Fluency MC meets Rachel's English

93,448 views ・ 2013-07-25

Simple English Videos


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

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This video is a joint project between Rachel's English, Jason R Levine, aka Fluency MC and
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Vicki Hollett, the video producer.
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It originally aired on WizIQ.
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Enjoy!
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The Best in ELT with Fluency MC.
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Listen, oh, listen.
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Rachel, it's so nice to be sitting down with you to talk.
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I met you once in real "real life."
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That's right.
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But like many people, I feel like I know you from seeing
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your videos and following you.
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I have a lot
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of respect for your work.
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Thank you.
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And I'm so happy to have this chance to talk to you.
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I guess the first thing I want to ask,
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and I know a lot of people are interested in, is how did, how did you get into teaching
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in the
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first place?
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Was it English as a foreign language or a second language, was it something else
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and then, how did that connect or evolve into teaching pronunciation?
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Yeah, well, I think it was a bit of an unusual path.
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I did teach a little bit of
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ESL but mostly Rachel's English grew out of something totally different, which was, I
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went to school for opera singing.
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Right.
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I have a Masters of Music in Opera Performance.
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And so through that I was getting really connected
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to this part of my body.
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So it was pronunciation first, in a sense,
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because you had this background in opera.
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Yeah, the ESL work that I did was useful
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but I don't think it actually is related at all to the Rachel's English thing that I'm
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doing, even though I did have that experience.
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So, mostly it grew out of myself singing in
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other languages.
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And so I was studying the pronunciation specifically and the phonetics
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of Italian, French, German, English for the stage; I had studied Spanish.
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So, there was
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that, my relationship to learning the pronunciation of other languages.
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But maybe even more so,
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it was just spending a decade really focused on
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breath and you know tongue placement and these
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kinds of things.
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And I think that gave me a really clear language to talk about pronunciation
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for other people.
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Did you have a language teacher helping you with that or, and a music teacher, or
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were you learning the pronunciation of the languages through the music?
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It was in a class that specifically "Diction for Singers".
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I see.
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So it was always related
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to the goal of singing for the stage.
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And it was focused on pronunciation and not so
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much the languages, although I the did take a semester of Italian, a year of German, and
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a semester of French.
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So you almost had no choice; they focused you on pronunciation.
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Yeah, they did, because, you know, if you only have one year and you need to get all
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of these things under your belt, then that's what's the most important; because as a singer
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you can memorize a translation and, you know, the feeling of what goes where, but in order
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to sell it, you have to really sound like you know what you're saying.
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And you were teaching English during that time or where you'd taught before?
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I did teach English as a second language a little bit during that time at a place in
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Boston where all of my students were Korean and it was mostly one-on-one or two-on-one,
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thirty minute sessions, and I really loved it.
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I think the rhythm of the language is so important, and the melody.
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And for me, having
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the background in singing has been really helpful for that, partially because, you know,
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singing
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is rhythm and is melody, but then also I think I developed
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an ear through that for when I hear someone
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do something, I can imitate it quite well.
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And then I can find out what needs to be changed.
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So, often with students, I'll imitate, think what needs to shift, and then be able to articulate
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that to them.
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Ah, that's interesting.
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For their pronunciation.
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And do they know you're doing that or is this your best kept secret
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you're revealing right now?
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They do they know because they'll be talking and I'll say "hold on," and then I'll do it
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myself and I'll say, okay your tongue needs to make whatever adjustment.
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I do that actually with grammar and vocabulary, if something's high frequency, and I'll kind
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of tune in to the collective use of English somehow from listening but I don't have that
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gift
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with pronunciation; so that's great.
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For the W consonant, the tongue tip is down here,
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and the back part of the tongue stretches up,
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so the tongue stretches this way.
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Ww, ww, wow.
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For the R consonant, the back part of the tongue
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does stretch up, here towards the middle part of the roof of the mouth.
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The front part of the
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tongue pulls back.
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So, with the W, the tongue is stretching.
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With the R, the tongue is sort of pulling up into itself.
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I think I just have a real interest in the human voice and how we produce sounds,
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and vocal health, and this kind of thing.
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So that's where my interest lies, not so much
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in even teaching a language, or, I mean, certainly not grammar!
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Sometimes teachers will correct
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my grammar in videos because it's not always perfect.
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It's all about your passion; follow your passion.
