English Expert Shares How To Become Fluent Faster

43,635 views ・ 2024-04-03

JForrest English


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Today I'm talking to Kris.
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Welcome, Kris.
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You're an English teacher.
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You've created many training programs,  you've opened language schools,  
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you've helped thousands of  students around the world.
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So tell us, in your opinion, what makes an  English learner successful or unsuccessful?
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Good question.
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So for me, a successful English learner  is someone who's open to change.
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Because so much of learning a language is about  changing something that you believe right First.
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You believe that language works in a certain way.
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And when you learn your first language, you  might think that everything works that way.
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So when you learn a new language,  there's a lot of new things to learn.
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And so some people are ready for  that, and some people aren't.
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And I think that the people who are  ready for for changing something about  
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how they think that those people  do better in in English courses.
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Interesting.
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So do you mean, for example,  if they're in their language,  
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they have a certain grammatical structure or the  
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way they pronounce sounds, they need to be  open to learning how it's done in English.
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Is that what you mean?
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Or something else?
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Yeah, yeah, this is like directly  about about the language.
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This is definitely true and I think it's true in  in maybe a a broader sense at the same time that  
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when when we're approaching learning a language,  it's actually an identity level question.
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It's about who we are.
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And so you have to be open to changing a  little bit about how you see yourself, right?
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Like, so those sounds in in one  language carrying over to another,  
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you just believe that that sound is always  that made that way or by by forming,  
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by shaping your mouth that way or  right putting those sounds together.
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So you have to admit to yourself that oh, there's  another way and and I wasn't doing that before.
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You have to admit that you didn't do  something before that now you have to do so.
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A person who's very stubborn  doesn't like to do that.
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That's a very good point.
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Yes, you have to be very open.
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You have to be willing to admit you're  wrong, willing to identify your mistakes,  
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willing to accept failure, learn from failure.
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And in your experience, the  students you've worked with,  
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is that something that comes easy to them or is  that something you see them really struggle with?
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Some people get it faster than others.
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That's why I kind of characterize  it as openness to change.
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And so I think that's just some  people naturally are are more  
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open and and some are less and  it just makes it a lot easier.
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But yeah, I think that someone can can work on  
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that skill and it's not like a it's not  a static thing, it changes itself so.
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So over time, I think that people as  they learn the language, they start to  
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to think of it this way, that it's that it's  like something that's separate from them.
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You might even see, maybe you've  seen with some of your students how  
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they might have a different voice  when they're speaking a different  
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language or or maybe you've done this  when you speak a different language.
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For me, studying Spanish, I saw that like, I  would always make my voice go a higher register.
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And speaking Russian, I was always  trying to push it a lot lower.
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And it was just like mimicking the sounds that I  thought I heard from the from the other language.
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But I found that sometimes for students,  
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this happens when they kind of feel  like there are two different people.
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Like, I'm this person when I speak this language  and I'm this person when I speak my language.
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And so I try to help them bring those  two things together because you can't  
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really have those two people your your  first person who you really think you  
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are is going to fight against this thing  that's that's not really who you are.
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So we try to integrate or bring together  those two those two parts so the person  
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can have the identity, can feel like  they are an English speaker actually.
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So really good point, because  a lot of my students, they will  
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never label themselves as just an English speaker.
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They won't say, oh, I speak English.
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Even if they've been living in an English  speaking country for years and years,  
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they'll always just say, oh,  I'm I'm learning, I'm a learner,  
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And although I don't think there's anything wrong  with saying you're a learner, at some point you do  
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just have to say I'm an English speaker, I speak  English and just accept that as your identity.
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I I agree.
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I see that with my students too.
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Mm hmm.
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And is there anything practical, any specific tips  
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or advice or strategies that you can  share to help someone who's currently  
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struggling with that try to embrace the  the identity of being an English speaker?
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Yeah, I think, you know, I  I think that it ties into  
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how you can connect learning with  real life, not just with language.
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So it's like if you're going to  learn a language then you need  
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to be able to apply it somewhere or  else you're going to lose it, right.
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The the old rule, use it or lose it.
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So I think that's putting it into  use is really the best way because  
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it doesn't have to, like it's not supposed  to completely change who you are, right?
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That's that would be a little extreme.
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It's it's just a tool that you use.
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So putting you in the situation  where you have to pull that tool  
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out-of-the-box and and put it to use, it  lets you see how it fits into your life.
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So, so yeah so I mean simple things like  if you, if you have a favorite activity  
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maybe like maybe when you're driving the the  classic example like driving the car you're  
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listening to a podcast or an audio book  or a YouTube video or something, right.
