AEE 302: Why Just Speaking May NOT Be the Best Route to Fluency in English

AEE 302: Why Just Speaking May NOT Be the Best Route to Fluency in English

Do you think that speaking is the most important thing for you as an English listener? Today Julian from Doing English will challenge your assumption!
19 Minuten
Podcast
Podcaster
Learn Advanced Conversational English with Professional American Teachers Lindsay and Michelle

Beschreibung

vor 10 Jahren
Come back and let us know your thoughts on this:
http://www.allearsenglish.com/302 Get our FREE IELTS Cheat Sheet:
http://www.allearsenglish.com/evaluation   Today we have a
special guest on the show! Our guest will challenge your assumption
that SPEAKING is the most important part of learning English.
Julian sees learning languages as a simple, two-step process: Step
1: Learn the language that we need for our specific situation Step
1: Apply the language and use it     Julian’s 3 Tips- How
to Keep it Practical: Try to do many different kinds of things in
the language: English is a process. Spend time with it. You can’t
HAVE it. You can’t GET it. You need to constantly maintain
it. Julian says that there is no difference between
“experiencing” the language and “learning” the language, as far as
your brain is concerned. By experiencing the language in many
different ways, we can acquire chunks of English which will help us
to sound more native-like. You should try to encounter the language
through reading, speaking, listening, writing, etc. Get a more
well-rounded experience of the language instead of just focusing on
speaking.   Try to get a balance between intensive activity
and relaxed exposure: Some of your work should be deliberate,
focused, practical, intensive study. At the same time, some of your
work should be a more relaxed encounter with the language. You need
to take it in in a way that is enjoyable and easy. You could try
listening to music in the language or watching TV. The key is
getting a balance between the two forms of learning.   Focus
on things which are useful to YOU: Exclude things that aren’t
useful to you. Don’t bother to learn things that you won’t need to
use. According to Julian, we don’t become fluent in English. We
become fluent in specific topics such as cooking, law, politics,
art, etc. Choose your focus and pursue English in that area. Drop
the idea of becoming “fluent” in English in general.  
Julian’s Bio: Our guest today is an English teacher from England,
living in Japan. He is the father of three bilingual children, is
halfway through a PhD program in Psycholinguistics and used his
insight about language learning to go from speaking poor Japanese
in 2008 to being a translator in 2010. Our guest today is Julian
from DoingEnglish.com   What do you think? Have you focused
down on one specific area of English learning? What area are you
focusing on? Let us know in the comments! Learn more about your ad
choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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