발음과 영어 스피치를 개선하는 데 큰 도움이 되므로 함께 연습해보세요.

주요 어휘 및 표현

  • 이해하다 (understand)
  • 기억하다 (remember)
  • 어휘 (vocabulary)
  • 요약하다 (summarizing)
  • 추론하다 (making inferences)
  • 텍스트 구성 (text organization)
  • 도전적인 (challenging)
  • 읽기 능력 (reading skills)

연습 팁

효과적인 shadowing을 위해 이 비디오의 템포에 주의하세요. 말하는 속도와 억양을 잘 맞추는 것이 중요합니다. 각 문장을 듣고 즉시 따라 말해 보세요. 이 방법은 영어 발음 교정과 스피킹 능력 향상에 매우 효과적입니다. 비디오의 내용을 반복적으로 듣고 발음하거나, 읽기 스킬이 필요할 때마다 shadowspeaks의 특정 기술들을 활용해 보세요. 예를 들어, IELTS 스피킹 준비를 하는 경우, 많은 다양한 텍스트를 읽고 요약하는 연습이 필요합니다. 매일 정해진 시간에 30분에서 1시간 정도는 그런 연습을 하여 자신감을 키우세요. 이 과정을 통해 독서 뿐만 아니라 발음과 언어 사용 능력 또한 크게 향상될 것입니다.

쉐도잉이란? 영어 실력을 빠르게 키우는 과학적 방법

쉐도잉(Shadowing)은 원래 전문 통역사 훈련을 위해 개발된 언어 학습 기법으로, 다언어 학자인 Dr. Alexander Arguelles에 의해 대중화된 방법입니다. 핵심 원리는 간단하지만 매우 강력합니다: 원어민의 영어를 들으면서 1~2초의 짧은 지연으로 즉시 소리 내어 따라 말하는 것——마치 '그림자(shadow)'처럼 화자를 따라가는 것입니다. 문법 공부나 수동적인 청취와 달리, 쉐도잉은 뇌와 입 근육이 동시에 실시간으로 영어를 처리하고 재현하도록 훈련합니다. 연구에 따르면 이 방법은 발음 정확도, 억양, 리듬, 연음, 청취력, 말하기 유창성을 크게 향상시킵니다. IELTS 스피킹 준비와 자연스러운 영어 소통을 원하는 분들에게 특히 효과적입니다.

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