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That's right.
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And so, like, pronunciation and the human voice, that's where it is for
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me.
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So what happened as far as getting your work up on YouTube?
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Did you first imagine
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putting a video of yourself up there and reaching just your students or more students?
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No, actually, I didn't have students when I first started the videos.
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I first started
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the videos when I was living in Germany and I was studying at a language institute there,
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so most of the people that in as in contact with were not American and also were not German:
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they were from all over the world studying German.
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And so I had a friend there from Turkey.
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And he was interested in American English because Hollywood is such a great exporter
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of American English, and wanted to sound more American.
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So we just played around a little
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bit with a few of the sounds, and I was telling him, you know, what his tongue should be doing
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and this kind of thing.
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And he was like, wow, you're really good at that.
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And I thought: hmm,
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idea!
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Actually, in undergrad, I studied computer science and in order to keep that skill set
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going, I had been wanting to make a website;
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I just didn't really have a topic yet.
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But I knew that was something that I wanted to
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create and so when he told me he thought I was good at that, I thought, maybe that's
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my idea.
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And so I made a few videos, put them on YouTube, connected them to a website, and
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just went from there.
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And how, what was the reaction at first?
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Nothing!
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There was no reaction for a long
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time.
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Why?
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Well, I wasn't doing them with a business mind; I wasn't promoting at all; I was just
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exploring, basically.
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And that was ok probably, at that point, or did it make you worried and nervous: nobody
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likes my approach?
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No it didn't make me worried and nervous, no, not at all, because I wasn't doing it
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for an audience.
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I was mostly doing it as a way to explore a website-production kind
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of thing.
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It's great that you had this interest in both pronunciation and computers.
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Yeah, no, definitely.
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You weren't an expert right?
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It just got you more into thinking about
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... In pronunciation?
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No, not pronunciation, I mean that I'm
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just wondering, especially for people out there thinking about doing any kind of online
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anything, but especially teaching, or students who want to study online, who might be a little
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afraid of technology thinking that they can't do it.
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It sounds like you kind of dove in.
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One step at a time.
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Oh totally.
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I mean, when I realized what I needed to learn, I learned it.
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I did not
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start Rachel's English at all with an idea of what it would be, like, in no way, and
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I'm still not sure what it will be.
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And that's important to the point now, because it's gotten, it's so well done now.
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I think that someone who hasn't followed you for as long as I have or as long as many other
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people here may have, would just think that wow that she just, boom, but it didn't happen
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that way.
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Definitely not.
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No, no.
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It grew.
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It started out in a dorm room in Germany.
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When was that, by the way?
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That was 2008.
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This October will be my 5th year anniversary of posting my first video.
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Congratulations in advance.
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Thank you.
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That's great.
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I want to ask you more about the rhythm of English, because I focus a lot on that
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too.
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What techniques have you found most useful?
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Because there are a lot out there.
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Yeah, well, I'm still developing that actually.
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But I've had a lot of fun recently working
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with students where I actually take the actual words out of the picture, and we just work
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on rhythm.
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So, for example, let's just take that phrase da-da-DA-da: for example.
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And when you take the text out, you're just focusing
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on the rhythm.
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Then the main thing I have
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to do with my students is to make their short even shorter, duh duh duh duh, trying to make
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them comfortable with that kind of length; and then once they start having, like, the
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rhythmic language down, and they're comfortable with that contrast and with making things
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that short, then when they put the word back in it's just unreal how much better it sounds.
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And then they're so aware of the difference s if you don't hear it yourself, feel it
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yourself, then you're not going to catch it when people say it.
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Yeah.
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It's such a matter of boiling things down to the most simple units for teaching.
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So, like the L consonant,and just drilling that,
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or in this case the rhythm, just drilling
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that, out of the context of the word or phrase.
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And then you know you can teach people that
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this rhythmic pattern can apply to all of these different words.
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And so, yeah, then as they really drill one word and one pattern,
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they're actually making themselves comfortable
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with the pattern that can be applied to tons of different words and sentences.
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And you said you're still developing this, so imagine where she's going to go with...
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Yeah, I'm excited about it!
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...teaching the stress and what I call "shrinking and linking".
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I just wanted to go back to ask you, when you first started out and you were making
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those videos, did you think about the fact that so many students don't have enough time
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in the class?