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And so you're like driving time,  
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now is English time or shower time  is another good one or something.
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I think these, these or  cooking is another good one.
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I think these situations where you have  to get out of your conscious mind and you  
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go into some repetitive action that's autonomous.
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If you can try to put a language there,  then you're kind of absorbing a lot in  
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the process of doing this for for  me, it's Spanish in the shower.
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I always listen to Spanish music in the shower  and I'm listening, trying to catch the sounds.
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And yeah, that that's that's one easy  thing that I think people can do.
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Yeah.
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So just finding those times in their  day where they can add in English  
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to their everyday routines,  that's really great advice.
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And what about the students you've  worked with when they come to you?
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Do they have this one thing they're  struggling with or they're frustrated with?
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And what is that and how do  you help them overcome it?
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Yeah, usually that is speaking.
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They say I don't have anybody to speak with.
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And so in the beginning what I decided to do was  
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I would just teach a lesson  every day at the same time.
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And I did that for like 40 days in a row  and then decided this is kind of extreme.
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I need a couple days off sometimes.
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And so then we started to bring on  more teachers and more teachers.
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So now we have a a a place where we have  24/7 a person can just log in and and speak.
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So this is, this is how we've tried  to to solve that problem basically.
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I saw that there were a lot of different programs  and apps and things out there, but speaking takes  
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a lot of human power, and it seemed like  there weren't a lot of options for that.
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So that's when I I set that up.
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But when I set that up, that was we  had to teach people how to use Zoom.
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Nobody knew what Zoom was.
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Nobody had been using that.
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So there were a lot of little things  like that that came up along the way.
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But but yeah, for speaking, I think  it's just there are a lot of people  
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out there and you can find people to  practice speaking with and there are  
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a lot of good teachers that  that can help with that too.
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And so finding something that works for  you and someone you like practicing with  
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who can help you, I think that's really important.
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That's a great point and I echo that.
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I would say the number one frustration  I hear as well is with speaking skills.
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And sometimes my my students, they act like it's  difficult to find someone to speak English with,  
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whereas in my mind, I think, but we're everywhere,  native speakers are everywhere around the world.
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So, aside from using your program,  
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maybe they don't have the financial  resources or the ability to.
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How can students find, connect with  and and just speak in English with  
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native speakers or just other  English learners practicing?
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It's a good question.
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So there's lots of groups, forums and and  places online to to meet other people.
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We set up a a group has like  400,000 people in there now.
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But but yeah, I always see the the funniest  thing for me is when I go in onto Facebook  
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or another platform and I see people  commenting like who wants to speak with me?
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Who wants to speak with me.
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So that's not so successful.
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And so, so a lot of times people  kind of think that it should be  
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either that easy or or nothing  at all, all or nothing maybe.
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And so like leaving a comment everywhere, I need  a speaking partner, it's it's not going to work.
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You're going to find somebody maybe who will speak  
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with you one time and they're  not going to be that serious.
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So it's more about finding serious  speaking partners because you know,  
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and that's that's the problem with a  lot of the apps that kind of connect  
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you to a random person and you're  supposed to have speaking practice.
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The the issue with that is, and this  comes kind of back to my whole philosophy  
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of of teaching English, is that it's a  communication is built on a relationship.
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So if I only see you once every year, then  the conversation isn't going to go very far.
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We're always going to say, hi, how are you?
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I'm Kris.
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Is that a lot of students,  That's all they can say.Kris
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Nice to meet you.
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My name is Kris and I'm from the United States.
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And then that's it.
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And and they've had that  conversation 50, * 100 times.
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They've done that a lot.
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So the so you have to get past that.
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And the way to get past that is to have a  longer relationship, a real relationship.
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So I think that a student's  relationship with a teacher  
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should model a real life relationship that  they're going to have out in the world.
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So it's going to progress through stages.
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You're going to start more formal and then you're  
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going to get less formal as  you know each other better.
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You're going to talk about more topics, right?
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So, So if you just go online and just  try to find a random person like that,  
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then it's not going to work.
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So it should be based around some  kind of mutual interest, right?
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So you asked about other learners.
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So if it's other learners,  this is the issue I see.
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And they need to find a common interest.
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If it's with native speakers, then like,  
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it's not going to just be interesting for  that person to just talk with you probably.
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So again, it's like, what's the common interest?
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What's the goal?
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And probably that brings us back  to another big issue with students,  
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right Is is what is the real reason  that you're learning English?
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And why do you bring that up?
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In your experience, what is it for students?
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What's the real reason that  you you hear about your from  
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your students of why they're learning English?
