쉐도잉 연습: MAY SALE 60-70% Off American Accent Training Courses - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

C1
Have you ever been in an English speaking situation where you felt that you couldn't fully express yourself?
⏸ 일시 정지
207 문장
문장이 너무 짧거나 길면 Edit를 눌러 조정하세요.
1
Have you ever been in an English speaking situation where you felt that you couldn't fully express yourself?
2
You're certainly not alone.
3
I want to introduce you to three people.
4
A software engineer, a physician, and a senior professional.
5
All brilliant at what they do.
6
All being underestimated every day because of how they sound in English.
7
By the end of this video,
8
I'll show you exactly how that changes.
9
This is May.
10
She's a software engineer at a company she worked very hard to get into.
11
She's sharp, prepared, and well-respected by people who know her work.
12
But in meetings, she goes quiet.
13
Not because she has nothing to say,
14
she always has something to say.
15
But because by the time she's translated the thought,
16
shaped it into English, checked it,
17
and decided it was safe to say,
18
the conversation has moved on.
19
Someone else has said it.
20
And May sits there feeling invisible,
21
holding an idea that never made it out of her mouth.
22
Then there's Andre.
23
He's a physician.
24
He trained for over a decade.
25
He's meticulous, compassionate, and deeply knowledgeable.
26
But every day before rounds, he rehearses.
27
He thinks through what he's going to say,
28
how he's going to say it,
29
which words to avoid because they're harder to pronounce,
30
which sentences to simplify so they come out clearly.
31
He prepares twice as long as his colleagues and still walks into every room bracing for the moment someone's expression shifts.
32
That small, subtle recalibration that tells him they've clocked his accent and adjusted their expectations.
33
He goes home exhausted, not from the medicine,
34
from the management of speaking in English.
35
And Fatima.
36
She has a master's degree.
37
She has 15 years of experience in her field.
38
She is by any measure an expert,
39
but in job interviews, on calls with senior executives,
40
at conferences where she knows the material better than half the people in the room,
41
she feels like she's auditioning for a level of respect she's already earned.
42
The credential is there.
43
The expertise is there.
44
But somehow, the sound of her voice keeps arriving before the substance of what she's saying.
45
And it costs her every time.
46
May, Andre, and Fatima all come from different places,
47
work in different fields, carry different versions of this weight.
48
But they share something.
49
The gap between who they are and the judgment of what people think they are based on their English speaking ability.
50
The gap between what they know and what people hear.
51
Between the life they've built and the life that feels just slightly out of reach because of how they sound in English.
52
If you recognize yourself in any of them,
53
this video is for you.
54
Now, I want to name something because I think once you hear it,
55
a lot of things will make more sense.
56
What Andre experiences every morning before rounds has a name.
57
I call it the performance tax.
58
It's the cognitive and emotional energy you spend every single day managing how you sound,
59
instead of focusing on what you're saying.
60
It's the rehearsing before you speak,
61
the monitoring while you speak,
62
the replaying after you speak,
63
wondering how it landed, whether the accent got in the way,
64
whether you should have said it differently.
65
Native speakers don't pay this tax.
66
They just speak.
67
You're doing two things at once every time in every professional situation,
68
communicating and managing the perception of how you communicate.
69
That is genuinely exhausting work.
70
And most people have been doing it for so long,
71
they've stopped noticing how much it costs them.
72
Here's what makes it harder.
73
The performance tax compounds.
74
The more you pay it,
75
the more you avoid the situations that trigger it.
76
You stop raising your hand in meetings.
77
You let moments pass.
78
You self-edit before you even begin.
79
And avoidance feels like relief in the short term.
80
But over time, it widens the gap between where you are and where your expertise could have taken you by now.
81
This is not a motivation problem.
82
It's not a willpower problem.
83
You cannot out-discipline this tax.
84
The only way to stop paying it is to change the underlying habit,
85
the physical habit of how your mouth,
86
tongue, and breath move when you speak English.
87
This is exactly what willpower cannot do,
88
and it's exactly what the right method,
89
applied consistently over time, can.
90
I'm Rachel.
91
I started my career as an opera singer and a computer programmer.
92
Two things that have almost nothing in common,
93
except that both taught me something I couldn't have learned any other way.
94
Opera taught me the voice at a physical level,
95
how the body produces sound,
96
how breath and placement and muscle memory shape every word that comes out of your mouth.
97
Programming taught me systems, how to take something genuinely complex and break it into logical,
98
repeatable steps that produce a reliable result.
99
Over time, these two things collided with the third, my passion for language.
100
And for the non-native English speakers I kept meeting,
101
these brilliant, accomplished, interesting people who are being underestimated every day because of how they sounded.
102
And so Rachel's English Academy was born.
103
Over 50,000 students have come through the Academy,