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I mean, you were teaching a group of Korean students.
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Yeah, that was about a year before I started the Rachel's English thing.
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Was part of it, were you also inspired or motivated to try to deliver something to
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individual students who wouldn't necessarily have that kind of attention to pronunciation?
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Well, yeah, in a way.
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When I was teaching at the institute in Boston, all of my students
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told me no one else cared about the pronunciation the way I did, and they really cared.
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So they
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really wanted a teacher who really cared.
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Well, can you imagine someone who is trying to learn a language who's not concerned about
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pronunciation?
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But it's true, what you're saying.
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I hear this complaint from a lot from
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students that teachers aren't focusing on it.
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So definitely that was in the back of my mind and the videos were made completely for
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self-study.
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I know that teachers do use them in the classroom but
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my original idea was just to have a great resource to learn on their own because for
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me,
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since I left college, everything that I've had
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to know, I taught myself.
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The library, or online resources, or whatever.
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I mean languages, computer stuff.
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That's interesting.
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I love that kind of learning.
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Well, I can see how that has benefitted you and
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your work.Yeah, definitely.
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Basically, I wanted to make something for English like I wished I was finding for French,
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and German, and Italian.
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So yeah, I thought it was really fun and I wanted to sort of provide
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this
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service for students.
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I think it's really interesting that you made them for self-study.
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You didn't really think about a teacher bringing them into the classroom
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. But now, I notice a lot of teachers using it in the flipped classroom model.
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The other day, literally the other day, at a college where I was doing a workshop, teachers
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were talking about the problem we just talked about, about pronunciation and how students
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want more and what should
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they do because they don't feel trained enough.
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I think that's a big reason why it's not...
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I think so, too.
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I've had teachers say the same thing: I don't know how to teach
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that.
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So it's interesting because I'm a teacher trainer, and I used to think OK, well then
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my job is to try to train up teachers to be able to do that
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and now I'm wondering if that is the best way because the other day these teachers were
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gathered
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at a college in New Jersey.
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And they were talking about this and then one teacher
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said, "You know there's this great teacher
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online, that teaches pronunciation.
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Students can just watch her, she's ..." and I knew she
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was going to say your name,
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and she said, Rachel's English!
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True story.
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That's awesome!
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I smiled to myself.
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"I'm going to have a
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conversation with her!"
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What she said was, "What I do with my students is just, you know, ask them to watch those
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videos, and then do some stuff in class but then they watch on their
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own or, and/or I learn from Rachel as a teacher how to do this in ways that I haven't been
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able to do from books or even from taking classes."
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It feels great to know that I'm providing something that can be helpful to teachers,
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too.
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Because you know teachers, obviously, it's one person, and they're reaching many,
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many, many so if I can help the teacher, then there's just that many more people that are
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benefiting from it.
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But yeah, I think that the idea of the flipped classroom is so great
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because, you know, not only do the teachers not need to learn every single thing to teach
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directly, they can sort of be a curator of other resources, and oversee the process of
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learning for their students.
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It's a very specific skill set to teach pronunciation, different
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maybe than the skills set to teach a language, and grammar,
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and classroom management.
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You would know, and she would know that, better than anyone.
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That's right, so, you know, not every teacher needs to be a great musician and a you know
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super great at teaching pronunciation if they know other resources that they can recommend.
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Aren't we at a time in history, with education, where, you know, teachers can be facilitators,
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guides, curators, mentors, you know, if you want to learn to be a great pronunciation
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teacher, fantastic; but if you don't or if you don't have the time, what's the point
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of being a mediocre one, when you can go see Rachel.
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Exactly, that's exactly right.
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I mean, a good teacher is maybe one that knows, well,
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this person teaches this so well, there's nothing more that I feel like I could add
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to it, let me point my students in that direction, let them work with the material, and then
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I can be here for questions and guidance, and that kind of thing.
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I think it's so important.
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And I think, ultimately, it's just going to make education a lot better.
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Yeah, I think so, too.
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So you had that experience teaching in a classroom.
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Someone
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the other day said, talking about 'ground teachers', or teachers on the ground.
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I love
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that.
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Instead of, like, 'first life' or 'real life'.
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Are you a ground teacher also?
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I'm not right now, actually.
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You're not on the ground.
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Not on the ground.
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Yes, only in the cloud.