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Usually when we ask them, though, they're gonna  say something like to speak better or to like,  
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it's very like it, Like it's not a joke,  
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but like, this is directly what  they're thinking about, right?
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And it it it's sort of about what's  the want and what's the need.
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So I want to speak more fluently.
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I want to connect with more  people around the world.
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I want to access more information.
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I want to get a better job and all  of those things are just really like  
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symptoms of them not finding comfort in  themselves of of using this thing right.
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So maybe because of the level,  
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like they feel like they don't have the  level of skill to do it or the experience.
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Maybe they feel intimidated by it.
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But but yeah, it's usually  something deeper, right?
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And and so usually they're talking  about these things that don't really  
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get at like how they're going to  use English, like get a better job.
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This is, this is a good example, at least like.
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But thinking that English itself  will get you the better job is wrong,  
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because you still have to use  it somehow to get the job.
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So I like to.
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Sorry, sorry, it's talking too much.
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No, no, it's great.
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I was just going to ask you to clarify that point.
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So instead of saying I want to get a  better job because that seems like a  
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very natural thing to say,  I certainly hear it a lot.
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It seems normal.
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If I heard it So I want to get a better  job, What would be a a better phrasing or  
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an alternative to that that would  be more helpful for that student?
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Yeah, I think I want to get a better job.
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Is a good like it is a good statement.
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But I want to speak better or I want to be.
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I want to be fluent, for example,  we hear that a lot, right?
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I want to be fluent.
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This one isn't so great because  like how do you define that?
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Like what do you what is fluent to you and and  what level of fluency do you need for what?
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And so it's very ambiguous, right?
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And so it's an unattainable goal.
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Get a better job, get a, get a  better job, higher paying job.
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It's a it has at least the clear  result that you can get, right?
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But I think that the the core thing  here is like thinking, thinking.
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So the point I was trying to make,  
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which I guess I didn't make very clearly,  was like language as the goal in itself.
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If the person says that that language is the goal,  
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then that's usually not the case in in my  experience that usually there's another goal.
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There has to be something else.
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And I like to compare language to  money in the way that it's a tool.
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And like nobody just says, like  I want to have better money,  
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you you want you want more units of it or  you want to use it to buy something else.
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So by itself, it's not worth anything.
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So language is kind of like that too.
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It's like, what are you going to use it for?
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You can have lots of words or not a lot of words,  and you can still use them to do different things.
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So it's the emphasis on what  you can do with the skill.
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I want to speak better English, so  I can get a better job, so I can  
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provide a better life for my family,  help my parents support my community.
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It's getting to the deeper motivation behind it.
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Yeah, yeah.
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The deeper motivation, Yeah.
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Yeah, for sure.
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And for all the students listening,  it's something you should consider,  
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because being motivated to improve your  English is one of the reasons that you'll  
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either spend the time or you won't  spend the time improving your English.
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And actually, Speaking of time, that is  something I hear a lot from my students.
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They say, Jennifer, I need to improve my English,  
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I want to improve my English,  but I don't have time.
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Is that something you've  experienced with your students?
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And how do you help them in a busy world that we  
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live in when they have so many  other responsibilities as well?
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Yeah, I think one of the things we talked about  
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before which was combining English  with an activity that you already do.
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I I feel like this is a good way  to to tackle not having time.
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So you combine these activities, but  that's not always possible and that's  
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like a a different kind of learning  than when you're focused, right.
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So.
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So how do you really find the time for it?
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I would say it it's just like everything else,  
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right if we're if we're if we're going to  talk about productivity and time management.
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So it's it's about really identifying  which which blocks of time are not being  
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used correctly now and and fitting it in there.
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This can be challenging for students because  you have to sometimes balance your your your  
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timetable with a teacher's timetable or with  another student or or something else and so  
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that can be a challenge and so it's it's really  about prioritization at the end of the day right.
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If if this is a priority then it will  take place of something lower priority.
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And I think that it's also important to  note the cyclical nature that the cycle,  
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the circle of of English, right.
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Because it's it's like a lot of  people compare it to going to the gym,  
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working out exercising or taking a shower.
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Like you take a shower one time, you're clean.
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That doesn't mean you're clean forever.
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The same is true of of an English lesson.
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So you take the English lesson one time,  
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you you got some new information you got  added fluency but that doesn't mean you're  
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going to be fluent forever and and  you'll lose it if you don't use it.
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So so yeah you have to find the time as far  
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as prioritization against other  activities you're already doing.
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But you could.
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You could connect those  activities like we said before,  
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but then you also need to remember  that it has to repeat, right?
