Understand FAST English Conversations [Advanced Listening Lesson]

8,904,027 views ・ 2018-05-25

Speak English With Vanessa


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

00:02
Hello, hello.
0
2929
1631
00:04
Welcome to today's live English lesson here on the Speak English with Vanessa YouTube
1
4560
5190
00:09
Channel.
2
9750
1000
00:10
I'm so glad that you're taking time out of your day to improve your English.
3
10750
3780
00:14
Today, I hope that you will improve your listening skills and especially listening to fast English
4
14530
6320
00:20
speakers.
5
20850
1100
00:21
A lot of my students have told me that they can understand me, but they can't understand
6
21950
5140
00:27
TV shows or movies or other native speaker friends, because they talk really fast, so
7
27090
6780
00:33
today I'm going teach you a technique that will help you to understand native English
8
33870
5600
00:39
speakers and also improve the skills step-by-step every day.
9
39470
4400
00:43
Today, first we're going to talk about how can you understand fast speakers, then we're
10
43870
5540
00:49
going to practice this technique together, and then at the end, I'm going to help you
11
49410
5399
00:54
continue this style for the month of June in the 30 Day English Listening Challenge.
12
54809
6201
01:01
We did this listening challenge in January of 2018 with a big success.
13
61010
4780
01:05
A lot of you really enjoyed this challenge every day, improving your listening skills,
14
65790
4530
01:10
so we're doing it again for the month of June.
15
70320
2790
01:13
At the end of this lesson, I'll give you some more details, but if you would like to know
16
73110
4030
01:17
now, you can click the link in the description to learn more about the 30 Day English Listening
17
77140
4710
01:21
Challenge Pack Two.
18
81850
3110
01:24
How can you understand native English speakers?
19
84960
4380
01:29
Is there a trick?
20
89340
1000
01:30
I know a lot of people think that if they just listen a lot, if you watch Star Wars
21
90340
8150
01:38
five million times, eventually you'll understand what they're saying.
22
98490
4190
01:42
But if you have ever tried to watch an English TV show, if you've ever tried to watch Breaking
23
102680
6979
01:49
Bad, or Game of Thrones, or an older show like Friends, and you understood hardly anything,
24
109659
8021
01:57
you probably felt a little bit overwhelmed or frustrated because there's a lot of vocabulary,
25
117680
6969
02:04
a lot of expressions, and a lot of reductions in pronunciation.
26
124649
4390
02:09
A lot of different things that you're not used to hearing on a daily basis, so can you
27
129039
5581
02:14
really just watch these things millions of times to understand?
28
134620
5489
02:20
Maybe you could, but it's not the most efficient method.
29
140109
3940
02:24
If you hardly understand anything of what you're listening to, you need to take a step
30
144049
6470
02:30
back, and use the technique that we're going to talk about today.
31
150519
4580
02:35
And that technique is going to be analyzing short real conversations.
32
155099
7110
02:42
When you take a real conversation, not one of my videos ... My videos are teaching English.
33
162209
4540
02:46
I'm speaking to English learners.
34
166749
2210
02:48
But when you watch and listen to real English conversations, you're going to hear the natural
35
168959
6120
02:55
reductions, the natural vocabulary, the natural linking styles.
36
175079
4371
02:59
When you take short clips from conversations like that, and analyze it, listen to it, again
37
179450
7099
03:06
and again and again, you'll start to realize, "Oh, maybe I can understand this short segment.
38
186549
6341
03:12
I know which sounds are difficult for me, which sounds are easy for me.
39
192890
4860
03:17
Maybe which ones are different from my native language."
40
197750
3689
03:21
Analyzing those short clips, that is a key to understanding long TV shows, understanding
41
201439
8160
03:29
your co-workers when they speak in a business meeting, understanding when you call your
42
209599
5370
03:34
hotel in Florida when you're going to Disney World.
43
214969
3300
03:38
You need to understand the receptionist on the phone, but she's probably going to speak
44
218269
3900
03:42
fast.
45
222169
1000
03:43
This is a key to help you take your listening skills to the next level.
46
223169
4660
03:47
Analyzing those short segments.
47
227829
1330
03:49
Of course, you can listen to Star Wars five million times.
48
229159
5711
03:54
It's possible.
49
234870
1449
03:56
But if you want to be more efficient and understand multiple English speakers, this is the technique
50
236319
7960
04:04
that we're going to practice today.
51
244279
2210
04:06
If you're joining me live for this lesson, I want to thank you.
52
246489
2990
04:09
Thank you from Taiwan, Korea, Paraguay, Brazil.
53
249479
2880
04:12
Thank you so much.