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But I do have plans to start developing,
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some in-person maybe workshop kind of things, then
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maybe move more into longer-term classroom
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situation.
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I'm really not sure.
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I mean, I just, for every video I make I have ideas
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for a hundred.
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I feel like I have a lot on my plate with what I'm doing virtually.
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And
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so, I do really want to move into that, because I think that in-person aspect is so interesting.
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Well, they can go hand-in-hand.
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Can't they?
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They can.
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To throw out another term, the blended learning doesn't just have to
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happen with the teacher flipping the classroom,
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it can also be, people are watching your videos, but then here you are in person to do something
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that you couldn't do and then it's back to virtual...
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Definitely.
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Definitely.
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So I see myself moving in that direction at some point, but it's
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not in the short-term plan.
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You just got back from a trip.
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I did.
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I was spying on you a little bit on the trip.
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I don't usually spy.
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I made it easy.
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I guess it's easy for us to spy on each
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other and many others who are watching, so it's kind of fair.
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So tell us where you were,
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and also tell us, how much was work, how much was pleasure?
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Because I did see you met some
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students...
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I did... where you were.
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So tell us how that was
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. Well, I had my first-ever meetup, in Berlin.
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Two students came.
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What?
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It was great!
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Not 200?
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Not 200.
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Two students came, neither of
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them are German.
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It was fantastic!
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We sat down to coffee; we were there for about two
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hours and, just, discussed everything about who they are.
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It was just fantastic getting to know them as people.
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16:18
It was very motivating actually for me, to think these are real people,
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these are the people who are using my videos.
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And, like, wow.
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I
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mean, it's easy sometimes, I think, to lose track of that when, as in my case, I'm only
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doing virtual teaching.
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I'm doing no one-on-one teaching.
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Rachel, there are so many people out there who want to meet you at meetups in Brazil.
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I know!
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In Russia, in Taiwan
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. I'd love to do more, definitely.
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So, and you said you are interested in doing
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the on the ground workshops, so when are you going to...where?
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Well, the most vocal group of people is in Brazil.
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Yes.
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So I will probably end up there at some
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point, I hope.
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I hope, fingers crossed.
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But also, you know, I live in New York City and that's
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such a melting pot, there's so many people there; it's crazy that I haven't done something
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in New York City.
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I should.
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Wow!
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We should talk about that.
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17:10
We should!
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Great.
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Rachel, I know a lot of people out there, both teachers and students who follow
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you, are probably really interested to know how you make your videos.
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How do you make
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videos, how often do you do it, how long does it take, do you do it on your own, do you
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do it with other people's help...
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Yeah.
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Well, I try to do two a week and it takes, depending on the length of the video,
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it takes around ten hours per video.
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Ten hours per video.
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That includes editing
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all the way to the end?
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Yeah, that includes everything: brainstorming, writing out the transcript, doing my hair
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and make-up, the lights, all of the set-up
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17:46
. How much help do you get with all of that?
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I had been doing it entirely on my own until about maybe six months ago.
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I had someone
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come in and help me, because rather than doing it at home, I started doing it at the YouTube
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studios in Manhattan, where they have all of the equipment already set up.
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That must have been really nice.
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It was great.
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18:04
It was fantastic.
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But I have
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18:06
to have someone run the camera and the teleprompter and help me if I meant to say 'consonant'
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18:11
but accidentally said 'vowel'.
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That kind of thing happens all the time as I'm talking.
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But yeah and then, there's, the editing takes quite a bit of time.
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I try to put some of the IPA and text up on the video screen.
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18:21
Yeah, I noticed that you're doing more of that.
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18:23
Typing up the transcript, making, you know,
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an interactive transcript version for my website.
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The whole process is about ten hours.
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18:29
How much of that process has evolved from when you first started?
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And how much have
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you changed, either, what you do, your approach to teaching pronunciation, and the video-making,
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18:41
in response to what students have told you, or
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teachers have told you they liked or didn't like?
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Well, I guess I haven't actually gotten so much feedback that shapes how I make the
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18:50
videos, I more get, suggestions for topics which I try to do.
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18:55
Is there anything you haven't covered yet, as far as, consonants, vowels?
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No.
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Well, I still have some blend work that I would
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19:02
like to do.
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But the sounds are pretty much
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there.
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It's more fleshing out the rhythm.
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As I said, I feel like I've got sort of a
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gray idea of how I want that to go, so trying to sharpen that.