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So you don't want to fall into the  trap where you do it a couple times  
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and then you come back three months  later and then start from zero again.
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Excellent points you provided.
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I really love your use it or  lose it for everyone watching.
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That's a proverb in English.
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Use it or lose it.
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I don't know if it translates into other  languages, but I'm sure you get the sense of it.
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If you don't use your English,  you will lose your English.
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So you have to like Kris said, that cycle.
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You don't just shower once and  expect to be clean forever.
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So the same thing with English.
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I really love that analogy.
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Thank you for sharing that.
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No, Kris, you live in Florida.
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Can you tell everyone about the diversity of  Florida from a language perspective and what  
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life in Florida is like for you from  a diversity of language perspective?
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Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
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It's it's a really interesting place to live.
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The part of Florida where I live,  it's mostly English speaking.
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There's still a lot of Spanish speakers,  
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but if you go to some parts of Miami,  then the majority is Spanish speaking.
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So you can walk into shops and  people are only speaking Spanish.
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I I mean I can find those places here  too, but it's harder to find them.
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But Spanish is definitely the the major second  
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language or or just a second  major language of Florida.
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So that's a really interesting  environment to be in.
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And I'm a parent, I have two daughters.
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And so it's really interesting to see how families  
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raise their children who who  speak more than one language.
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So you know, some parents  who are Spanish speakers,  
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they moved to the United States,  they both parents speak English.
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Their child goes to school and and  maybe will struggle learning English,  
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but some of them will say like, oh, I  want my child just to speak English.
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I want them to.
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So English is a real big thing for them.
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Some parents maybe don't even  teach their children Spanish.
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They speak Spanish, but they don't teach their  children Spanish and they say only English.
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We just want them to speak English and then some.
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Some families teach them  both and children speak both.
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It's interesting to see people's choices,  
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parents choices about raising  bilingual, bilingual children.
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Apart from that, there's a lot of I don't live  too far from from the city here, Tampa, FL.
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And there are a decent number of diasporas groups  of people from other countries who live here.
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So you can hear.
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My wife is Russian, so I I pick up on Russian  all over the place when we're walking around.
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But but a lot of other languages too, yeah.
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Well, thanks for sharing that.
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And the reason I asked.
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Because I wanted students get  some perspective of diversity.
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And in North America because a lot of  students tell me they are very afraid  
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of using their English with native speakers.
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Particularly because they think native  speakers are going to judge them.
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Judge them because of their accents, their grammar  mistakes, their lack of vocabulary and how they  
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sound, and just those feelings really prevent them  from wanting to interact with native speakers.
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So is that something that your  students have experienced?
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And then how would you help them overcome that?
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Yeah, yeah, there's the what did I say?
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There's this phrase that I that I like to  say to characterize this Ah, it's so strange  
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that people who are learning a language, they  they learn all of the rules of the language so  
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that they can speak and sound like the people  who forgot all of the rules of the language.
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That's.
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A really good point.
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So students are here studying rules, studying  the books and trying to speak correctly,  
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but and trying to speak like a native when  the native people completely forgot the rules,  
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don't care about the rules, and they're  not thinking about the rules at all.
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So it's really like a language  learner thing to even think that  
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you're that that someone's going to  care that you made a mistake, right.
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Because the the first point  is you're just speaking.
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It's just communication.
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And then you have to consider how many native  
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speakers that you meet have never  studied any other language before.
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So they don't even know  what they're talking about.
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So you you speak to them and they  might say, oh, you, what did you say?
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Oh, I didn't understand.
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They just don't have any experience  talking to foreign people and they  
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don't have any experience with different accents.
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If if a person from the other side of the country  came to that, they would hear that person say,  
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oh you have an accent, they would say the  same thing to a person who's a native speaker.
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So a lot of times non-native students  who are learning English to come to  
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United States for example, they'll  get discouraged, upset, frustrated  
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about about this that people might hear their  accent and and ask them to repeat something.
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God forbid someone asked me to repeat something.
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Native speakers ask other native  speakers to repeat stuff all the time.
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It's it's not an issue.
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But yeah, so I so I think especially the  rules when you when, when you're really  
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focused on rules and being correct, then it can  really hold you back because you're thinking  
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about the speech and and the language a lot  more than the people who you're talking to.
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I'm glad you said that.
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It's such a great point  for all of you to remember.
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You spend a lot of time interacting with  English teachers, but just remember out  
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there in the real world, you're talking to a a  regular person who is not an English teacher.
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They know nothing about grammar rules,  although they speak the language.
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Yeah, and I think most people are like  that, even in other languages too.