54
252359
1871
04:14
If you are watching the replay, no problem.
55
254230
2940
04:17
We're going to be practicing this technique of analyzing short real conversations today.
56
257170
7410
04:24
Make sure that you have a pen, some paper, and be prepared to be active during this lesson,
57
264580
7130
04:31
because it's good to passively listen, but when you're active, that's when your brain
58
271710
6050
04:37
makes those connections that it needs to really remember these things in the future when you're
59
277760
6040
04:43
using it in the real world.
60
283800
1989
04:45
Take your pen, take your pencil, we're going to be analyzing a clip.
61
285789
3981
04:49
Let's go to the second section, and I'm going to tell you what we're going to be listening
62
289770
5000
04:54
to.
63
294770
1000
04:55
We're going to be doing four things.
64
295770
2730
04:58
The first thing is, we're going to listen to a fast clip.
65
298500
4570
05:03
This is a quick conversation that I had with my mother-in-law.
66
303070
4390
05:07
She is American.
67
307460
1210
05:08
She is a native English speaker.
68
308670
1980
05:10
She speaks quickly.
69
310650
1190
05:11
She uses natural pronunciation.
70
311840
2799
05:14
All native English speakers are able to understand her.
71
314639
3781
05:18
But maybe for you, she speaks in a different way than you're used to, or she speaks faster.
72
318420
5769
05:24
She speaks like you're used to hearing in TV shows.
73
324189
3181
05:27
But it's a little fast, so the second thing we're going to do is we're going to listen
74
327370
4810
05:32
to a slow version.
75
332180
2289
05:34
This slow version is actually going to be the same exact conversation, but it's going
76
334469
10720
05:45
to be reduced.
77
345189
3091
05:48
It's going to be slowed down to a kind of unnatural speed.
78
348280
6169
05:54
You might think that it's not helpful to listen to unnatural slow conversations, but when
79
354449
11351
06:05
you hear the fast version, and then you hear the slow version, it is going to be key.
80
365800
5440
06:11
It is going to be the key to your success because you're going to hear every single
81
371240
6470
06:17
word and when you listen to the fast version again, you'll realize, "Oh, I do understand
82
377710
8340
06:26
everything."
83
386050
1000
06:27
The second thing we're going to do is listen to that slow version, and then we're going
84
387050
3869
06:30
to check your writing.
85
390919
2771
06:33
I guess the third thing is to write.
86
393690
3819
06:37
The third thing is to write exactly what you hear.
87
397509
3051
06:40
I want you to use your pen, use your pencil.
88
400560
3120
06:43
You can write it on your phone, but there's some studies that show when you physically
89
403680
5269
06:48
write something, you remember it better.
90
408949
2940
06:51
I recommend writing exactly what you hear, and trying to imitate exactly that same speaking
91
411889
10550
07:02
style.
92
422439
1000
07:03
When you hear some words that maybe you don't know, just try to write it down, and we'll
93
423439
5771
07:09
listen to the fast version a couple of times, and then we'll go back and listen to the slow
94
429210
3799
07:13
version.
95
433009
1490
07:14
When you listen to the slow version, this is your chance to pick up on any words that
96
434499
6401
07:20
you didn't understand in the fast version.
97
440900
2290
07:23
"Pick up on" is a great phrasal verb that just means, "Oh, I can hear those.
98
443190
5890
07:29
I can understand it.
99
449080
1980
07:31
I can understand those little segments."
100
451060
3139
07:34
When you listen to the slow version, you'll be able to pick up on those little details
101
454199
4821
07:39
that you might have missed in the fast version.
102
459020
3280
07:42
And when you finish writing, the fourth step is to compare your writing with the original
103
462300
7899
07:50
transcript.
104
470199
1041
07:51
What did Margie, who's my mother-in-law, what did Margie actually say in that conversation?
105
471240
7690
07:58
And when you can compare her speaking to what you wrote, then you'll realize, "Aha!
106
478930
5930
08:04
This is word is always difficult for me.
107
484860
3640
08:08
Why can't I hear it?"
108
488500
1430
08:09
Or maybe you'll realize, "Oh, that's what it sounds like in a real conversation."
109
489930
4260
08:14
When it's reduced, when it's linked together, "Aha.
110
494190
2940
08:17
Now I can understand it."
111
497130
1800
08:18
And in the 30 Day Listening Challenge, you're going to have these four things: The fast
112
498930
5209
08:24
version, the slow version, you're going to write.
113
504139
2710
08:26
I'm going to give you a worksheet so that you can write, and then a transcript so that
114
506849
3790
08:30
you can check your writing every day.
115
510639
3011
08:33
A lot of my students in the first listening challenge in January, they said that the first
116
513650
4679
08:38
couple days were pretty tough.
