跟读练习: Articulate Your Thoughts Clearly: 3 PRECISE Steps! - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

C1
Have you ever thought that you don't make sense when you speak,
⏸ 已暂停
325
如果句子过短或过长,请点击 Edit 进行调整。
1
Have you ever thought that you don't make sense when you speak,
2
that you get your thoughts muddled or that you can't express yourself clearly?
3
If that sounds like you,
4
then you are not alone and this video is absolutely perfect for you.
5
We're going to talk about a three-step sequence to help you articulate your thoughts so you can communicate them clearly.
6
Now if you follow this three-step sequence and you do it on a regular basis,
7
it's going to help you organize your thoughts better
8
so you can articulate them well and communicate them verbally in a clearer way.
9
Because at the end of the day,
10
our speech is a reflection of our thinking.
11
If your thinking is muddled,
12
if it is confused, then your speech is going to come out confused as well.
13
Whereas if your thinking is clear,
14
if it is organized, then your speech will come out clear and organized and articulate as well.
15
So in order to communicate and articulate clearly.
16
We need to start with our thoughts.
17
We need to organize our thoughts in a clear way,
18
in a very structured way.
19
So when we communicate, those thoughts come out in a very clear and easy to understand manner.
20
If you like what you're going to learn in this video,
21
there are two things you can do to help out my channel.
22
You can hit the like button below this video,
23
which tells the algorithm that people like you like this video.
24
So it's shown to more people on YouTube.
25
The second thing is you can subscribe to my channel.
26
Every week I release videos on leadership to help people like you in their leadership journey
27
and I would be honored to share this content with you as well.
28
Now let's move on to how to articulate your thoughts clearly.
29
So the first thing you need to do is to read.
30
Reading is the first step in this three-step structure.
31
Reading is a fantastic way to fill your mind with new ideas,
32
to learn new vocabulary, rich vocabulary,
33
good structure, good sentence structure and structure of ideas as well.
34
And it's essential if you want to learn how to organize your thoughts better
35
because you can learn how other people organize their ideas and organize their thoughts.
36
So every time you read a book,
37
whether it's fiction or nonfiction,
38
you expose yourself to all of these things.
39
There is no way that you could come up with all of this rich vocabulary or good structure on your own.
40
And why would you?
41
It's not necessary when you can learn from other people who have gone through this process to write those fantastic books.
42
The way I see it is books are really a gateway into the world of organized thoughts and good structure.
43
I mean, think of how long it takes somebody to write a book.
44
How many revisions do they do?
45
How many other people are involved in the process to improve on their ideas or improve on their structure?
46
There is a lot of time,
47
money and effort put into writing books,
48
you can leverage this and use this final product to enrich your mind with rich vocabulary,
49
with good structure and with organized thoughts.
50
You can basically learn from these high level authors or from the high level work that other people have created.
51
Now, what kinds of books should you read?
52
Well, you've probably guessed I'm not talking about comic books,
53
I'm not talking about children's books.
54
The kinds of books I recommend you to read are nonfiction or also fiction books,
55
biographies, classical literature, books about historical events,
56
business books, or literary fiction.
57
All of these are the types of books
58
that have had a lot of work put into them
59
that are using a level of vocabulary and structure that you probably want to aim for.
60
Since you are working to become a leader,
61
you probably want to sound more intelligent and sound more structured and organized as you speak.
62
These are the kinds of books that you can use to draw those ideas from
63
and to get the vocabulary from as well.
64
I do encourage you to read books that you don't normally read.
65
This will help to expose you to new ideas,
66
new ways of thinking, new ways of structuring your ideas as well.
67
So if you normally read biographies,
68
then maybe opt for books about historical events.
69
Or maybe if you read business books a lot,
70
you can learn a lot by reading classical literature.
71
How often should you read?
72
This is a question I get asked quite a lot.
73
I recommend you read five to 10 pages every day.
74
The way I do it is over breakfast.
75
Generally, as I am eating my breakfast,
76
I have a book beside me instead of my phone,
77
instead of Instagram, I have a book beside me and I am reading the book,
78
book going through the pages of the book as I eat my breakfast.
79
As to when you read,
80
it's really up to you how you like to fit it into your daily schedule,
81
but I recommend you read five to ten pages every day.
82
This way you are filling your mind with new vocabulary,
83
with good sentence structure and new ideas as well.
84
You're probably wondering if I have any recommendations for you as to what books you should read.
85
This is definitely a question I'm going to be getting once you are at this point in the YouTube video.
86
So I wanted to share with you this one book,
87
which is one of my favourite books to read.
88
It's called Profiles in Courage by John F.
89
Kennedy.
90
I will put some information about it in the description below.
91
It's an old book.
92
It was written in 1965 in a very classical style of English like people used to write back then.
93
I absolutely love the way people used to write books during that time or even prior to the 1960s.
94
I find it so intelligent,
95
the vocabulary used is so rich,
96
the phrases that are used.
97
One of the phrases in this book that I came across
98
and I absolutely love and I thought was so intelligent was independent courage,
99
the phrase independent courage.
100
So there's many more phrases like that in this book.
101
There's many more things you can learn in this book.
102
It's an extremely, this particular one I got is extremely old.
103
I picked it up in a second hand store.
104
If I were to flick through the pages,
105
you can probably see that all of the pages have actually started to dislodge from the spine.
106
They're coming out, So I have to be really careful with this book.
107
But Profiles in Courage by John F.
108
Kennedy is a really good book that I would recommend you to read.