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You kind of learn the grammar and the  rules when you're when you're young,  
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but you learn how to speak from  your parents and your environment.
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And so those rules were  kind of applied afterwards.
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And that's a whole thing I think.
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I think it's really a good idea  for learners to to learn about  
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descriptive grammar and prescriptive grammar.
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Basically, two types of rules, right?
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Are these the rules that they  told me that I have to use,  
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or are these rules to explain why people do this?
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It's it's something that a lot of  students don't ever think about.
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They just say book rule.
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This person said it like the book that's good.
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Didn't say like the book that's bad.
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That's not really how language works.
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Yeah, you're right.
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It's it's everyone watching.
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It's so much more flexible in the real world,  
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which we both try to share with  you in our lessons, of course.
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Now, Kris, you mentioned that  you you're learning Spanish,  
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now you're married to a Russian, so I'm  sure you've learned Russian as well.
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So tell us about your experience,  
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learning languages, some of your successes,  failures, and anything you want about that.
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Yeah, I I think I'm definitely not  a not like a polyglot or someone  
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who has who can boast about a lot of  success of learning lots of languages.
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I was just always very interested  in language as a child.
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My dad just had different like  like dictionaries, like English,  
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French dictionary, Romanian dictionary.
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So I would just go through these things and and  it was like figuring out a puzzle and so then  
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when I went to school I studied different  Romance languages in school and and so I  
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was really interested in in in language and  just being open to kind of that like learn.
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I like to learn about foreign  cultures and that stuff.
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So one thing I noticed was that I had studied  Italian mostly through high school because I  
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lived in Italy for two years and then in before  that in middle school I had studied Spanish.
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So when I moved to Italy, my first instinct  was when I tried to speak Italian to people,  
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Spanish came out of my mouth, the  Spanish that I had learned at school.
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And I thought, that's weird.
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And then when I went to learn Russian,  
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Italian came out of my mouth and it  was like, what's what's going on?
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Why can't I just say the language that I want  And and then I had it again after Russian  
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when I completely forgotten Spanish, try to  learn Spanish again, Russian starts coming.
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So I think what happens is you you like  make a place in your brain when you learn  
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the first foreign language, you make like a part  of your your brain that says there's there's your  
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first language and then everything that's not  first language is over in this other category.
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And so everything kind of gets  put into this one category.
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And then as you learn more languages, you  already have the skill of categorizing,  
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but now you have to create another category.
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And So what we talked about today  about connecting language learning  
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to to activities, that really  has been a big thing for me.
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So Russian is really the  only language that I became  
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fluent in and it's definitely  because I had a real world use.
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So I was in that place, I wanted to  connect with people and I there was  
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a website that's like a like  a Russian version of Facebook.
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And I would basically just go on  there and add random people and  
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then they would send me these strange messages.
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And so I that's how I started.
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I would just go like step by step, like on a chess  board, you like moving one piece and one piece.
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And I would see what they say back  to me and I'd say something and then  
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I would see how far I could get the conversation.
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Before they just got angry that I  was not writing the right stuff.
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And eventually that turned into like being  able to write on the keyboard faster than  
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most Russian people, being able to like,  write pretty well and and then from there  
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speak well because on social media people  tend to write closer to how they speak.
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So, So yeah, that that's kind  of my little language journey.
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An interesting journey you had with Russian and  what I took away from that is you made it fun,  
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you had fun with it, you had fun when you  were making mistakes and you just kept at it.
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And like you said, you had the real world  reason to need to learn Russian as well.
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So that's great that you had that experience.
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So, Kris, if my students were to  do only one thing this week to  
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improve their English fluency,  what should that one thing be?
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Talk to somebody.
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Have a conversation in English.
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Just maybe you studied and maybe  you went to a class at a university,  
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or maybe you maybe for work there was  something you had to do that was in English.
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Like maybe you read an e-mail.
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Whatever you had to do, just just practice  getting the words out of your out of your mouth.
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You just have to do it enough times  for it to become more automatic.
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So you know, if you want  to get strong, do push ups.
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So do some push ups this week.
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You heard it.
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Everyone talk to one person this week.
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That's a very simple thing to do.
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That's achievable.
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I know you can do it.
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Talk to one person this week.
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Great advice, Kris.
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So Kris, where can my audience connect with you?
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Well, they can find us at krisamerikos.com  or just go to YouTube, Instagram, Facebook,  
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look for English with Kris Amerikos and you can  
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connect with us there and and  get whatever you need from us.
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And of course everyone, I'll put the links  in the description so make sure you check.
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Thank you so much Kris for being here and  sharing your wonderful advice with my students.
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Thank you so much.
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