쉐도잉 연습: What's going on inside a baby's mind? - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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Hello and welcome.
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We have a very special SGMD today from New York City in partnership with the Clinton Global Initiative.
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And today we're talking about the science of success, investing in babies minds.
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Let me just tell you,
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there's something a little intimidating about doing a panel on intelligence.
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It's very hard to look good,
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I think, especially when you meet our guests in just a moment.
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But before I introduce them,
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I want you all to think for about a couple of points.
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What is intelligence?
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What is the value of intelligence?
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And how do we ensure that every child out there can reach their full potential?
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I'm a neurosurgeon and I'm fascinated with what I think is the most complex biological system in the world.
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So let's just take a moment to appreciate it.
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By the time a human embryo is five weeks old,
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it is just the size of an apple seed.
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But the brain has already begun to grow.
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By eight weeks the basic structure of the brain and central nervous system are in place.
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The neural networks are spreading out,
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and even now the nerve signals are traveling more than 150 miles an hour.
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At birth, nearly all 100 billion neurons of the human brain are already in place,
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but the brain only weighs about 25% of what it will later on.
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It's about to embark on its fastest growing period,
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quadrupling in size by the time a child finishes preschool.
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By age six, the brain is 90% of its adult size.
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During that burst of growth,
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700 new neural connections are formed every second as we gain the capacity to smile around two months,
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to talk usually around a year,
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and to dress ourselves, around the age of three.
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In those early years, in fact throughout our lives,
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the brain changes through experience,
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learning to speak, taking those first steps,
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understanding colors and shapes, forming novel thoughts.
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But as certain neurons are used more frequently,
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other unused neurons go away.
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It's a process called pruning and almost anything can shape us in those baby and toddler years.
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First words, first ice cream,
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first TV show, first argument, for better or worse.
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And here with me now, Dr. Rosemary Trullio.
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She's the Vice President of Education and Research for the Children's Television Workshop.
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Among other things, that means she's responsible for developing the curriculum that you see on Sesame Street.
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Also, Dr. Nadine Burke Harris,
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she's a pediatrician from Oakland,
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California, where she's founded the Center for Youth Wellness, which she runs.
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She's also an expert advisor to Too Small to Fail,
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an initiative which was launched by Mrs. Clinton
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and the Clinton Foundation to improve the well-being of kids from birth to age five.
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And I think you may recognize the woman right here to my left.
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Hi, Sanjay.
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Back about 40 years ago,
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I think the book was called Beyond the Best Interests of the Child.
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Ah, you've done your homework.
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Yes.
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40 years ago, you were about 10 years old.
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Yeah, I was.
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I was.
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A very precocious fifth grader.
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Yes.
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But, you know, it's interesting because we went back and looked at some of that research.
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And when you talk about educational achievements,
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we've certainly made progress in some areas.
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But over 40 years, I think most people agree,
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not nearly as much as we would have wanted as a country.
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Do you point to any particular things and say,
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here's where we sort of missed the boat?
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I think a couple of things,
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and in no particular order.
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I think that life was not as fast-paced or as stressful in many,
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many ways 40 years ago,
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and certainly even before that.
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Yes, were there problems?
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Did our parents and grandparents face a lot of difficulties?
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Absolutely.
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But income has stagnated people's economic futures don't seem as predictable and stable as they did perhaps to a prior generation.
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And that kind of stress and anxiety does affect how you interact with your children,
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and particularly your youngest children.
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I think also with the increasing ubiquity of television and now with screens of all kinds in our homes,
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I think too many people drew the wrong conclusion that,
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yes, talking, teaching your children words,
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singing to them, reading to them,
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all of that is great,
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but that people are talking on TV.
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So if we put them there or if we give them,
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you know, access to a computer or an iPad or whatever,
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you know, they're going to get that too.
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And what we now know from the brain research is that doesn't work that way.
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It's the human interaction and reinforcement.
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You talk a lot about adverse childhood experiences,
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as I read in your paper.
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Look, there are a lot of kids out there who have tremendously tough lives,
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and they face a lot of adversity.
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How do you stratify who is going to be able to rise through
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that and maybe even be better because of it and those who are just going to be really harmed by it?
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Yeah, so the term adverse childhood experiences comes from the seminal study
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that was done by the CDC and Kaiser Permanente and
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when they looked at 17 and a half thousand adults what they found was
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that folks who had greater exposure to these adverse childhood experiences including abuse
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and neglect or household dysfunction like parental mental illness or parental incarceration or domestic violence,
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those folks had dramatically increased risk of chronic disease.
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And when we look at individual susceptibility to that,
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what the science shows us is that it's a combination between nature and nurture.
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It has to do with our biology,
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but it also has to do with the environment.
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And frankly, we know that early detection makes a big difference.
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And particularly when we're thinking about young children,
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we know that children's exposure to adversity,
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the earlier we intervene, the better the outcome.
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Is it important, Secretary Clinton,
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for two parents to be involved?
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You wrote the book, It Takes a Village.
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I mean, two parents, one parent.
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Does it have to be a parent to provide some of these buffers that Dr. Burke Harris is talking about?
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Well, I think as the doctor said,
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there are other ways to provide that buffer.
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You know, sometimes it is a grandparent,
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sometimes it's an older sibling or an aunt or an uncle.
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You know, every child, though,
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needs a buffer, or as I like to say,
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every child needs a champion.
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And that champion has to,
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you know, really invest in that child,
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and to a certain extent,
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buffer and protect that child from whatever the other stresses are.