109
If you wanted to start getting into reading books with a higher level of vocabulary,
110
definitely opt for the ones that were published a long time ago.
111
So even in the early 1900s,
112
the way they used to write back then,
113
the way they used to organize their thoughts back then,
114
the vocabulary they used back then was at another level.
115
You hardly even see that nowadays in the books that are published.
116
So I highly recommend this one or any other topic
117
that was written around that time or before that time to help yourself,
118
enrich yourself with the vocabulary,
119
the sentence structure to really organize your thoughts better.
120
So reading is definitely the first step that you need to fill your mind,
121
to fill your subconscious with the tools,
122
with the vocabulary, with the ideas and the structure that you need to move on to the second step,
123
which we're going to talk about right now.
124
Writing is the second step in this three-step sequence.
125
And this is a fantastic way to help you organize your thoughts better,
126
get it on paper, so can actually see whether the thoughts you have in your mind are truly organized or not.
127
It also helps you to identify your thoughts.
128
So sometimes when you have those thoughts in your mind, they're all muddled.
129
It's hard to identify clearly what those thoughts are.
130
Writing is one of the best ways you can get clear on those thoughts and identify them too.
131
As I mentioned at the beginning of this video,
132
our speech is a reflection of our thinking.
133
So we first need to get our thoughts organized.
134
And we do this by writing before we actually jump into speaking,
135
which is the next step we'll talk about in a couple of moments.
136
When you don't do this,
137
this is what leads to muddled communication.
138
When you have those muddled thoughts in your mind,
139
and then you go from those muddled thoughts straight to speaking,
140
that's what leads to muddled speaking and not being able to articulate your thoughts clearly or communicate them well.
141
Basically what writing does is it allows you to take the time to organize your thoughts well.
142
It allows you to draw them from your mind,
143
to put them on paper and to see whether they are organized or not and whether they're good thoughts or not.
144
You can put those thoughts in order,
145
you can organize them and you can eliminate thoughts that aren't important or that don't add anything to the discussion.
146
If you feel that you don't make sense when you speak?
147
Well, it's probably because you haven't spent the time organizing your thoughts like you do through this writing process.
148
You've just jumped straight into speaking without organizing them first.
149
And that is what has led to muddled communication and you not making sense.
150
I want you to get into the habit of writing your thoughts.
151
Now, how do you do this?
152
Well, it should be something that you do every day,
153
just like reading, part of your everyday routine.
154
And it's something that can directly follow your reading schedule.
155
You can do journal writing,
156
you can do formal writing,
157
whatever type of writing suits you better.
158
I recommend you write one page every day.
159
So reading is five to 10 pages every day.
160
But writing, because it takes more time,
161
you are allowed to pause,
162
you're allowed to organize your thoughts a lot more,
163
write one page per day.
164
I usually do my writing in a book much like this.
165
It is just a plain notebook.
166
I'll open it up.
167
The pages are plain.
168
There is no lines whatsoever in this book.
169
And I find that this works much better for me to not have lines drawn on the page.
170
I find that when I am working or writing with lines,
171
it limits my thinking in a way.
172
It prevents me from thinking freely, from writing freely.
173
So I like to have the space
174
and the opportunity on a blank page like this to just scribble down my thoughts
175
and write them in a more coherent way.
176
What can you write about?
177
So that's no doubt your next question.
178
You have this book.
179
What do you actually write about?
180
Well, you can reflect on the past.
181
So think of things that have happened yesterday, last week, last month.
182
Perhaps there were fears you faced,
183
conversations you had with people,
184
challenges you faced, achievements you made,
185
your desires, goals that you're working towards,
186
goals that you have achieved,
187
disagreements you had with someone or agreements you had with someone.
188
There are a number of things you can use as inspiration for your writing.
189
As well as reflecting on the past,
190
you can also look to the future.
191
You can write about your future goals,
192
your future dreams, your desires,
193
conversations you want to have with people.
194
And this is a fantastic point for people who are looking to communicate more assertively.
195
If you have a conversation you need to have with someone that's an assertive conversation,
196
you're a bit nervous about that assertive conversation,
197
you can write the conversation down using your journaling,
198
your morning journaling that you do.
199
If you're going for a job interview,
200
you can use it for exactly the same thing as well.
201
So there are a number of things that you can write about.
202
It's really just about you deciding on what the subject is,
203
what the topic is that you want to write about.
204
And this is where you can start to get creative.
205
But this process, when it's done on a daily basis,
206
it will definitely help you to organize your thoughts,
207
to structure them better and help you communicate them more clearly as well.
208
How long will this whole process take?
209
How long will it take you to start seeing an improvement in the way that you communicate?
210
Well, I would recommend you wait for a couple of weeks at least.
211
I think it takes most people two weeks to start to see improvement in their communication.
212
So remember, it's a whole process that you have to go through and you're basically retraining your brain.
213
You're retraining the way that you think about things,
214
the way you have your thoughts in your mind,
215
the way you structure them them and the way that they come out as well when you communicate.
216
And the way you notice whether you are improving with your thoughts
217
and articulating them better is if you start to feel less and less that you are communicating in a muddled way.
218
If you start to feel more and more
219
that you are clearer with your communication
220
and you're also noticing through the reactions of other people that they're really understanding what you're saying.
