5 Tips for Better English Listening Skills

Well hey there I’m Emma from mmmEnglish!

Today’s lesson is going to focus on five tips to improve

your English listening skills.

So often we focus on speaking, don’t we? But listening,

understanding someone else is just as important if you want to

be able to communicate effectively, right?

What makes listening so hard is that the English that you hear

is often quite different to the English that you learn.

So I want to share five different techniques that you can use

to improve your listening skills.

Perhaps you’ve already tried a few of them,

maybe some of them are new. I definitely hope

that you can take a couple of new ideas away

and put them into practice after this video.

When I was preparing for this lesson I asked the members inside

my English speaking community Hey Lady! about what they

feared most when it comes to listening to someone

speaking English, what were the things that worried the most

and I got lots of different responses

but the top three were: Not being able to understand words,

maybe slang, people talking too fast

so of course, that includes linking,

contractions and reduced forms.

Thirdly, not being familiar with or comfortable with the accent.

What do you think? Do you agree?

What worries you the most when you have to listen to someone

who is speaking in English? Let me know down in the comments.

Listening to people is something that we do all of the time.

You’re listening to me right now. We listen to podcasts,

we listen to TV shows and movies.

All of this is passive listening, you’re absorbing the sounds

and the words, taking what you know

and understanding it, interpreting it.

But today I really want to talk about

how you can practise and how you can improve

your listening skills so that you can feel more confident joining

conversations and meeting new people and

communicating in English.

First up, pronunciation.

One of the best things that you can do to improve your listening

skills is to study pronunciation

but I’m not really talking about

learning and practising individual sounds

but rather focusing on the elements of naturally spoken English.

Things like contractions, reduced forms, sentence stress,

intonation, all of these things, learning to hear and recognise

the sounds of English as it’s actually spoken

because English doesn’t always sound like what you expect,

does it? Sounds blend together, they change,

sometimes they’re completely dropped.

And it’s no wonder that your poor little brain is  

crying out for help as you’re listening to someone speaking English

and it’s no wonder that you tend to blame your ears and yourself

for not being able to hear and understand the sounds

but it’s not your fault. You haven’t been taught

to hear ‘What do you want to do?’

that’s what you expect to hear, isn’t it?

What you actually hear is something like:

Whaddaya wannado?

Learning to recognise these sounds and to start associating

those sounds with the words ‘what do you want to do’

is gonna help

right and I have the perfect video to help you practise,

the thirty most common reductions in English.

The link is up here and I’ll add it to the end of the video

but if you study and learn the sounds of naturally spoken English,

you’re going to be in a much better position to actually understand

spoken English.

Next up is reading and listening together.

Now this really shouldn’t be a new idea because I talk

about it all of the time. It is one of my favourite techniques

to help you improve your pronunciation which I just explained

is an excellent way to help

you improve your listening skills, right?

With this technique, you get to see the word as you read

and you also get to hear it as it’s being spoken.

So you start to recognise

the sounds and associate it to the words.

Hey quick question. Do you use Ted Talks at all when you study

and you practise your English?

Ted Talks are brilliant resources to help you with your

listening skills in English.

If you go to their website, every video has an interactive transcript

and that transcript allows you to follow the script

as the speaker is talking so it’s great for learning new words,

it’s great for hearing the natural pronunciation

and you can even use it to pause and to practise imitating

what the speaker is saying. Ted Talks are also a really awesome

way to listen to different types of English speakers

because there are so many different talks that you can listen to.

Listening to those different voices, different accents,

different paces, all of this is essential to helping you develop

your listening skills.

So this is my third tip, listening to different accents,

different voices and in different contexts.

Opening yourself up to different voices and

different accents is so important.

It’s not only about accents but it’s also the tone of people’s voice,

the pace at which they speak and then of course, the context

in which you’re listening, background noise,

maybe you’re really comfortable talking one-to-one

but when there’s a group and there’s multiple people talking,

they’re talking over the top of each other

it becomes more challenging.

So we have all of these different features to play with.

Playing with the difference in all of these experiences is something

that will help you to develop really strong listening skills.

Now if you choose to listen to different voices,

it may be a little harder at the beginning.

It’s definitely going to be something that pays off

for you in the long run because you’re going to be able to

understand more people

and you’ll feel less fearful as you meet people who have an accent

or a tone of voice that you’re not familiar with.

So how do you know when you should look for a different accent

or a different type of person to listen to?

When you’re listening to someone, maybe you’re listening to me

right now and you’re feeling really good.

I can understand most of what she’s saying.

I feel relaxed and comfortable.

I’m kind of pleased with myself actually.

Well this is a sign, it’s a sign that’s telling you

you need to shake things up a bit.

If you’re feeling comfortable, then you know it’s time to push

the boundary of your comfort zone a little.