117
518329
1861
08:40
It was fast.
118
520190
2130
08:42
It was a new technique, a new strategy for them, but on the second week they noticed
119
522320
5610
08:47
a huge improvement.
120
527930
1790
08:49
All of a sudden, their ears were getting used to hearing and they felt more comfortable.
121
529720
4950
08:54
And by the third week, the fourth week, it just got better and better.
122
534670
3830
08:58
This is your first lesson.
123
538500
1220
08:59
This is kind of a practice technique, so if you feel like it's too fast, "Oh, I can't
124
539720
4150
09:03
do it", be patient with yourself, try to do this lesson a couple of times when it's finished,
125
543870
5620
09:09
and then if you would like to join the 30 Day English Listening Challenge, this is the
126
549490
4469
09:13
week when it's open, May 25th to May 31st.
127
553959
3961
09:17
You'll be able to continue to use this technique over the month of June and you can continue
128
557920
6520
09:24
improving your listening skills.
129
564440
1269
09:25
If it is after the month of June, or after May when you're watching this, you can just
130
565709
4401
09:30
click on the link and see when the challenge will open again.
131
570110
2919
09:33
All right, what we're going to do now is, I'm going to share my screen and I'm going
132
573029
4591
09:37
to show you the writing style that you can have.
133
577620
4500
09:42
I would like to show you exactly the kind of thing that you're going to see.
134
582120
6649
09:48
All right, here on my screen you can see 30 Day English Listening Challenge 2.
135
588769
10250
09:59
Here is the conversation outline that you're going to see.
136
599019
5421
10:04
First, Margie is going to say something, then I'm going to say something, then Margie, Vanessa,
137
604440
6420
10:10
Margie, Vanessa.
138
610860
1020
10:11
If you have a piece of paper right now, I recommend writing at least M, V, M, V, M,
139
611880
5950
10:17
V. Try to write this so that you can, at least, prepare yourself for what you're going to
140
617830
4960
10:22
hear.
141
622790
1000
10:23
This is actually day 16 of the Listening Challenge that is open right now for $30.
142
623790
8070
10:31
This is day 16.
143
631860
2070
10:33
On June 16th, you'll have this conversation, but I wanted to give it to you as a free sample.
144
633930
5990
10:39
You'll see here, in this conversation, Margie describes her decision to home-school her
145
639920
4950
10:44
children.
146
644870
1200
10:46
This is a quick little summary of what you're going to hear.
147
646070
4110
10:50
It's only going to be a couple seconds, maybe 30, 40 seconds, so we're going to listen to
148
650180
4920
10:55
the fast version a couple times.
149
655100
2349
10:57
All right.
150
657449
2010
10:59
Are you ready to listen to the fast version?
151
659459
3771
11:03
Let's listen to the fast version a couple times.
152
663230
3359
11:06
I'm going to show it to you, or let you listen to it three times.
153
666589
4481
11:11
You're going to hear the conversation, but you're not going to see any words.
154
671070
3569
11:14
You're only going to see my face, so this is really going to test your listening skills.
155
674639
5241
11:19
I'm going to turn off my microphone and I want you to listen to this original fast audio
156
679880
6860
11:26
version.
157
686740
1409
11:28
Are you ready?
158
688149
1000
11:29
We're going to listen to it three times.
159
689149
2471
11:31
Okay.
160
691620
1159
11:32
Let's listen.
161
692779
1261
11:34
Margie: I home-schooled my children, and that was a big thing way back when.
162
694040
5450
11:39
Vanessa: Not the norm?
163
699490
1060
11:40
Margie: Not the norm, yeah.
164
700550
1300
11:41
Vanessa: That's kind of typical of the US, though, that people do do things differently.
165
701850
4010
11:45
Margie: Yeah.
166
705860
1000
11:46
Vanessa: Not everyone follows the same pattern.
167
706860
4530
11:51
Margie: I home-schooled my children, and that was a big thing way back when.
168
711390
7710
11:59
Vanessa: Not the norm?
169
719100
1060
12:00
Margie: Not the norm, yeah.
170
720160
1239
12:01
Vanessa: That's kind of typical of the US, though, that people do do things differently.
171
721399
4071
12:05
Margie: Yeah.
172
725470
1000
12:06
Vanessa: Not everyone follows the same pattern.
173
726470
3900
12:10
Margie: I home-schooled my children, and that was a big thing way back when.
174
730370
7080
12:17
Vanessa: Not the norm?
175
737450
1060
12:18
Margie: Not the norm, yeah.
176
738510
1280
12:19
Vanessa: That's kind of typical of the US, though, that people do do things differently.
