ฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษด้วยเทคนิค Shadowing จากวิดีโอ: How To Become Dangerously Self-Educated (Complete Plan)

C1
There is a strange
⏸ หยุดชั่วคราว
157 ประโยค
หากประโยคสั้นหรือยาวเกินไป กดที่ Edit เพื่อปรับแก้
1
There is a strange
2
and uncomfortable truth that almost nobody talks about in our modern world,
3
which is that the most powerful people in any field are rarely the ones who went through the most formal education.
4
They are the ones who,
5
at some point in their lives,
6
took complete responsibility for their own learning
7
and went far deeper into a subject than any school would ever have asked them to go.
8
This kind of person is what I have come to think of as dangerously self-educated,
9
not because they are dangerous in any harmful sense,
10
but because they have developed a depth of understanding
11
that makes them genuinely formidable in a way that credentialed but shallow thinkers can never match.
12
They see things other people miss,
13
they connect ideas across domains,
14
and they can work problems through to conclusions that surprise even the experts.
15
What is interesting is
16
that the path to this kind of self-education has very little to do with how much you read
17
or how many courses you take.
18
It has everything to do with how you actually relate to knowledge itself.
19
Most people who attempt to educate themselves do so in ways
20
that produce almost no real understanding because they are using methods that were never designed for depth.
21
The older Japanese tradition, particularly within its long history of master and apprentice learning,
22
has thought deeply about what actually produces real knowledge in a human mind
23
and the principles it has developed offer a much more reliable path than the modern habit of consuming endless content.
24
This video is about that path and how you can use it to become genuinely, dangerously self-educated.
25
The first principle and perhaps the most important of all is that understanding must always come before reading.
26
Most people approach self-education by trying to consume as much material as possible,
27
treating books and articles and videos as if the act of passing them through your eyes were the same as learning.
28
The Japanese tradition of deep study suggests a completely different approach.
29
There is a concept called Rikai,
30
which means to grasp something so thoroughly that it has become part of you,
31
and it is treated as fundamentally different from the surface activity of reading.
32
The shift from reading to Rikkai requires you to slow down dramatically.
33
Instead of finishing a chapter,
34
you might spend an entire afternoon on three pages,
35
breaking the ideas into smaller and smaller parts until each one is fully clear in your mind.
36
You close your eyes after reading a passage and visualize what was just described,
37
building the concept in your imagination until you can see it clearly without the book in front of you.
38
You then test whether you actually understand it by imagining
39
that you are explaining the idea to someone who knows nothing about the subject because if you cannot explain something simply,
40
you do not yet truly understand it.
41
This kind of slow, deep,
42
deliberate engagement produces more real knowledge in three pages than ordinary reading produces in 300.
43
The dangerously self-educated person reads less than most people
44
but understands far more because every piece of material has been genuinely absorbed rather than merely consumed.
45
The second principle concerns the choice of domain
46
and it is something almost everyone gets wrong at the beginning of their self-education journey.
47
Most people, when they decide to take their learning seriously,
48
try to study many things at once.
49
They read about philosophy in the morning,
50
history in the afternoon, and economics in the evening,
51
hoping that the breadth itself will make them well-rounded.
52
The Japanese tradition of mastery teaches almost the opposite.
53
There is an old principle called Ichige ni Hairu,
54
which means to enter deeply into one art,
55
And it suggests
56
that the path to becoming genuinely formidable runs through depth in a single domain rather than scattered shallow exposure to many.
57
The reasoning behind this is psychological as much as practical.
58
When you go deep into one subject,
59
you eventually reach a level where you begin to see the underlying structures
60
that connect knowledge itself and this insight transfers to every other domain you later approach.
61
The person who has truly mastered one thing has actually learned how to learn,
62
while the person who has dabbled in 20 things has learned only how to dabble.
63
The choice of your one main area is therefore one of the most important decisions in your self-education.
64
It should be something you can imagine spending several years inside without losing interest,
65
something that connects to the deeper questions you find yourself returning to throughout your life.
66
Once you have chosen this domain,
67
everything else becomes secondary,
68
and you protect your focus on it with a quiet stubbornness that may seem strange to people around you,
69
but which is the actual source of the depth they will later admire.
70
The third principle is one I learnt from reading about the journals of Japanese scholars and craftsmen,
71
and it has changed my own learning more than almost anything else.
72
The principle is the practice of keeping what I now call a thinking document,
73
which is a private written space where you develop your understanding through writing rather than simply through reading.
74
This is fundamentally different from taking notes.
75
Notes are a record of what you have read
76
while a thinking document is a record of what you have come to think.
77
In Japanese intellectual tradition, particularly within the practice of careful daily reflection,
78
writing has long been understood as a form of thinking rather than a record of thinking already completed.
79
When you write your thoughts down,
80
you are forced to make them clear enough to exist on paper