104
and what I've learned from all of them is this.
105
The problem is almost never effort.
106
May is not lazy.
107
Andre is not careless.
108
Fatima is not uninvested.
109
The problem is the tools they were given.
110
The apps, the group classes,
111
the focus on grammar, reading, and writing.
112
These things were not built to transform English speaking skills.
113
Here's the truth about the American accent most programs don't tell you.
114
Changing the way you speak is a physical process.
115
The habit lives in your body,
116
in your mouth, in your tongue,
117
your muscles, even your mindset.
118
It's been there for decades.
119
You cannot think your way out of it.
120
You cannot will your way out of it in four, eight, 12 weeks.
121
You have to train your way out of it,
122
focused and consistently with the right method and enough time for your body to actually change.
123
And when that happens, when the physical habit shifts,
124
the performance tax goes down.
125
Not because you're trying harder,
126
but because you don't have to try harder.
127
That's what Rachel's English Academy is built for.
128
It is the habit training program that addresses the physical process.
129
When you join, you start with essentials.
130
Five to six weeks, about 25 minutes a day.
131
Every day you log in,
132
there's exactly one thing waiting for you.
133
I've already decided what it is.
134
You don't waste a single minute figuring out where to go or what to do.
135
You just do the training.
136
You just do the one part for that day.
137
The training combines video, visualization,
138
and a significant amount of focused audio work, listening and speaking.
139
You'll also record yourself regularly because learning to hear your own voice clearly to analyze it,
140
to catch what's shifting becomes one of your most important skills.
141
After Essentials, you move into the Daily Plan.
142
Same structure, one step per day,
143
and this is not a group class,
144
which means there's no getting behind.
145
If life interrupts you for a few days,
146
you come back and pick up exactly where you left off.
147
No lost progress, no starting over.
148
With your subscription, you also get teacher feedback.
149
Real teachers, not AI, watch your recordings and tell you specifically what they hear and exactly what to adjust.
150
I've tested a lot of AI tools for accent feedback and while they do some things adequately,
151
they miss the nuance that actually matters when it comes to sounding natural and fully human.
152
That feedback is built into your 25 minutes.
153
It's part of what I'm bringing to this.
154
Because here's how I think about the Academy.
155
I take the first half of the responsibility for your transformation,
156
the method, the materials, the structure,
157
the feedback, the guidance, that's all mine.
158
All I ask from you is the second half, the time.
159
About 25 minutes a day.
160
You bring that, I bring everything else.
161
For May, 25 minutes a day is the difference between ideas that stay trapped and ideas that impress people.
162
For Andre, it's the difference between starting every day braced and starting every day ready.
163
For Fatima, it's finally closing the gap between the expert she is and the expert the room recognizes when she walks in.
164
On the first day in the academy,
165
I have every student do one exercise where they record something very specific.
166
Then, after six days of training,
167
they record the same thing,
168
and I ask them to go back and listen to both recordings, watch both videos.
169
And I want them to reflect, did anything change?
170
Does anything sound more natural now?
171
And they're always surprised, yes.
172
After just six days of this focused training, change has happened.
173
They do sound more natural and they do feel more confident.
174
I didn't expect that change at the beginning.
175
I really noticed the difference by watching the two videos together.
176
It really changed my confidence of speaking English.
177
When I close my eyes and listen to the second video,
178
I'm pretty sure it sounds very native and that's surprising.
179
Does it sound more American?
180
Yes, I feel the second video sounds more American, like more musical.
181
It flows way better, it feels way more natural.
182
And yeah, definitely there's not like some huge difference,
183
but there's a big noticeable difference.
184
Well, I'm happy to say that I do hear the difference between the first video to the second.
185
I'm happy with the results.
186
It's been a great first week.
187
The average student spends about six months in the academy.
188
If you can commit 25 minutes a day for six months,
189
you will hear the difference in your voice.
190
You'll feel it in your body.
191
You'll notice it in the way conversations go.
192
The moments that you used to let pass by that now you step into.
193
Many students don't want to stop at six months
194
because by then they can feel that it's working and they want more of that feeling.
195
This week I'm running my May sale,
196
one week, big discounts, 60% off, 70% off.
197
We have various options but you can get started for as little as $19 your first month
198
and that includes community with teacher feedback.
199
Sign up at rachelsinusacademy.com sign up now.
200
I offer a 30-day money-back guarantee.
201
If you sign up and don't think this method is right for you,
202
just let us know.
203
Just request a refund and we can take care of that quickly and easily.
204
Visit RachelsEnglishAcademy.com.
205
You've been carrying this long enough.
206
You bring the time, I'll bring everything else.
207
Let's close the gap.