177
739790
4029
12:23
Margie: Yeah.
178
743819
1000
12:24
Vanessa: Not everyone follows the same pattern.
179
744819
3781
12:28
Okay.
180
748600
2719
12:31
Thank you for your patience the first time.
181
751319
4111
12:35
The sound wasn't on, but the second time it was.
182
755430
3110
12:38
I hope that you got a chance to listen to that clip three times.
183
758540
4099
12:42
It was pretty quick.
184
762639
2041
12:44
Margie mentioned that she home-schooled her children.
185
764680
6329
12:51
Let's listen to the slow version.
186
771009
2510
12:53
I want you to hear every single word slowly.
187
773519
5681
12:59
This version is not with Margie, it's with me and Dan, my husband.
188
779200
6550
13:05
We're reading it really slowly.
189
785750
2850
13:08
I hope that it will be easier for you to understand, but if you have your pen, make sure that you're
190
788600
7359
13:15
writing down everything you hear.
191
795959
2240
13:18
All right, are you ready?
192
798199
1811
13:20
I'm going to turn over my microphone.
193
800010
4230
13:24
I'm going to turn it off, and I want you to hear the speakers, so that you can check out
194
804240
4849
13:29
exactly what you're listening to.
195
809089
2401
13:31
Okay, let's listen.
196
811490
2120
13:33
Day 16.
197
813610
2839
13:36
Typical.
198
816449
1421
13:37
Dan: I home-schooled my children, and that was a big thing way back when.
199
817870
7000
13:44
Vanessa: Not the norm?
200
824870
1500
13:46
Dan: Not the norm.
201
826370
1550
13:47
Vanessa: Yeah.
202
827920
1000
13:48
That's kind of typical of the US though, that people do do things differently.
203
828920
6029
13:54
Dan: Yeah.
204
834949
1000
13:55
Vanessa: Not everyone follows the same pattern.
205
835949
4070
14:00
Day 16.
206
840019
3451
14:03
Typical.
207
843470
1720
14:05
Dan: I home-schooled my children, and that was a big thing way back when.
208
845190
7339
14:12
Vanessa: Not the norm?
209
852529
1471
14:14
Dan: Not the norm.
210
854000
1540
14:15
Vanessa: Yeah.
211
855540
1000
14:16
That's kind of typical of the US though, that people do do things differently.
212
856540
6060
14:22
Dan: Yeah.
213
862600
1000
14:23
Vanessa: Not everyone follows the same pattern.
214
863600
3940
14:27
Day 16.
215
867540
3190
14:30
Typical.
216
870730
1599
14:32
Dan: I home-schooled my children, and that was a big thing way back when.
217
872329
7180
14:39
Vanessa: Not the norm?
218
879509
1491
14:41
Dan: Not the norm.
219
881000
1420
14:42
Vanessa: Yeah.
220
882420
1060
14:43
That's kind of typical of the US though, that people do do things differently.
221
883480
6120
14:49
Dan: Yeah.
222
889600
1000
14:50
Vanessa: Not everyone follows the same pattern.
223
890600
5400
14:56
All right.
224
896000
6120
15:02
We listened to the fast version three times, actually six times, but the first three times
225
902120
4159
15:06
didn't work.
226
906279
1000
15:07
It's okay.
227
907279
1091
15:08
Then the slow version three times.
228
908370
3180
15:11
You heard Dan say what Margie was saying, and I was saying what I was saying, but also
229
911550
4670
15:16
slower.
230
916220
2750
15:18
Did you think that the slow version was easier for you to understand?
231
918970
4599
15:23
If you heard that fast version, and you felt, "This is too fast", that's probably also how
232
923569
5941
15:29
you feel when you watch English TV shows or movies, maybe when you talk on the phone with
233
929510
6040
15:35
a business client.
234
935550
1610
15:37
That same feeling of, "I can't understand the majority of what they're saying", or,
235
937160
4909
15:42
"I don't understand these little expressions."
236
942069
2960
15:45
Well, when you're listening to the slow version, you're going to be able to pick up on those
237
945029
5420
15:50
little details, and it's going to help you build your fluency and build your listening
238
950449
3881
15:54
skills.
239
954330
1119
15:55
Let's go to step number four.
240
955449
1921
15:57
I hope that you were writing what you were listening to, or at least listening closely.
241
957370
4370
16:01
We're going to take a look at the worksheet.
242
961740
2230
16:03
Actually, the transcript.
243
963970
1520
16:05
I'm going to show you the transcript.
244
965490
1789
16:07
We're going to go over the transcript.