221
So look out for these signs,
222
the way you feel, the way the other person reacts to detect
223
and understand whether you're starting to see an improvement with your own communication.
224
And the third step in this sequence is to speak.
225
So we have filled your mind with rich vocabulary,
226
with good structure, with new ideas through step one, where you read.
227
Then we have transferred all of that knowledge and all of that intelligence onto paper through the process of writing.
228
And through the process of writing,
229
you have started to organize your thoughts better,
230
identify good ideas, reject bad ideas as well.
231
This has led to clearer thoughts in your mind, leading to clearer communication.
232
So the next step in this process is to actually speak.
233
And this is where you move your thoughts from your mind,
234
from paper, out into the world in conversations with people you interact with.
235
This is your ultimate goal.
236
This is the whole purpose of this three-step process,
237
to speak clearly, to articulate your thoughts well,
238
and to communicate clearly to the other person.
239
One of the things I've noticed about people who speak very well,
240
who can articulate their thoughts very clearly is that they've been trained to do it.
241
Now, sometimes this training happens formally.
242
They might go to a school where they learn how to do it.
243
But most of the time it happens informally.
244
It happens through their upbringing,
245
through their family background, through the education that they get.
246
A lot of those people are exposed to debates,
247
to people who have fantastic communication skills.
248
They get involved in those conversations with those people and through the way they communicate,
249
they can learn from those people.
250
They learn the vocabulary.
251
They learn how to communicate their thoughts.
252
They learn how to argue points.
253
There are many families in this world,
254
every night over dinner, they regularly have rich conversations.
255
They have deep conversations, whether it's about politics, about music, about history.
256
They debate a lot their ideas.
257
And through this process, if you do it every night,
258
it's normal that they would naturally develop really good communication skills over time.
259
They're being exposed to people who are good communicators.
260
They themselves are picking up all of these skills,
261
all of these tools, and they are bringing them to their conversations in the world as well.
262
They learn how to have intelligent debates with people.
263
They know how to argue their point.
264
They know how to speak in a persuasive way.
265
They know how to influence people or influence their ideas.
266
They know how to explain complicated concepts because they've had experience and training in doing this.
267
Through practicing speaking, these people can gain invaluable skills in communication,
268
in all types of communication and communicating with all types of people as well.
269
But not everyone has this same upbringing.
270
Not everybody is exposed every night at the dinner table to
271
intelligent debates where they're listening to people argue their point and where they have a chance to argue their point as well.
272
Not everyone is exposed to this growing up.
273
I certainly wasn't.
274
I will admit that to you.
275
I was not in a family where we had these kinds of conversations at the dinner table.
276
So I didn't learn how to do this through my family upbringing as well.
277
The strategy I used is reading,
278
it's writing, and it's finally speaking,
279
just like I'm teaching you in this video.
280
So we've been through the process of what to do for the reading,
281
what to do for writing.
282
Now, how do you practice speaking?
283
If you don't have access to this type of family environment that I just described to you,
284
how do you actually practice speaking?
285
Well, I'm going to share with you and activity on exactly how you can do that.
286
I want you to choose someone you feel comfortable with.
287
It could be a work colleague,
288
it could be a friend in your personal life or your partner,
289
somebody you feel comfortable with.
290
And I want you to speak to that person for five minutes straight.
291
It's an impromptu style speaking for five minutes straight about a topic that is important to you.
292
So it could be the same topic that you wrote about in your journaling stage.
293
You could have that morning written about a certain topic and you would like to tell the person,
294
your conversation partner about that topic.
295
So you could choose that.
296
It could be about a conversation you recently had with somebody.
297
It could be an experience you recently had,
298
a challenge you recently faced.
299
The topic you choose is really up to you.
300
But if you find it hard to choose a topic to talk about,
301
then I recommend you choose the same topic you wrote about that morning in your journal.
302
You can write out your thoughts in your journal,
303
how you are going to discuss them,
304
how you are going to present them to your conversation partner.
305
You can do all of that organization and all of that planning in the second step when you write.
306
Remember, we need organized thoughts to have clear communication and to articulate well.
307
So you can organize your thoughts when you write then
308
when you speak you can follow the structure the exact structure
309
that you wrote about that morning
310
when you do this on a regular basis it will help
311
you to organize your thoughts it will help you to master how to communicate them clearly
312
and how to articulate them well i do have another video
313
on my channel about how to be more articulate i'll put a card on the screen above
314
so you can check it out once you finish watching this video.
315
In that video, I share nine tips on how to be more articulate and communicate clearly as well.
316
We have gone through a lot of content in this video.
317
I would love to know how all of these ideas and this three-step process works for you.
318
Once you've tried out this three-step process,
319
please let me know in the comments.
320
Jump back to the channel and let me know in the comments how it has worked for you.
321
Have you seen an improvement in your communication?
322
Have you noticed other people are reacting differently?
323
Or maybe they're even commenting that you sound a lot more articulate and a lot clearer when you speak.
324
Let me know in the comments the benefits that you see.
325
Thank you so much for watching and I'll be back next week with another video.

