Практика Shadowing: How To Learn So Fast It’s Almost Unfair - Изучайте разговорный английский с YouTube

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I grew up a poor kid in Mumbai who struggled in school, who struggled with learning.
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I grew up a poor kid in Mumbai who struggled in school, who struggled with learning.
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Today, I am an MIT grad, former CEO, and board advisor to billion-dollar companies.
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And it's not because I'm smarter or read more, but because I learn how to learn faster than everyone around me.
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And here's the truth.
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Intelligence is a commodity in the world of AI today.
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Any skill advantage you have is temporary.
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The only real edge is how you learn and how fast you can stay ahead.
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So in this video, I'm not going to give you any hacks.
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I'll share with you how our brains actually work and show you a learning system that puts you in the top 1% even if you've always felt like a slow learner.
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But first, you need to understand why 99% of people fail at learning.
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Your brain weighs only three pounds but it burns up to 20 percent of your body's total fuel one
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of his hungriest part is your prefrontal cortex this is the ceo function of your brain every new theory
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every new idea you cram into that region spikes up the demand for glucose and
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oxygen and that's metabolically very expensive this region is your tiny cognitive bowl 99 of the learners
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try to learn by jamming and cramming now if you dump a gallon of theory into a four ounce bowl how much do
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you think it will retain well exactly four ounces of it right and it's a trap that has an almost
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100 failure rate today's ai can run millions of processes in parallel but our human brain cannot do that we're Built for serial learning, serial processing, one transfer at a time.
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So give yourself and your brain a break.
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Now the next thing you have to understand if you want to learn like the top one percent is that your brain is lying to you.
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Carnegie Mellon University tested an adaptive learning system for its students.
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The material would get increasingly difficult based on the students prior success.
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Now of course students at CMU totally hated it, but they ended up learning twice as much as those who took the standard test.
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And that's the point we miss sometimes.
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We feel friction and we assume failure.
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Neuroscience calls it the generation effect.
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The harder you work to generate the answer, the deeper it's wired in your brain.
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99% of us use AI as a crutch, not as a coach.
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Your brain doesn't hate struggle.
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It hungers for it.
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The real question is, how do you feed it?
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Well, for that, we have to build a better learning system, and I call it the 3C protocol.
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Compress, compile, and consolidate.
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Each step accelerates your learning machine.
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And when you fire all three of them, you will break out of the orbit of the ordinary.
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So let's dive into the first C, compress.
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The best way to learn that is from one of the best chess players.
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If you watch Magnus Carlsen sitting down at the chessboard, he's not thinking about any specific move.
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What's happening in his brain is really fascinating.
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Cognitive studies on chess grandmasters estimate that they can internalize 50,000 or even 100,000 patterns on the chessboard,
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but they're not memorizing they compress what they have learned into patterns that their brain can actually handle now why do they
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have to do that because recent research shows that our brain can only juggle about four independent ideas at a time any more than that and it drops the ball
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so the first c is compressed and it's not about memorizing more it is about reducing many ideas into fewer
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stronger chunks and patterns that your brain can carry so how do you actually compress the first step is selection here's
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an example when i want to learn from a book i first compress i ask what's the 20 of the book that i
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must read that will give me 80 of the benefit most books are just about one single idea so i read only selective chapters sometimes i would read them them more than once until it sinks in.
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That is selection.
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Always pick the 20% that matters.
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Then comes association.
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A paper in Science Magazine showed that you can't learn something new until you connect it to something you already know.
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That's the secret behind mastering how you learn.
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You have to ask, where have I seen this idea before?
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How does it connect to something I already know?
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This This is why Magnus Carlsen wins, right?
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Because he connects a new move to an old pattern.
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He sees the harmony.
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Then comes chunking.
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This is the third step.
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You take these ideas and compress them into a simple model.
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It could be anything.
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A drawing, a short summary, a metaphor you can remember, a song in your head.
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99% of us get overloaded, but the top 1% compress before they consume.
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But the next C is about how you cut down the tree, compile.
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A lot of you might have watched a movie called Rain Man, and it was actually based on a real person.
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His name was Kim Peek.
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Kim grew up in the Midwest.
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He was a savant, kind of like walking, talking Google.
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He could reportedly recall every word of any of the 12,000 books he had read.
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And he could also add events tied to that day.
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He would tell you exactly what happened that day.
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And his unique abilities were linked to his brain's unusual design.
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His brain scans found that the bridge between his brain's hemispheres was missing completely from birth.
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But here's the part that broke my heart, that uniqueness also made his daily life very difficult to navigate.
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His father would have to take care of his basic needs that you and I take for granted.
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He lived with his father until he passed away at 58, never got married.
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Kim had these incredible gifts, but he had difficulty mastering simple chores and social cues.
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It tells you that memory alone is not mastery.
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You can store the entire world and still struggle to live in it.
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That's Kim's tragedy.
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And this is the 99% trap.
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We focus on the goal of hoarding information and mistake consumption for learning.
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And you need three things to do that.