245
967279
1730
16:09
I'm going to explain three vocabulary words, because every day in the 30 Day Listening
246
969009
5031
16:14
Challenge, there are three vocabulary expressions that I'll tell you more about from each clip.
247
974040
6500
16:20
Let's take a look at the transcript.
248
980540
1109
16:21
I'm going to share my screen again.
249
981649
3000
16:24
And we're going to look at exactly what was said.
250
984649
5661
16:30
All right.
251
990310
2709
16:33
Here, you can see 30 Day English Listening Challenge 2, The Transcripts.
252
993019
8820
16:41
Does this look familiar?
253
1001839
4321
16:46
You saw on the worksheet Margie, Vanessa, Margie, Vanessa, Margie, Vanessa.
254
1006160
6190
16:52
And here we have exactly the what we said, so I hope that as you were writing, your paper
255
1012350
4570
16:56
looks similar to this.
256
1016920
2120
16:59
And then, at the bottom, we have vocabulary expressions.
257
1019040
2760
17:01
Let's talk about these in just a moment.
258
1021800
2050
17:03
But first, I'd like to go over the transcript.
259
1023850
3330
17:07
I'm going to read this slowly, and after we finish talking about the transcript, we're
260
1027180
4640
17:11
going to go back and listen to the fast version a couple times so you can see, "Oh, I do understand
261
1031820
5500
17:17
more, and I do know what this means."
262
1037320
2110
17:19
In the beginning, Margie said, "I home-schooled my children, and that was a big thing way
263
1039430
7100
17:26
back when."
264
1046530
1070
17:27
I'll explain that expression in just a moment.
265
1047600
1990
17:29
Then I said, "Not the norm."
266
1049590
2950
17:32
And Margie repeats, "Not the norm."
267
1052540
2130
17:34
I said, "Yeah, that's kind of typical of the US, though, that people do do things differently."
268
1054670
8200
17:42
Margie agrees, she says, "Yeah."
269
1062870
2470
17:45
And I said, "Not everyone follows the same pattern."
270
1065340
3260
17:48
All right.
271
1068600
2070
17:50
I hope that you heard something similar to this, at least in the slow version.
272
1070670
4470
17:55
Let's talk about these three vocabulary expression, because they're essential for understanding
273
1075140
4410
17:59
the meaning of this short clip.
274
1079550
2960
18:02
Margie says, "Home-schooling was a big thing way back when."
275
1082510
5510
18:08
This expression "way back when" is super common.
276
1088020
3500
18:11
We say this all the time to talk about an undefined time a long time ago.
277
1091520
6490
18:18
You're not saying 10 years ago.
278
1098010
2680
18:20
That's specific.
279
1100690
1170
18:21
Way back when is a general time a long time ago.
280
1101860
4010
18:25
Maybe you might say, "Way back when, women didn't wear pants, they wore skirts or dresses."
281
1105870
8920
18:34
This is not a specific time, but it's just a general time a long time ago.
282
1114790
5760
18:40
She said, "I home-schooled my children.
283
1120550
2130
18:42
That was a big thing."
284
1122680
1000
18:43
That means it wasn't common.
285
1123680
1560
18:45
It was unusual way back when, so 20 years ago when her children were younger.
286
1125240
6610
18:51
I kind of repeated the idea.
287
1131850
2550
18:54
"Not the norm."
288
1134400
1990
18:56
The norm.
289
1136390
1040
18:57
I made a video on YouTube several years ago about the expression "the norm".
290
1137430
5140
19:02
And this means normal.
291
1142570
2230
19:04
It's not normal.
292
1144800
1410
19:06
That wasn't normal.
293
1146210
1980
19:08
We can say, casually, "Oh, that's not the norm", or, "It is the norm."
294
1148190
4880
19:13
You might say, "In my country, it is the norm to eat dinner late.
295
1153070
6340
19:19
We eat dinner at 8:00 p.m., 9:00 p.m.
296
1159410
3360
19:22
It's the norm to eat dinner late."
297
1162770
2040
19:24
Let me know, what is something that is the norm in your country?
298
1164810
3850
19:28
That's the second vocabulary expression that we talk about down here.
299
1168660
3630
19:32
And finally, why in the world did I say, "People do do things differently"?
300
1172290
7230
19:39
Why did I repeat do twice?
301
1179520
2980
19:42
Well, this is another thing that I made a YouTube video about quite a long time ago.
302
1182500
5240
19:47
We often use do as emphasis.
303
1187740
3870
19:51
If you said to me, "Vanessa, you don't like cats?"
304
1191610
5130
19:56
Well, I like cats, so I could respond, "I do like cats."
305
1196740
6580
20:03
I'm adding do before the verb.
306
1203320
3860
20:07
And here, the verb happens to be do.