下载应用

AI 为你说出的每个句子打分

TRENDING

热门

关于本课

在本课中,你将学习如何清晰表达你的想法。许多学习者在讲话时常常感到自己的表达不够流畅或清楚。本视频提供了三个步骤,帮助你整理思路,使你的言语更具条理性。通过这个课程,你将提高你的英语发音和表达能力,从而使你在日常交流中变得更加自信。

关键词汇与短语

  • 表达 (Articulate) - 清晰地表达自己的想法。
  • 思维 (Thinking) - 理清思路,帮助表达。
  • 组织 (Organize) - 组织你的想法,使其更清晰。
  • 阅读 (Reading) - 通过阅读丰富你的词汇和思路结构。
  • 词汇 (Vocabulary) - 学习新词汇以增强表达能力。
  • 清晰 (Clear) - 确保你的讲话易于理解。
  • 沟通 (Communicate) - 有效地与他人交流。
  • 影子跟读 (Shadowing) - 模仿他人的发音和节奏以提升说话能力。

练习技巧

为了最大程度地提高你的英语发音和表达能力,利用英语影子跟读技巧会非常有效。在观看视频时,你可以先聆听一段内容,然后模仿说话者的语调、节奏和发音。尝试在相同的速度进行练习,让你的语音更接近原讲话者的风格。这里有一些具体的练习建议:

  • 选择视频片段进行shadowing练习,确保你能够清晰听到每个单词。
  • 开始时可以降低视频播放速度,等你熟悉后再恢复到正常速度。
  • 注重语调和情感表达,力求使你的说话更具感染力。
  • 每次练习后,回放你的录音,检查你的发音和表达是否与原视频一致。
  • 多次重复练习,以增强记忆和自信心。

通过这种方式,你不仅能够提高你的英语发音,还能通过看YouTube学英语的方式,掌握更丰富的词汇和表达技巧。结合这些练习,你将在与人沟通时变得更加游刃有余。

什么是跟读法?

跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。

请我们喝杯咖啡