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The timer, the test, and the tools.
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The timer is about managing your learning cadence.
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This is called the ultradian cycle.
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Your brain operates in 90-minute cycles.
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Then it needs to rest.
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So you get about 90 minutes of peak focus, and then your brain must rest for at least about 20 minutes.
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So here's something actionable.
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Look at your weekly calendar.
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Do you have one or two blocks of deep work?
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If yes, then use this timer.
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90 minutes of deep work plus 20 minutes of rest.
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Have one or two such blocks per week and protect them ruthlessly.
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This is how you're going to learn fast.
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Second, the test.
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Most people learn, learn, learn for six weeks, for six months, and then there's a big test and a big presentation at the end.
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This is a giant waste of time.
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This is one of the biggest mistakes we make in learning.
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You software engineers talk about agile development all day long.
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Everything is a two-week sprint.
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In fact, in today's AI companies, everything is a single day sprint.
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So why not apply the same concept to learning?
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Build a different loop.
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Learn, test, learn, test, learn, test.
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So pick a concept, learn it, and then test.
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Then pick another concept.
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And how do you test?
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That's where the tools come to play.
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There are three that are my favorite.
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Tool number one, slow burn.
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If you're learning something physical, like playing a guitar, do it at an excruciatingly slow pace and do it a lot of times.
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But don't turn off your brain because slow is boring.
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Focus on every micro move.
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The slower you play, the faster you learn.
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Tool number two, immersion.
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Every musician will tell you this.
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No matter how you practice and rehearse with the band, the moment you start playing on stage, everything goes haywire.
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So you must test in the arena.
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Practicing a speech in front of a mirror is a good start, but practicing it in front of real people, that's even better.
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And the third tool, teach to learn.
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Now this is the boss tool.
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I do this all the time.
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Once I learn something, I teach it to someone.
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sometimes I even lecture the wall as if I'm giving a TED talk because I'm learning I'm internalizing I'm
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connecting I'm reframing and I would do it a few times and try different angles until I feel I have learned it
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well we compress the map we compile the work now comes the final C you have to consolidate it to retain what you've just learned forever if time was money
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and you wanted to invest it in learning, then relying on stickies and flashcards will give you short-term gains, but terrible long-term returns.
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And the most important insight is this.
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Learning is a two-stage process.
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Stage one is focus.
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You're sending the request to your brain to rewire.
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But stage two is even more important.
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Rest.
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This is where the actual consolidation happens.
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So you've got to leave some room for it.
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You have to manage your rest as much as you manage your work, both at the micro and macro level.
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So think about the learning cycle in terms of work, rest, work, rest, work, rest.
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First, on the micro level, inside your 90-minute block, you have to think about taking frequent 10-20 second breaks.
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Research shows that after some heavy learning, if you pause for just 10 seconds, your brain replays the information you just learned at 10 to 20 times the speed, and it might fire that sequence 20 times over.
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So you're literally getting 20 free reps in your brain just by taking a break.
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And on the macro level, we're talking about the ultradian cycle of 90 minutes of work and 20 minutes of rest again.
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And what you do in those 20 minutes is also important.
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I, for one, do NSDR, which is non-sleep deep rest.
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In Sanskrit, it's called yoga nindra, which literally means the rest that helps you connect.
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So what do you have to do during that 20-minute NSDR period?
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Absolutely nothing.
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For instance, I just lie down or sit, close my eyes for 15 minutes, 20 minutes, and do nothing.
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And sometimes I would go for a leisurely walk if I can.
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But the point is not to distract yourself and do nothing.
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And the third most macro thing is a good night's sleep.
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There is a lot of research that suggests that when we're sleeping our brain replace the entire thing we learned in reverse.
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So these three rests are super important.
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You know in this post-industrial technological age we've forgotten what farmers have always intuitively known.
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You can't keep plowing the field every day of the year.
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The soil, the ground, it must rest to regain is fertility and that's the most important lesson.
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I struggled with learning when I was growing up.
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I failed every single course in college.
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Couldn't focus, couldn't retain anything.
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But these techniques, they changed my life and they might work for you too.
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Remember three things.
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First, stop racing other people.
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There will always be someone who learns faster.
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So what?
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There's someone faster than them.
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That loop never ends.
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Your only competition is you from yesterday.
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Second, get out of your head.
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You cannot be the performer and the critic at the same time.
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While you're learning, be the performer, not the critic.
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And finally, give yourself time.
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Learning is like an ocean.
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It has its rhythm.
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It ebbs, it flows.
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Honor that cycle.
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With enough time, there is nothing you can't learn and nothing you can't become if you like this video please subscribe thank you and I love you
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Shadowing English

