쉐도잉 연습: ENGLISH SPEECH | SHAKIRA: Education Changes the World (English Subtitles) - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

B2
Good morning Your Highness, excellences, friends, and colleagues.
⏸ 일시 정지
43 문장
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1
Good morning Your Highness, excellences, friends, and colleagues.
2
I would like to thank you for the opportunity to be here today.
3
It's also an honor to join forces with Educated Child, an organization led by a woman who is an amazing role model — a woman who has shown such relentless dedication to getting every child in school.
4
This is such an exciting day for us because it marks the beginning of a new era in my home country Colombia.
5
Most of you may know me as an artist, as an entertainer, and that's indeed my calling and what I've been doing since I was 13 years old, but I never would have imagined when I started out that my work as an artist would end up being the vehicle for me to serve my greater purpose in life of working towards eradicating poverty through the power of Education.
6
As a Colombian citizen inequality as a concept that sadly one becomes very familiar with at a very young age.
7
It's a country like many others in Latin America where a few have a lot; a lot have almost nothing and where if you're born poor, you will almost certainly die poor.
8
Where people don't access equal opportunities, and because of that generation after generation, after generation live trapped in the same vicious cycle fed by prejudice and inaction.
9
Growing up in my country when I was around eight years old, I remember I saw kids my age who, instead of being in school were already working in the streets, were barefoot in the park.
10
Kids like me whose reality was completely different than mine only because of the circumstances into which they were born.
11
It was really hard for me to accept that to accept that something so unjust didn't have a solution.
12
There had to be something that could be done.
13
So I often asked myself why the adults, around me were so resigned to the fact that these kids who were just like me or even their own children we're living in a parallel reality so different and so cruel.
14
As Kofi Annan put it, poverty is intolerable in a world of plenty, so as soon as I had some success, the first thing I wanted to do was to invest as many resources I could into what later would become the most meaningful project of my life, working for children.
15
So I set out to find a team, a team of people who dream big and worked hard and thought like me to help me right the wrongs that I had witnessed throughout my entire childhood, and that's when our foundation The Barefoot Foundation, ‘Pies Descalzos Fundacion’ was born.
16
I knew, and I was only 18 years old then, but I knew that I wanted to focus on children and improving their lives, but I didn't know where to start.
17
So, I really felt that I needed to learn what the roots of inequality and low social mobility were.
18
So, I decided to study the reasons why children were working in the streets or why some children were being recruited by the violent organizations, like the paramilitary or the guerrillas, why were so many children suffering from chronic malnutrition and I realized that most of the issues that children face in my country had and have a common denominator; the lack of access to quality education.
19
To me, it became crystal clear that Education was a surest way to give all these kids the best fighting chance of improving their circumstances in life because Education is the great equalizer.
20
When I started building schools in Colombia, which shows the most remote areas, areas where there was literally nothing, no infrastructure, no paved roads, no electricity, no potable water, and we decided to build in those places but not only build schools but state-of-the-art schools.
21
Schools with comprehensive models that included ECD programs, school feeding programs, parent and teacher training, and another very important part is we've decided to engage the government as a strategic partner and made it nearly impossible for them to say no to doing their part by showing them results through our holistic model that really proved to work.
22
We noticed that as soon as a school is built in those places, everything is transformed.
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The improvements to the infrastructure were jaw-dropping electricity, and potable water were made available, made accessible.
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Roads were paved, malnutrition plummeted, but the best part of all is the academic results, the kids really responded academically, and now those kids who could have been recruited by the guerrillas or paramilitaries or that could have had a completely different outcomes for their lives, they're now on their way to the University and thriving in their communities.
25
Some of them are athletes; some of them are professionals.
26
That's why… I'm so…It really is a thrill to work for Education that's why I'm so passionate about it because I've really seen results that are as palpable as this podium and seeing all these success stories that have a name and a last name has been the one of the most rewarding things I've done in my lifetime even more so than winning Grammys, I think.
27
Now that said, our work is far from being done, many developing countries are still rife with inequality and internal conflict, and there are a lot of kids who still need to be reached.
28
History is not only the past.
29
History it's made every day in the present, and what matters now is how we go forward and how we'll fix what's wrong, and that is the real challenge.
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This is the goal of the SDGs and what people like Her Highness and myself, and so many more of you who are adamant about achieving are here for.
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Facts don't lie, and numbers show what an incredible return on investment a quality education provides.
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For instance, if all students in low-income countries left primary school with basic reading skills, a hundred and seventy-one million people could be lifted out of poverty.
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Systemic change often begins from the bottom up rather than the top down.
34
The government must take responsibility, and we should all put as much pressure as we possibly can, but the rest of all the civil society should also do their part.
35
What we have discovered both here IPS discuss and educated child is that many times only one single barrier to entry, such as no access to transportation or basic needs like a functioning bathroom, can prevent a kid from attending school or even put them at risk of dropping out.
36
Sometimes all it takes to change a child's life is the security of a hot meal in school or the ease of being able to hop on a bus that will leave you safely at your classroom door, it's as simple as that, and these are simple interventions, and they don't cost a lot.
37
The biggest effort really is in mapping the communities; in going door-to-door searching for the out of school children talking to the parents talking to their families, giving a name and putting a story behind these children is the first step to start rewriting their story.
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Over the next three years, we pledge to get fifty-four thousand kids who are out of school or at risk of drop out into the educational system.
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Ultimately, more than two hundred ninety-five thousand people will benefit from this project, including children, teachers, families, and community members.
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New schools and classrooms will be built, school kits and uniforms will be distributed; children will be enrolled in school, feeding, and transportation programs.
41
Teachers will be trained in strategies and how to identify those students who are at risk so they can receive psycho-social support, and we are extremely confident that this partnership is only the beginning and will be the model to replicate throughout my country until not a single child is out of school.
42
This is our responsibility...Thank you...This is our responsibility to our children and our debt to fulfill for the generations to come.
43
Thank you very much.

