跟读练习: becoming smart is easy, actually - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
C1
So you want to become smart.
154 句
如果句子过短或过长,请点击 Edit 进行调整。
1
So you want to become smart.
2
In most of the world,
3
you're told that it takes 12 years of school,
4
plus 4 years of college,
5
plus 6 years of graduate school to become smart.
6
But what you actually become is homeless.
7
That's not even a joke.
8
But on the bright side,
9
when you make a Reddit post about how you can't get a job,
10
you can do it in perfect English.
11
If you haven't guessed by the title,
12
becoming smart is actually very easy.
13
Even if you think your genetics make you dumb,
14
If you compare yourself to every other animal, you're actually pretty overpowered.
15
When people like you and me say we want to get smarter,
16
it means a bunch of things.
17
We want to learn useful skills,
18
ideally skills that make money.
19
We want to be good at solving problems, hopefully for money.
20
We want to get better greeds and learn difficult subjects to make more money,
21
and also to flex on people.
22
And lastly, we want to sound smart in conversation,
23
just enough so people respect you,
24
but not too much to the point where people think you're a nerd.
25
The problem is, most advice on the internet is so vague and philosophical that even if it works,
26
the only people who could actually follow it are Oprah and Socrates.
27
And if you instead look for specific advice that you can actually try right now,
28
this is what you get.
29
Eat blueberries cause they're brain food.
30
Drink black coffee.
31
Exercise.
32
Sleep more.
33
Take IQ tests.
34
Listen to classical music.
35
These things sound good, but at some point you have to,
36
you know, actually learn stuff.
37
Besides, even in the past,
38
there have been some geniuses who've spent the whole day sitting at a desk,
39
getting two to four hours of sleep a day.
40
So what can you actually do to get smarter?
41
That's not just the same six brain hacks from a Facebook post copied
42
and pasted from a WikiHow article inspired by a quote spray-painted on a New York subway wall.
43
The main thing you need to do is read.
44
What kind of reading?
45
It depends.
46
Fiction is good for learning to read faster,
47
and it gives you better vocabulary.
48
Also, if you read a lot of dialogue,
49
it makes you feel like you have friends.
50
But most people go straight for non-fiction,
51
which indeed is the key to being able to casually drop interesting knowledge in conversations.
52
For example, just by reading this book,
53
you can come off to anyone in conversation as someone who knows history.
54
The key is to not be obnoxious about it.
55
Crazy how he evolved from chimpanzees, right?
56
Well, actually, evolution is non-linear and several human-like species inhabited Earth simultaneously,
57
none of which could even be remotely considered as chimpanzees.
58
While this is considered polite by the standards of a YouTube comment section,
59
in real life, saying a well actually before proving someone wrong will make you instantly unlikable.
60
Change the well to an easy, and now we're talking.
61
Let's redo that conversation.
62
Crazy how we evolved from chimpanzees, right?
63
It is crazy, right?
64
You know, I was reading the other day and apparently humans and chimpanzees I always thought we evolved from them,
65
but I guess we just evolved side by side.
66
You can be smart while also being humble and also sounding like you touch grass.
67
The key is to teach people what you know without making them sound dumb.
68
This way, people will actually learn from you,
69
which will make them see you as smart and respectable.
70
Now, how do you find these books?
71
It's actually really easy.
72
You don't have to read the same five books everyone tells you to read.
73
Just think of a topic you want to learn about.
74
Like cleaning.
75
Now Google books about cleaning.
76
Here's one that looks good.
77
Usually, these books cost money.
78
But if your finger slips,
79
you might accidentally end up on this website.
80
And you might accidentally search for the title of the book.
81
And by chance, click on the first link.
82
And oh no, accidentally downloaded a file.
83
and opened it with the appropriate ebook viewer?
84
Well now that you have the book,
85
you'll also find that not only can you pick out interesting tidbits to use in conversations,
86
but you can also learn many useful skills.
87
There are 10 things you should know before you learn a skill.
88
1. Unless you practice the skill,
89
your brain will think it's useless and forget it.
90
2. You only have to know 20% of the knowledge to master 80% of the skill.
91
So I guess we could just move on.
92
This is called the learning curve.
93
It's a graph of how good you get at a skill over time.
94
As you can see, just by practicing a little bit,
95
you can make a lot of progress in the beginning.
96
But you have to practice.
97
No one ever learned how to tie a tie by watching how to tie a tie.
98
You only learned how to tie a tie by watching how to tie a tie while tying a tie.
99
The same applies to reading.
100
Books only make you smart if you give your brain a reason to remember the stuff in the book.