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Контекст и предыстория

В этом видео опытный спикер делится своим путем от трудного детства в Мумбаи до выпускника MIT и генерального директора. Он подчеркивает, что секрет его успеха не в интеллектуальных способностях, а в том, как быстро и эффективно он учится. В условиях современного мира, где большинство навыков временно, важно научиться адаптироваться и использовать правильные методы обучения, чтобы стать одним из лучших в своей области.

Топ-5 фраз для повседневного общения

  • “Как я могу улучшить произношение английского?” - Когда вы хотите улучшить свое произношение, этот вопрос поможет вам получить полезные советы.
  • “Можете ли вы дать мне совет по поводу обучения?” - Используйте эту фразу для получения рекомендаций о том, как лучше учить английский с YouTube.
  • “Что вы посоветуете для практики shadowing?” - Это поможет вам найти методики для занятий через shadow speak.
  • “Какой материал лучше использовать для shadowing?” - Важно выбрать правильный контент для эффективного обучения и практики.
  • “Как связать новую информацию с уже известной?” - Этот вопрос поможет вам лучше запомнить изучаемый материал.

Пошаговое руководство по шадовингу

Чтобы справиться с материалом этого видео и улучшить свои навыки, следуйте следующему пошаговому руководству:

  1. Сжатие. Начните с того, чтобы выделить основные моменты из видео. Определите, какая 20% информации даст вам 80% пользы.
  2. Ассоциация. Свяжите новый материал с тем, что уже знаете. Это поможет усвоить информацию и облегчит процесс запоминания.
  3. Применение. Используйте метод шадовинга, повторяя фразы, произнесенные в видео. Работайте над улучшением произношения английского через повторение, что значительно поможет вашей уверенности при общении.
  4. Регулярность. Занимайтесь каждый день и не забывайте использовать ресурсы как видео на YouTube и специализированные сайты для шадовинга, такие как shadowspeak.
  5. Обратная связь. Запрашивайте у носителей языка отзывы о вашем произношении. Это поможет вам корректировать ошибки и развиваться быстрее.

С помощью этих стратегий вы сможете существенно улучшить свои навыки английского языка и стать более уверенным в общении! Решительность и системный подход к обучению — вот ключ к успеху.

Что такое техника Shadowing?

Shadowing — это научно обоснованная техника изучения языка, изначально разработанная для подготовки профессиональных переводчиков и популяризированная полиглотом доктором Александром Аргуэльесом. Метод прост, но эффективен: вы слушаете аудио на английском от носителей языка и немедленно повторяете вслух — как тень, следующая за говорящим с задержкой в 1–2 секунды. В отличие от пассивного прослушивания или грамматических упражнений, Shadowing заставляет мозг и мышцы рта одновременно обрабатывать и воспроизводить реальные речевые паттерны. Исследования показывают, что это значительно улучшает точность произношения, интонацию, ритм, связную речь, понимание на слух и беглость речи — что делает его одним из самых эффективных методов для подготовки к IELTS Speaking и реального общения на английском.

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