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이 비디오는 유명 아티스트 샤키라가 교육의 중요성과 사회적 불평등 문제에 대해 이야기하는 감동적인 순간을 담고 있습니다. 그녀의 연설을 통해 독특한 문화적 배경과 개인적인 경험을 알 수 있으며, 이는 영어를 배우는 여러분에게 매우 소중한 자료가 됩니다. 유튜브 영어 공부는 단순한 단어 암기에서 벗어나, 실제 상황에서의 대화를 연습하는 데 큰 도움이 됩니다. 이 비디오의 내용을 따라 하면서 영어 쉐도잉 기법을 활용하면, 발음과 억양을 자연스럽게 익힐 수 있습니다.

문법 및 표현 분석

샤키라의 연설에서 사용된 몇 가지 주요 문법 구조와 표현을 소개하겠습니다:

  • “I would like to thank you”: 정중한 감사 표현으로, 상대방에 대한 존중을 나타내는 문장입니다.
  • “It became crystal clear that”: 어떤 사실이 명확해졌음을 강조하는 표현으로, 그 뒤에 오는 문장이 중요한 정보를 전달합니다.
  • “I set out to find a team”: 목표를 가지고 행동하기 시작한다는 뜻으로, 자기결정과 행동력을 표현합니다.
  • “What matters now is”: 현재의 중요성을 강조하며, 상황이나 문제를 해결하는 데 초점을 맞춘 표현입니다.

이러한 표현들은 영어 회화 연습에서 자주 사용되며, 대화를 보다 풍부하게 만들어 줍니다.

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  • “Education”: /ˌɛdʒʊˈkeɪʃən/으로 발음되며, 강세가 두 번째 음절에 있습니다.
  • “Poverty” : /ˈpɑvərti/로 발음되며, 자주 잘못 발음되는 단어 중 하나입니다.
  • “Circumstances”: /ˈsɜrkəmˌstænsɪz/로 발음되며, 또렷하게 발음하는 것이 중요합니다.

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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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