101
So once you read the chapter on cleaning a bedroom,
102
go ahead and clean a bedroom.
103
Doesn't even have to be your bedroom.
104
Just clean one.
105
and now you'll never forget it.
106
But let's just imagine that's something that you can't practice right now.
107
Like imagine you're reading a book about cars
108
and then you see this diagram of how to jumpstart a dead car with a good car.
109
Ideally, you'll read about it and then go practice it.
110
But not everyone has two cars lying around to practice on.
111
But you can still practice it by just imagining.
112
Imagine the moment where you'll need to know how to jumpstart a car.
113
Put yourself in the situation.
114
Find a video and pretend that's your car.
115
By imagining the whole process from start to finish,
116
you just convinced your brain that you used all that information and now you'll remember it.
117
Meanwhile, the person who just looked at the diagram
118
and tried to memorize it still won't know what to do if they ever had to jumpstart a car.
119
This is how you get smart.
120
Use everything you learn and if you can't,
121
imagine yourself in the moment where it'll be useful.
122
This is basically how the entire school system works.
123
You learn a piece of information,
124
and because it'll be like 15 years before you actually use it,
125
your teacher creates an imaginary situation where that information is useful.
126
That is, a test.
127
An exam that has questions on that exact piece of information,
128
and if you get it wrong, you fail.
129
Or in South Korea, you get prison time.
130
Just kidding, that's only if you cheat.
131
This is usually enough to make your brain at least attempt to remember the information.
132
The only problem is, once the test is over,
133
your brain says it's not useful anymore, and you forget it.
134
Some people think repetition, or spaced repetition,
135
or studying in intervals, or mind mapping will help them get better grades and learn faster.
136
But in reality, doing practice questions will give you the most results,
137
because they simulate the actual situation in which you'll need to use what you learned.
138
If you don't have any practice questions,
139
make your own, and convince yourself that the stakes are high.
140
Like, pretend that you're hanging off a cliff by one arm,
141
and someone's there to pull you up,
142
but only if you can name all the parts of a human cell.
143
Learning information and making it seem useful to your brain is all you need to get smart,
144
and this is why textbooks are the S-tier format for becoming smart as fast as possible.
145
There's no fluff, no hand-holding,
146
no distractions, just pure information and a bunch of practice questions,
147
and if you can't solve them,
148
you have to flip all the way to page XXXVVIII in the appendix to get help.
149
Textbooks aren't for the casual learner,
150
because it's not as fun as watching a YouTube video on the topic and forgetting it all an hour later.
151
But if you're ever up to the challenge,
152
there is a website you might accidentally end up on where you could accidentally download free textbooks on any subject you want.
153
But before you do that,
154
I'm collecting donations in the form of subscribes to fund the next video.
下载应用
AI 为你说出的每个句子打分
TRENDING
热门
背景与上下文
在现代社会,我们常常被告知,变得聪明需要经过漫长的教育历程,包括12年的基础教育,再加上4年的大学教育和6年的研究生学习。然而,这种观点并不一定准确。本视频提到,即使在教育体系中努力奋斗,也未必能保证获得成功与幸福。虽然学习的过程中可能遇到困难,但通过适当的方法,我们依然可以提升自己的智慧。在这里,我们将探讨如何通过简单的方法来提升自我,尤其是在语言学习方面。
日常沟通的五个关键短语
- 我想变得更聪明。 — 表达您希望改善自己的愿望。
- 这看起来很有趣。 — 当讨论新事物时,可以用这个短语来表示兴趣。
- 我应该尝试学习更多技能。 — 强调学习的意识和行动。
- 我会通过阅读来提升自己。 — 说明您打算通过阅读来增进知识。
- 有什么建议吗? — 向他人询问建议,促进交流。
渐进式影子跟读指南
为了提升英语口语能力,建议学习者采用影子跟读(shadowing)的方法,这种学习方式能有效帮助理解发音和语调。以下是逐步指南,帮助您应对该视频的挑战:
- 分段观看: 将视频分成小段(例如,每次观看1-2分钟),然后反复播放。
- 初步理解: 首先理解每句话的意思,确保您能捕捉到关键信息。
- 跟随录音: 开始模仿说话者的语音和语调,尽可能保持一致。
- 对比听力: 在练习过程中,关注自己与原声之间的差距,持续调整。
- 反复练习: 每日选择固定时间段练习影子跟读,形成良好的学习习惯。
通过以上方法,结合看YouTube学英语的实践,您将逐步提升英语口语水平。同时,建议在shadowing site上寻找相关资源,进行shadowspeak练习,以加快学习进程。
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。