307
1207180
3690
20:10
That's why it seems a little strange that they're together, because we could say, "People
308
1210870
5680
20:16
do things differently."
309
1216550
2100
20:18
But instead, I decided to emphasize what I was saying.
310
1218650
4280
20:22
"Oh, people do do things differently."
311
1222930
3980
20:26
You might add do in front of something else that is emphasized.
312
1226910
3740
20:30
All right, so those are the three vocabulary words here.
313
1230650
3240
20:33
I'm going to go back to my video for just a moment.
314
1233890
6390
20:40
Before we take a look at the fast version and then take a look at the transcript so
315
1240280
4890
20:45
you can read them and listen at the same time, I want to let you know that every day for
316
1245170
5760
20:50
the 30 Day English Listening Challenge, you're going to get three new vocabulary expressions
317
1250930
4230
20:55
like this included in the transcript.
318
1255160
2930
20:58
Because, yes it's good to improve your listening skills, but you need to know what they're
319
1258090
4530
21:02
saying too.
320
1262620
1560
21:04
Maybe you can understand, you can hear each word, but can you understand it?
321
1264180
5020
21:09
Can you use those expressions yourself?
322
1269200
2320
21:11
Well, that's what the vocabulary is for.
323
1271520
2190
21:13
And because it's such a short clip, I hope that it will help you to repeat it a lot of
324
1273710
4940
21:18
times, to be able to engrain it in your memory.
325
1278650
3890
21:22
Okay.
326
1282540
1000
21:23
Let's look at the transcript.
327
1283540
1000
21:24
I'm going to share my screen and we're also going to listen to the fast version a couple
328
1284540
7690
21:32
times.
329
1292230
1000
21:33
I want you to follow along with your eyes, check your paper that you were writing on,
330
1293230
5490
21:38
and make sure that you wrote it accurately.
331
1298720
3320
21:42
And if you didn't write something accurately, circle it.
332
1302040
3280
21:45
Go back and decide, "Oh, every time that she said and, I wrote an.
333
1305320
6530
21:51
I didn't add a D. I couldn't hear that sound."
334
1311850
3650
21:55
You know, for you, that's a difficult thing to hear.
335
1315500
3280
21:58
Make sure that you go back and analyze your own difficulties with that.
336
1318780
6360
22:05
Let's go ahead and listen to the fast version together.
337
1325140
4660
22:09
All right, I'm going to play it here and share my screen.
338
1329800
5320
22:15
Let's do that.
339
1335120
9410
22:24
Margie: I home-schooled my children, and that was a big thing way back when.
340
1344530
8630
22:33
Vanessa: Not the norm?
341
1353160
1070
22:34
Margie: Not the norm, yeah.
342
1354230
1300
22:35
Vanessa: That's kind of typical of the US, though, that people do do things differently.
343
1355530
4010
22:39
Margie: Yeah.
344
1359540
1000
22:40
Vanessa: Not everyone follows the same pattern.
345
1360540
3560
22:44
Margie: I home-schooled my children, and that was a big thing way back when.
346
1364100
6750
22:50
Vanessa: Not the norm?
347
1370850
1060
22:51
Margie: Not the norm, yeah.
348
1371910
1280
22:53
Vanessa: That's kind of typical of the US, though, that people do do things differently.
349
1373190
4030
22:57
Margie: Yeah.
350
1377220
1000
22:58
Vanessa: Not everyone follows the same pattern.
351
1378220
2960
23:01
Margie: I home-schooled my children, and that was a big thing way back when.
352
1381180
6160
23:07
Vanessa: Not the norm?
353
1387340
1060
23:08
Margie: Not the norm, yeah.
354
1388400
1280
23:09
Vanessa: That's kind of typical of the US, though, that people do do things differently.
355
1389680
4030
23:13
Margie: Yeah.
356
1393710
1000
23:14
Vanessa: Not everyone follows the same pattern.
357
1394710
4260
23:18
All right.
358
1398970
6390
23:25
How did you do?
359
1405360
1110
23:26
As you saw the transcript, and you listened to the fast version, did you hear more than
360
1406470
6320
23:32
you heard the first time?
361
1412790
2040
23:34
Because we listened to the slow version, we talked about that vocabulary a little bit,
362
1414830
4300
23:39
I hope that you could understand more and it was useful for you to take that first step
363
1419130
7780
23:46
in improving your listening skills.
364
1426910
1790
23:48
Imagine if you studied like this for five to 10 minutes every day for 30 days.
365
1428700
8060
23:56
Your listening skills would skyrocket.
366
1436760
3030
23:59
Skyrocket means improve a lot.
367
1439790
3310
24:03
And this is exactly what other people who joined the course in January told me.