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Really, I said before, for
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every video I have I ideas for a hundred more.
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19:22
I mean, I could right now write down a thousand
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videos that I would like to make.
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Do you?
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19:26
Or do you just keep them like...
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I keep track as I go.
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But a lot of them
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are, like, I get an idea of a way to teach a sound and so then, that would be thirty-three
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19:34
different videos because I would do it for every sound, and that kind of thing.
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Right, right.
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19:38
I just want to take this opportunity to say that if you are a teacher,
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or even just a learner of English, or anything, if you wanted to write down your ideas and
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start video taping your ideas, it's so easy now.
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19:50
It is, yeah.
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19:51
To get stuff out there.
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19:52
Even, you know,
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19:53
starting like you did.
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19:54
Not with a mission to become what you've become, but just as
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19:56
an interest in what you were studying and learning.
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Right, just exploring what's interesting.
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Yeah, and, you know, at that point, to
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know anything about a website, design, was kind of unusal, compared to now.
448
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20:08
Oh it's so easy now.
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You don't need to know anything now.
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20:12
Yeah, except that way you can focus on...
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Right, the content.
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And not the vehicle to get it out there, but more, just, the content itself.
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Which
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is great.
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20:22
Yeah.
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Have you found any areas of teaching pronunciation that are particularly difficult to master
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as a teacher?
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And I also wanted to ask you, from a student's perspective, if a student
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is feeling frustrated with learning something in pronunciation, I wonder how much of that
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is due to, you know, the fact that it really is difficult because of their first language,
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20:44
learning English, or how much maybe is like, oh, I just didn't know this trick, or something.
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Right.
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I guess I have a couple of different answers for that.
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First is that I think that
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the rhythm is the most important thing in capturing the language, the character of the
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20:58
language, much more important than sounds.
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Rhythm.
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21:02
Yeah, rhythm.
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21:03
You heard it here from the expert.
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I'm
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so 100 percent behind you.
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21:07
And so it's been, as I said, I'm developing
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sort of my way for teaching that.
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21:12
So that's coming along, but there's one topic that I'm
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21:17
actually still struggling with teaching, and that has to do with the placement of the voice.
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21:22
So in American English...umm...uhhhh...that's our core sound.
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21:27
It's very much so here.
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21:28
The schwa basically; the elongated schwa.
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21:31
Exactly!
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21:32
And as a singer, I have dealt
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a lot with placement, but not in a very concrete way.
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21:38
What do you mean by placement exactly?
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21:40
Well, no, exactly, that's part of why it's hard to explain, and something a lot of people
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21:45
don't think about, but for me it's like, where does my voice live inside my body.
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21:51
And for me, and I think for Americans, it's generally
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21:53
a lot lower; other languages it tends to be more nasal.
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21:58
If I take American English as
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my base and I compare it to other languages, for example Mandarin.
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22:03
I've had some students
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that just have a very, very nasal delivery; and it also just has to do with the placement.
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22:09
Their voice seems to live so much in their face, completely detached from the body.
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22:15
Whereas
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for me, I think it really lives in the body and then the face is sort of where the shape
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22:20
of the sound will happen.
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22:24
So that's been sort of hard to teach because it's not at all like,"oh
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22:30
you need to round your lips a little bit more."
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22:32
It's not something that people can
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22:33
see that's concrete.
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22:35
It's like, where does your voice live in your body, that's sort
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22:37
of a difficult...
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22:38
Do you think people that develop high accuracy and fluency in their pronunciation, delivery
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22:44
through just experience; and, you know, just like anything else in language, they're not
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22:48
aware of what we're talking about; do you think that's the way, in this case?
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22:53
It sounds
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22:54
like the Holy Grail: if you can find where you're voice lives.
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22:58
You can go from sounding not quite right to sounding very American really quickly if
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23:03
you can make that adjustment.
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23:04
Does it come from just the input and the practice or is it something you could make
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23:08
a video for?
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23:10
I'm working on a video series for it right now, but also a lot of it can be achieved
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23:16
through imitation.
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23:17
Yeah, but for some people they'll say "I know it's not right, but I
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23:21
don't know why it's not right."
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23:23
And often to me it's related to placement.
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23:27
So I'm trying
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23:28
to make some videos that will talk about that in a concrete manner.