81
and this act of clarification reveals everything you do not yet actually understand.
82
The vague ideas in your mind,
83
which felt complete while they remained unspoken,
84
suddenly show their gaps and contradictions when you try to put them into written sentences.
85
Over time, your thinking document becomes a living conversation with yourself,
86
where you return to old ideas and revise them,
87
notice patterns across months and years of your own thinking,
88
and develop the kind of slow,
89
deep clarity that no amount of reading alone can produce.
90
My grandfather Daiki kept this kind of document for over 40 years,
91
and the depth of his thinking near the end of his life was something
92
that simply could not have been built any other way.
93
The dangerously self-educated person writes constantly,
94
not for an audience but for their own thinking because the writing is itself the engine of their growing understanding.
95
The fourth principle is the one where most self-education projects quietly fail and it concerns the relationship between knowledge and application.
96
Most people who study seriously eventually accumulate a great deal of theoretical knowledge that never actually enters their lives.
97
They can speak about ideas,
98
recognize references, and follow conversations about their domain,
99
but the knowledge remains essentially decorative,
100
like furniture in a room that no one ever uses.
101
The Japanese tradition of mastery has always insisted that knowledge becomes real only through application,
102
through the slow process of trying to use what you have learnt in actual situations
103
until the understanding moves from your mind into your hands and your judgement.
104
There is a concept called Jisen,
105
which refers to the bringing of knowledge into lived practice,
106
and it is treated as the moment when learning actually becomes real.
107
The implication for self-education is that every significant idea you encounter should be tested against your actual life as soon as possible.
108
If you are studying philosophy,
109
you should be applying its principles to your daily decisions.
110
If you are studying economics,
111
you should be making predictions about real markets and tracking whether your predictions hold.
112
If you are studying writing,
113
you should be writing things that real people will read.
114
The knowledge that gets applied takes root in you,
115
while the knowledge that stays purely theoretical eventually fades no matter how carefully you originally studied it.
116
The dangerously self-educated person is recognizable by the visible imprint of their learning on their actual life
117
because their understanding has flowed through them into the world rather than remaining trapped inside their head.
118
When you bring these four principles together,
119
what emerges is a complete plan for becoming the kind of self-educated person who can stand alongside
120
and often beyond the credentialed experts in any field.
121
You read less than other people but understand far more because every piece of material has been broken down,
122
visualized and explained back to yourself until it has become genuinely yours.
123
You concentrate your learning in a single chosen domain,
124
going deep enough that the structure of the knowledge itself begins to reveal patterns that scattered learners can never see.
125
You write your thinking down in a private document that grows alongside you,
126
revising your ideas over months and years,
127
until the clarity of your thought becomes something almost no one around you can match.
128
And you apply everything you learn as quickly as possible to real situations
129
because the The knowledge that does not enter your life never truly becomes part of you.
130
What makes this kind of self-education dangerous in the best sense is
131
that it produces a quality of mind that the modern educational system rarely creates.
132
The dangerously self-educated person does not need anyone to tell them what to think
133
because they have developed the capacity to think things through carefully on their own.
134
They are not impressed by credentials because they have seen too clearly how often credentials and real understanding fail to coincide.
135
They are not easily manipulated
136
because they have spent years developing the habit of testing every idea against careful thought and lived experience.
137
And they have a quiet confidence that does not depend on external validation
138
because they know exactly what they understand and exactly where the edges of their understanding currently lie.
139
The path to this kind of education is not fast and it cannot be shortened by any technique or tool.
140
It requires years of deliberate,
141
slow, deep work on yourself,
142
with no one watching and no one giving you the recognition that traditional education distributes so freely.
143
But the people who walk this path eventually develop something that ordinary education simply cannot produce,
144
which is a mind that has been genuinely shaped by the depth of its own thinking,
145
rather than merely filled with the contents of other people's ideas.
146
Yes my friend, this is the quiet truth that almost no one will tell you about education.
147
The most important learning of your life will probably happen entirely outside of any classroom,
148
in the slow daily practice of trying to understand things deeply,
149
choosing your one domain carefully,
150
writing your thoughts down patiently,
151
and applying what you learn to the actual texture of your days.
152
If you are willing to commit to this path,
153
the depth you can reach is genuinely beyond what most people imagine possible
154
and the kind of person you become along the way is someone the world will eventually have no choice
155
but to take seriously take good care of yourself
156
and take good care of your mind it is the only
157
one you will ever have i hope to see you in the next video bye

ดาวน์โหลดแอป

AI ให้คะแนนทุกประโยคที่คุณพูด

สแกนเพื่อดาวน์โหลด
สแกนเพื่อดาวน์โหลด
TRENDING

ยอดนิยม

ทำไมการฝึกพูดกับวิดีโอนี้จึงสำคัญ?

การฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษสามารถทำให้คุณพัฒนาทักษะการสื่อสารที่มีประสิทธิภาพมากขึ้น โดยเฉพาะเมื่อคุณเลือกวิดีโอที่มีเนื้อหาที่สามารถกระตุ้นความคิดและสร้างแรงบันดาลใจให้กับคุณ วิดีโอนี้พูดถึงวิธีการเป็นผู้เรียนรู้ด้วยตนเองในรูปแบบที่ลึกซึ้งและมีประสิทธิภาพ ซึ่งจะช่วยให้คุณสร้างแนวคิดและเชื่อมโยงแนวคิดต่าง ๆ ได้ดีขึ้น การฝึกใช้ shadow speak หรือ ชาโดว์อิ้งภาษาอังกฤษ กับวิดีโอนี้ จะทำให้คุณได้ยินน้ำเสียง การออกเสียง และการใช้ภาษาที่เขาใช้ ทำให้ทักษะการพูดของคุณพัฒนาไปในทิศทางที่ดีขึ้น

ไวยากรณ์และสำนวนในบริบท

  • การใช้คำว่า "Rikai": คำนี้หมายถึงการเข้าใจอย่างลึกซึ้ง ซึ่งเน้นว่าความเข้าใจเป็นสิ่งสำคัญกว่าการอ่านเท่านี้
  • โครงสร้างการอธิบาย: การเชื่อมโยงความคิดและอธิบายให้คนอื่นเข้าใจ เป็นหนึ่งในวิธีที่จะช่วยให้คุณตรวจสอบว่าคุณเข้าใจเนื้อหาหรือไม่
  • เกณฑ์การทบทวนเนื้อหา: การใช้วิธีการคลี่คลายแนวคิดและทำให้มันชัดเจนในใจคุณ ถือเป็นเทคนิคที่สำคัญในการเรียนรู้
  • การเน้นการเฉลี่ย: การมุ่งเน้นที่การอ่านน้อยลง แต่เข้าใจมากขึ้น อาจช่วยให้คุณจัดการกับเนื้อหาที่ซับซ้อนได้ดีกว่า

กับดักการออกเสียงที่พบบ่อย

ในวิดีโอนี้มีคำศัพท์ที่อาจสร้างความยุ่งยากในการออกเสียง เช่น "completely" ซึ่งมีการเน้นเสียงที่มักจะไม่ถูกต้อง ความเข้าใจระหว่างการฟังและการออกเสียงจะทำให้คุณใช้ shadow speech ได้อย่างมีประสิทธิภาพมากขึ้น นอกจากนี้ การฝึกฟังสำเนียงและวิธีการพูดจากผู้พูดยังช่วยเพิ่มความคล่องแคล่วในภาษาอังกฤษอีกด้วย โดยเฉพาะกับการเรียนรู้ เรียนภาษาอังกฤษจากยูทูป ที่จะช่วยให้คุณมีโอกาสดื่มด่ำกับภาษาอังกฤษในแต่ละวัน

เทคนิค Shadowing คืออะไร?

Shadowing เป็นเทคนิคการเรียนรู้ภาษาที่ได้รับการรับรองทางวิทยาศาสตร์ พัฒนาขึ้นสำหรับการฝึกนักแปลมืออาชีพ วิธีการนี้เรียบง่ายแต่ทรงพลัง: คุณฟังเสียงภาษาอังกฤษจากเจ้าของภาษาและพูดตามทันที — เหมือนเงาที่ตามผู้พูดด้วยช่วงเวลาห่าง 1-2 วินาที การวิจัยแสดงว่าเทคนิคนี้ปรับปรุงความแม่นยำในการออกเสียง ทำนองเสียง จังหวะ การเชื่อมเสียง การฟังเข้าใจ และความคล่องแคล่วในการพูดได้อย่างมีนัยสำคัญ

เลี้ยงกาแฟเราสักแก้ว