368
1443100
4400
24:07
They said that during the month some lessons were more difficult, some lessons were more
369
1447500
5270
24:12
easy, but by the end of the month, they felt like they had analyzed and listened to these
370
1452770
5280
24:18
short, real clips so many times, and really dedicated themselves for 30 days so their
371
1458050
5710
24:23
listening fluency improved, and the most important thing is, feeling like you can continue that
372
1463760
6010
24:29
and use it in the real world.
373
1469770
1780
24:31
It's great to understand the lessons and that short little clips, but can you take it into
374
1471550
4290
24:35
the real world?
375
1475840
1400
24:37
And yes, you definitely can.
376
1477240
1750
24:38
That's something that you need to do no matter where you are.
377
1478990
2640
24:41
If you're using English, you're going to hear it, so improving your listening skills is
378
1481630
4300
24:45
really important.
379
1485930
1100
24:47
I'm going to show you, as we continue ... If this lesson was useful to you, I hope that
380
1487030
5940
24:52
you can join me to learn like this for 30 days.
381
1492970
3820
24:56
The 30 Day Listening Challenge Pack Two is open right now.
382
1496790
5880
25:02
Yesterday was the first day to join, so you only have one week to join the 30 Day Listening
383
1502670
6850
25:09
Challenge for $30.
384
1509520
1470
25:10
Next time that it opens, it's going to be a higher price and the enrollment will close
385
1510990
5720
25:16
in one week, so make sure that you join before June 1st, because on June 1st, I'm going to
386
1516710
6400
25:23
send you the first lesson.
387
1523110
1380
25:24
Today, we studied the ... Which one was it?
388
1524490
3890
25:28
The 16th lesson.
389
1528380
2200
25:30
And you're going to be able to study Day one, two, three, four, all the way up until 30.
390
1530580
7130
25:37
I'm going to take a moment to share my screen and show you exactly what you're going to
391
1537710
6910
25:44
be learning in the course.
392
1544620
1510
25:46
All right.
393
1546130
1000
25:47
Let's take a moment to take a look at my screen.
394
1547130
5160
25:52
There's a lot going on right here, isn't there?
395
1552290
3190
25:55
I'd like to show you the 30 Day English Listening Challenge Pack Two course material.
396
1555480
8850
26:04
Here, you're going to have access immediately to day zero.
397
1564330
4380
26:08
Today is day zero.
398
1568710
2000
26:10
Any day before the course starts on June 1st is day zero.
399
1570710
4230
26:14
Let's take a look at the day zero material.
400
1574940
5640
26:20
Welcome to the 30 Day English Listening Challenge.
401
1580580
2190
26:22
You're going to find a course guide, which is here.
402
1582770
4130
26:26
This is the course guide.
403
1586900
1450
26:28
A course calendar so that you can track your progress, and also a zip file.
404
1588350
5010
26:33
I know some students want to download all of the courses on the first day, so they don't
405
1593360
4820
26:38
have to keep going online to view them.
406
1598180
2100
26:40
No problem.
407
1600280
1000
26:41
Or you can just view them every day.
408
1601280
2100
26:43
In the course guide, I give you a recommended study guide.
409
1603380
3450
26:46
But I'm going to give you a little tip.
410
1606830
2190
26:49
This is exactly what we did today.
411
1609020
2220
26:51
You're going to be able to download the files, print the worksheet and the transcript, listen
412
1611240
5411
26:56
to the original conversation clip two or three times, like we did today, then you can write
413
1616651
5899
27:02
exactly what you hear, listen to the slow version, which is what we did, as well, and
414
1622550
4910
27:07
then check your writing with the original transcript, which we did.
415
1627460
3820
27:11
You're welcome to also write expressions and sentences using the special vocabulary words
416
1631280
6040
27:17
every day.
417
1637320
1000
27:18
That's kind of a bonus material.
418
1638320
2860
27:21
You also get a calendar for the month of June.
419
1641180
3280
27:24
On June 1st, I'm going to send you the first lesson.
420
1644460
3310
27:27
We studied this day 16 lesson over here, but you're going to have access to all of these
421
1647770
7060
27:34
lessons throughout the month of June.
422
1654830
3050
27:37
And each day you'll have access to a new lesson.
423
1657880
3560
27:41
Right now, these are not available because June hasn't started yet, but on the first
424
1661440
4430
27:45
day you'll have access to day one, the empty-nesters lesson.
425
1665870
3950
27:49
Day two, you'll have access to the free-for-all lesson, etc, throughout the rest of the month.
426
1669820
10280
28:00
If you enjoyed today's lesson, but you just want some more details, no problem.