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아기의 뇌가 성장하는 과정에 대한 과학적 논의는 언어 습득 및 커뮤니케이션에 대한 깊은 통찰을 제공합니다. 이 비디오는 아기의 뇌 발달에 대한 흥미로운 정보와 함께, 우리가 매일 접하는 언어의 다양성과 중요성을 강조합니다. 이러한 주제를 통해 영어 회화 연습을 하고자 하는 학습자들은 아기의 두뇌 발달, 감정 표현, 그리고 사고의 밝은 미래에 대한 이야기를 듣게 됩니다. 이런 맥락에서 연습하는 것은 IELTS 스피킹 및 일상 대화에서 자신감을 높일 수 있는 훌륭한 기회를 제공합니다. 특히, shadowspeak 기법을 활용하면 듣기 이해력을 높이고, 발음 및 억양을 개선할 수 있습니다.

문맥 속 문법 및 표현

이 비디오에서 사용된 몇 가지 주요 문법 구조를 살펴보면 다음과 같습니다:

  • “There’s something intimidating about…” - 이 표현은 불안감을 표현할 때 유용하며, 비슷한 상황에서 다양한 표현으로 응용할 수 있습니다.
  • “What is the value of intelligence?” - 질문형 구문을 통해 대화의 깊이를 더할 수 있고, 의견을 나누는 데 효과적입니다.
  • “The brain is changing through experience.” - 현재 진행형을 사용한 이 문장은 변화의 지속성을 강조합니다. 영어든 한국어든 이를 활용하여 비슷한 맥락을 전달할 수 있습니다.

이러한 표현들을 연습하면서 아기의 뇌 발달과 같은 주제를 바탕으로 shadow speak 연습을 하면, 자신감 있는 대화가 가능해질 것입니다.

일반적인 발음 함정

비디오 중에 주의해야 할 발음이나 억양이 있습니다:

  • “neural networks” - ‘뉴럴 네트워크’를 발음할 때, ‘뉴’와 ‘널’의 구분에 유의하여 자연스럽게 이어서 발음해야 합니다.
  • “pruning” - 이 단어는 ‘프루닝’처럼 발음하며, ‘ㅜ’와 ‘우’의 발음 차이에 주의가 필요합니다. 같은 맥락에서 연습하면 발음 개선에 큰 도움이 됩니다.
  • “development” - 이 단어는 ‘디벨롭먼트’처럼 강세를 주어 발음하는 것이 중요하며, 느리게 연습하면서 천천히 발음하는 것이 좋습니다.

이런 발음 함정을 인식하고 연습하는 것은 shadowspeaks 기법을 통해 언어 능력을 더욱 향상시키는 데 필수적입니다.

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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