Stop Watching The NEWS To Speak English Fluently

99,498 views ・ 2020-04-13

EnglishAnyone


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Hi there. I am Drew Badger, the English Fluency Guide. And in this video I'm going to talk
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about content alignment for language learning. Content alignment. It sounds like a complicated
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idea, but it's actually very simple and I'll show you why you should be thinking about
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this as you learn. Now, one of the most important things that
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I explaine to people, you've probably heard me talk about this lesson many, many times,
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is you should be doing basically the opposite of what most people do to learn. And the reason
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you do that is because most people don't get fluent. So you should not do what they do.
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And you can think specifically about all those different things like how you listen, how
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you practice speaking, how you meet people to speak with. But in this video I want to
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talk about content alignment specifically for language learning. Here's what that means
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and how it works. Often I will meet students who say they want
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to have conversations like this, they want to communicate in a certain way. So I'm just
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going to label this as HW... Well, actually, no. I don't want to make this too simple,
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but basically how they want to speak. We'll putting like that. HS for how they want to
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speak. Now, the idea of how they want to speak, it could be many different things, but the
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most important ones, this is the way they communicate. So this is the words that they
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are using. It's also the pronunciation and the content. So the kinds of topics, which
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is really related to words, but we're just going to talk big picture about the kinds
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of content they'd like to learn. Now what people will often do is they will
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send me emails or if I see them out in Japan where I live, they will ask me questions like,
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"How do I learn this? How do I sound more like a native? How do I learn more native
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vocabulary?" And I say, "Well, how are you learning right now?" And usually they say,
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"Well, I'm reading this." Or, "I'm learning that thing." And I say, "Okay, that's interesting."
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So you have an idea or a goal for how you want to speak, but the content that you are
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learning with, this could be videos, it could be often maybe some movies or books or something
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like that. The content is not aligned with how they want to speak. Now, an obvious example
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is children. You see children, they spend time with other kids, they watch little shows
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for kids and they start speaking like little kids. It's pretty obvious. But what you see
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there, that's content alignment and you understand why children speak the way they do or tell
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the jokes that they do because they're watching content specifically for little kids.
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Sometimes you will find a child who just likes older people stuff and maybe they watch shows
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for adults or other things like that and that changes their vocabulary. It's usually less
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of a problem for native speakers, but non-native speakers, as an example, someone wants to
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be casual, they want to understand natives in real conversations. They want to be casual
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in their speech. They want to blend the sounds of their words together, but they're watching
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CNN or they are watching the BBC. Now, there's nothing wrong with the BBC, CNN news programs
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like that. If you're interested in that, that's fine. But there is a misalignment here between
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formal vocabulary and the goal of casual speech. Does that make sense?
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I know this is not supposed to be a profound, amazing idea. It's to remind people, hey,
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if you want to be casual and speak casually and understand native speakers who speak casually,
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then you shouldn't be looking at a CNN or BBC. Now an example of something you should
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read or pay attention to is kind of like tabloid news. All right. [Inaudible 00:04:13] your
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tabloid news, T-A-B-L-O-I-D. This is conversational for everyday people, lots of idioms and funny
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things and actual conversational speech and less more formal specialized technical vocabulary
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that you would see in something like the news. Even me, my focus for learning Japanese is
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everyday casual conversations. I can talk with people about all kinds of things and
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I can even have conversations with people about education or business or whatever, but
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it's usually more in a casual, conversational way, the way people really speak. So I would
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have trouble writing an essay in Japanese about something using formal vocabulary because
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I just don't know so much of it unless it's a specific thing maybe related to education
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or business, but in general, this content alignment here, I will sometimes watch some
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TV shows that are, maybe casual or conversational or dramas or something like that. This kind
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of information in Japanese. But most of my content is just speaking with Japanese people
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and this could be online or in person and most of the time in person, because I live
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in Japan, but when I was in America, it was some online and some meeting people.
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But anyway, the more casual way to do this is tabloid and so you can look up the National
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Enquirer. This is probably the most famous of the tabloid magazines. The kind of information
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in here, it's probably not going to help you in daily life the way that CNN and BBC will.
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If you've never heard of the National Enquirer, you'll understand when you look at it. But
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it's stuff about celebrities or sports stars or other things like that. Lots of drama and
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scandals. So it's interesting content. I don't personally read it because I don't care, but
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I recommend it for people. Rather than learning with the BBC, pick up a magazine like this,
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it's written for an easier audience and it has a lot more casual conversational speech.
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So this is just one example. It could be with music as well or movies or
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other things, but there should be alignment between the goal you have for how you want
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to speak and the kind of content that you're learning with. So if you want to speak like
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a native speaker, it's good to watch some videos like mine and learn how to do that
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because this is what I call the fluency bridge, where I'm moving you from your current level
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to the higher level of where you'd like to be speaking. But you can't spend all of your
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time with just English lessons and that's only going to get you halfway to your goal.
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You have to spend the rest of your time with the kind of content that's aligned with what
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your goals are. Now, if you are a professor or you don't care
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about having casual conversations, really you should because even in an academic setting
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or a business setting, really the secret to having great conversations is understanding
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casual and conversational language. But you can focus more on things like the BBC, but
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just remember this idea. A lot of people, they will try to do one thing, they will have
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this in mind for their goal and then not move towards that thing because they're doing something
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else. So most people, the reason they... For people who are learning a language, this
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is how they are taught to learn language. "Hey, today in the English lesson we're going
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to listen to a report from the BBC." Okay, that's great, but how is that going to help
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me speak in a casual conversation where people are not using that vocabulary? So if you don't
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care about this stuff or you are just more interested in having better conversations,
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go with the tabloids and the National Enquirer rather than the news. Does that make sense?
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Anyway, I won't go too much into this, but this is what content alignment is all about
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and this is what I teach. And remember, it's very simple. Begin with your goal and you
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work backwards from that. So you don't begin with the content. You begin with the goal.
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Where do you want to be and how do you get there? Pretty simple.
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All right, well if you have enjoyed this, you can post a comment down below. Let me
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