앱 다운로드

당신이 말하는 모든 문장을 AI가 채점

TRENDING

인기 동영상

맥락 및 배경

영어를 사용하는 상황에서 자신의 생각을 충분히 표현하지 못한 경험이 있나요? 이러한 경험은 많은 영어 학습자에게 공통적입니다. 이 비디오에서는 소프트웨어 엔지니어 메이, 의사 안드레, 그리고 15년 경력의 전문가 파티마를 소개합니다. 이들은 각기 다르지만, 영어 발음과 억양 때문에 자신의 전문성과 능력에 대한 평가가 왜곡되고 있습니다. 그들은 자신이 알고 있는 것과 대중이 듣는 것 사이의 간극을 경험하며, 이는 직장에서의 커뮤니케이션 능력에 큰 영향을 미치고 있습니다.

일상 생활을 위한 주요 5개 표현

  • “Can you clarify that?” - 상대방에게 명확한 설명을 요청할 때 유용합니다.
  • “I see your point.” - 상대의 의견을 이해했음을 표시하는 표현입니다.
  • “Would you mind repeating that?” - 상대방의 말을 다시 반복해달라는 정중한 요청입니다.
  • “That’s interesting; tell me more.” - 대화의 흐름을 이어가며 상대방에게 더 많은 정보를 요구하는 표현입니다.
  • “Let me think about that.” - 생각할 시간을 요청할 때 사용합니다.

단계별 쉐도잉 가이드

이 비디오의 내용을 보다 잘 이해하고, 표현을 자연스럽게 구사하기 위해 아래의 단계를 따르세요:

  1. 듣기: 비디오를 처음 봤을 때, 전체 내용을 이해하려고 노력하세요. 긴장하지 말고 따라갈 수 있는 수준에서 들어보세요.
  2. 쉐도잉: 비디오를 다시 보며 화자의 발음을 따라 해보세요. 이때 ‘shadowspeaks’ 기법을 사용하여 각 단어의 발음과 억양을 집중적으로 연습합니다.
  3. 반복 연습: 목소리를 녹음해 보세요. 그리고 자신의 발음과 비디오 속 화자의 발음을 비교해보며 수정할 부분 찾기.
  4. 상황 연습: 메이, 안드레, 파티마와 비슷한 상황을 상상하고, 그들이 사용한 표현을 실제 상황에서 활용해보세요.
  5. 피드백 받기: 친구나 선생님에게 발음과 표현에 대한 피드백을 요청하여 개선해 나가세요.

꾸준한 연습과 피드백을 통해 영어 발음 교정을 이뤄내고, 자연스러운 영어 쉐도잉이 가능해질 것입니다. 자신의 목소리에 대한 자신감을 얻고, 원하는 메시지를 정확하게 전달할 수 있는 기회를 만들어보세요.

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.

커피 한 잔 사주기