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23:30
Also, I'm very lucky
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23:31
to have found a teacher who I'm working with now named Tom Kelly.
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23:35
And he is an actor and
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he has a Master's in Acting from Harvard.
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23:39
He has a great background, speech for the
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23:42
stage; and placement and how to make someone hear you in the very back of the theater and
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23:48
relaxation of the vocal apparatus and everything.
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23:51
Would you say he knows where his voice lives?
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23:53
I would say he does, and he seems to have
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23:57
language about moving that around and some techniques for that.
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24:02
So he and I are working
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24:03
together.
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1000
24:04
So if you can learn from him, you can take
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24:05
that and formulate it somehow.
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24:07
He and I are talking actively about a video
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24:10
series where we work together on that.
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24:12
That's really interesting.
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24:13
So we can look
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24:14
forward to more of that.
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24:16
Hopefully we'll figure out how to teach
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24:17
it.
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24:18
It's almost like "metaphysical."
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24:21
Exactly!
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24:22
That's why it's so hard.
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24:24
Rachel, not long ago I started teaching in a virtual classroom on WizIQ.
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24:30
I got hooked.
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24:31
The first time I did it I dragged my feet getting into a virtual classroom.
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24:37
As soon
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24:38
as I got in there, people were in the chat box meeting each other "Oh, I've seen you,
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24:41
nice to see you there" She's talking, I have the mike and we're reaching all these people,
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24:46
the way you do with your videos.
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24:49
Have you done any work in a virtual classroom?
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24:51
Not entirely, I do have an online course but it's focusing more on the student interacting
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24:57
with the materials on their own and then one-on-one with me.
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25:00
Tell us about that.
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25:02
What's your online course like.
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25:03
Well, it's eight weeks, and basically I cover the topics that I found I work on the
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25:08
most with my private students.
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25:12
But since there's so much one-on-one time, that doesn't really
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25:14
matter.
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1000
25:15
If something they need to work or isn't covered in the course, we work on it
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together.
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It's always one-on-one or do you do small groups?
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It's always one-on-one.
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Do you Skype?
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Yeah, we Skype.
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But actually, Tom, the teacher I was talking about, is teaching a
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course for me right now.
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So I did it four times; he's doing it twice, and I think we're
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going to have a good enough sense for what worked well and what could work better that
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when he's done we're going to brainstorm and I think really revamp it to include much more
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of that sort of, you know, one to five kind of thing.
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Once you're more certain about what people share, their needs.
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I haven't done it yet, but I'm looking forward to it because I think that when students
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can hear another student being coached and they're not actively engaged in having to
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react, they can just watch, I think that's a great opportunity for learning, too.
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Yeah, I agree.
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And then also you can meet more private students this way because more
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people will come into those classrooms.
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They learn from each other, they learn from me; I think it's fantastic.
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And also
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knowing people from all over the world is such a cool thing.
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You know, when I first
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started doing this and they were getting popular and so people were asking me, "Do you teach?"
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and I hadn't yet ever online.
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And that must have just really shocked people to hear that.
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It was crazy.
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Yeah, and so I wasn't sure how beneficial it would be to teach someone
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on Skype, you know, with pronunciation especially when you've got the mike and the speaker thing.
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So what's it like?
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It's been great!
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So if I invited you into a virtual classroom one day, would you accept?
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I would love it.
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I would love to see what that's like.
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I'm teaching with students but also I have a plan to bring teachers together coming up.
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Stay tuned for that.
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Of course, I'd love for you to come.
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Yeah, that'd be great!
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Excellent!
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Rachel, it's such an honor and privilege to have you here.
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Thank you for having me.
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It's been very fun.
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27:08
And this is the first episode or edition of "The Best in ELT with Fluency MC" so I'm
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really, really happy you agreed to come and it was great talking to you.
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Yeah, you too.
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I hope everybody enjoyed this conversation; I know I did.
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And please stay tuned for further
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editions of "The Best in ELT with Fluency MC" only in WizIQ.
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27:27
Thanks so much.
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Peace and much respect.
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Don't stop there!
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learn more about us and our work.
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See my playlist, 'American English in Real Life' or Jase's playlist, Collotunes.
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27:39
And the producer of this video, Vicki, has fun minute English lessons you'll want to
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be sure to check out.
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Thanks for watching!
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Original video on YouTube.com
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