427
1680100
3870
28:03
Let's take a look at the page that is linked in the description below this video.
428
1683970
5540
28:09
If you go to SpeakEngliswithVanessa.com, which is my website, /listeningchallenge2, or you
429
1689510
6380
28:15
can click the link in the description, you'll see this page.
430
1695890
2890
28:18
At the moment that we are making this live lesson, there are six days, 10 hours, 26 minutes,
431
1698780
6240
28:25
53, 52, 51 seconds left to join the course.
432
1705020
4730
28:29
The enrollment closes on May 31st, so make sure that you join before June 1st when the
433
1709750
6170
28:35
first lesson comes out.
434
1715920
2810
28:38
If you would like to learn more about the course, I recommend taking a look at this
435
1718730
4230
28:42
page.
436
1722960
1000
28:43
You can see another sample conversation.
437
1723960
2330
28:46
This is a sample from day one.
438
1726290
1850
28:48
You can listen to it.
439
1728140
1660
28:49
Listen to the fast one, the slow one, see the worksheet, the transcript, and you'll
440
1729800
5550
28:55
also see some of the bonuses; these 90 expressions, the calendar, and at the end of the month,
441
1735350
5340
29:00
I'll send you a special unofficial certificate of completion with your name on it.
442
1740690
6290
29:06
And it is only $30.
443
1746980
2040
29:09
If you would like to join the course now, it is your best deal because later, if I decide
444
1749020
6640
29:15
to open this course again, for Pack Two it will be a higher price.
445
1755660
5090
29:20
At the moment, Pack One is $47, but if you want to get both of them together, you can
446
1760750
6720
29:27
get it for $60.
447
1767470
1220
29:28
This is special promotion with both packs, but you can get just Pack Two.
448
1768690
4540
29:33
It's the same level, same style material, but just different lessons.
449
1773230
5140
29:38
You can get either one.
450
1778370
2190
29:40
Pack One could start today if you want, or you can have access to these lessons forever.
451
1780560
4770
29:45
There's no rush.
452
1785330
2500
29:47
I recommend studying them with us on June 1st, but you have access to it forever, so
453
1787830
5170
29:53
if you go on vacation for a week, don't worry.
454
1793000
2740
29:55
You can always come back.
455
1795740
1500
29:57
There's also some frequently asked questions.
456
1797240
2510
29:59
"Can I download the lessons?"
457
1799750
2060
30:01
Yes, you can download them and keep them forever.
458
1801810
2990
30:04
"What's the price of the challenge?"
459
1804800
2210
30:07
$30, or one dollar a day.
460
1807010
2590
30:09
"When will I get the first lesson?"
461
1809600
2470
30:12
June 1st.
462
1812070
1130
30:13
Excellent.
463
1813200
1000
30:14
"What level is this?
464
1814200
1110
30:15
What's the refund policy?
465
1815310
1400
30:16
How should I use the course?"
466
1816710
1430
30:18
You can check out all of these questions in the link in the description below, or you're
467
1818140
5640
30:23
welcome to send me an email, as well.
468
1823780
2760
30:26
All right.
469
1826540
1000
30:27
I hope today's lesson was useful for you, and that you could see this technique that
470
1827540
6150
30:33
will help you to improve your listening skills.
471
1833690
2540
30:36
If today was pretty short for you, you'd like to go back, no problem.
472
1836230
4580
30:40
You can repeat this lesson as many times as you would like, and in the 30 Day Listening
473
1840810
4940
30:45
Challenge, I recommend five to 10 minutes every day.
474
1845750
3040
30:48
Five to 10 minutes maybe after breakfast or before you go to bed.
475
1848790
4360
30:53
Repeat the short clip a couple times.
476
1853150
2370
30:55
Repeat it five times, 10 times, three times.
477
1855520
3580
30:59
It's your choice.
478
1859100
1000
31:00
And try to write exactly what it is.
479
1860100
1580
31:01
It should be really short, so that you can complete it successfully every day.
480
1861680
4540
31:06
That's the goal.
481
1866220
1000
31:07
The goal is to be able to complete it, because at the end of the month, you'll really see
482
1867220
3930
31:11
that your progress and your hard work paid off.
483
1871150
2670
31:13
Thank you so much for joining me today.
484
1873820
1641
31:15
If you would like to join the 30 Day English Listening Challenge Pack Two, there's a link
485
1875461
5039
31:20
in the description, and then I'll post a link here at the end of this video.
486
1880500
4230
31:24
Thanks so much for joining me.
487
1884730
1500
31:26
I hope you have a wonderful week, and I'll see you again the next time.
488
1886230
3590
31:29
Bye.
489
1889820
550
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7