Not a lot, let’s not go crazy but a little.

And when you feel a little bit of discomfort or that fear

when you start talking to someone and you realise

that their accent is quite different

or maybe they’re speaking really quickly, you just want to notice

that fear, that resistance that you have

of not being able to understand someone you’re worried about it.

That is telling you that this is the type of situation that you need

practice with. The more you listen to someone,

the more you understand of them, right?

So again Ted Talks are really great tools to help you with this

because people who are presenting, they’re often speaking a little

more clearly. You have the transcript to help you practise with

and you get to ease into different accents, different paces,

different tones.

Let’s get on to my next tip.

Write what you hear.

This is my absolute favourite one. I can’t wait to share it.

So we’re not talking about sitting down to a YouTube video

and writing out the entire thing, everything that you hear.

That is not going to work, it’s not going to be fun.

It’s going to take you a bloody long time.

So I have some really specific steps

to follow if you want to practise along in this way.

Step one is choose a really small section of a video,

a podcast or a Ted Talk,

just thirty seconds only.

Step two is just listening to that section a couple of times.

You’re not writing yet, you’re just listening,

you’re getting used to their accent, you’re getting used to the tone

and the pace of their voice.

You’re also becoming more familiar with the topic or the context

of the conversation.

Step three.

Okay now you’re ready to pick up your pen and to write.

So you want to listen to the first sentence,

pause, write down what you hear.

Listen to the next sentence, pause,

write down what you hear.

Now you may want to slow down the speed of the audio a little.

It’s really easy to do that with Ted Talks, with Audible

and on YouTube. We really don’t want to make this an impossible

task. If slowing down the speed a little

helps you to get through the practice

there is no harm in doing that at all.

So what about when you don’t quite catch something,

maybe there’s a word that you don’t recognise, you don’t know the

meaning of, you can’t recognise it, maybe the sounds

have kind of all squished together

and so it doesn’t make a lot of sense to you.

That’s fine, leave a gap, keep listening,

write down what you do hear.

Do this all the way through to the end of that little section

that you’re listening to

and go back to the start, listen again,

try to fill in some of those gaps. Look at the words around the gap.

Can you try and guess what could go there

or what should go there?

So tell me, what is so great about this really simple technique

to help you improve your listening skills?

Any ideas?

Unlike all of the other tips that I’ve shared today,

this one helps you to actually discover what you’re not hearing.

When you’re listening, you are always taking in information.

You’re taking in everything that you understand

and you’re leaving the rest behind

but the parts that you don’t understand, they’re the parts

that are going to help you to learn and to grow.

So filling in those gaps is going to help you to understand

and it’s going to help you to improve your listening skills.

And lastly, watch without subtitles.

Okay quick poll.

Who watches movies or TV shows without any subtitles?

Answer honestly here. I really genuinely want to know.

Share it down in the comments.

Watching a movie or a TV show in a language that you’re learning

without subtitles is really hard work

especially if you’re sitting down to do it at the end of a long day,

you’re sitting down to watch your favourite show,

you just want to relax.

Yes watching without subtitles is harder. It’s going to teach you

how to listen. When you listen to people in real life,

there are no subtitles right, there are no captions in real life

so we have to build that confidence and that awareness

with our listening skills.

You’ve got your favourite TV show, you have a notebook handy,

you’ve got it sitting next to you on the couch

just so every time you sit down to turn on the telly

you’ve got it there ready.

You want to turn off the subtitles and start paying attention.

Remember we’re just focusing on the first one minute,

when you watch that one minute through,

pause,

take out that notebook and write down a few notes about

what you saw or what you heard in the first minute of that video.

So, for example, you might write something about

one of the characters.

Paul seemed really frustrated by

Annie’s decision to book a holiday with her friends

and not to ask him first.

So then go back, turn on the subtitles, of course in English,

and read them through for the entire minute making sure

that you understood everything exactly as you wrote down.

The ideas are all clear and true. That is the active listening practice

that you need to keep improving your skills.

So there you have it!

They were my five tips, five different techniques that you can use

to practise and to improve your English listening skills.

Of course, you can do it on your own.

You can do it with a study buddy

but I recommend that you just choose one of the techniques

we talked about today and put it into practice over a whole week.

Try and do it a few times see if it sticks.

See if it’s something that’s working for you,

something that you enjoy.

I’ve left some links to some really great Ted Talks

down in the description. You can use them to get started

and if you want to focus on natural pronunciation

then check out this video right here, the one about

common reductions that I mentioned earlier

or this entire course that I made here on YouTube

that’s about linking and natural pronunciation.

I’ll see you in there!

嗯,嘿,我是来自 mmmEnglish 的 Emma!

今天的课程将重点介绍

提高英语听力技能的五个技巧。

所以我们经常专注于说话,不是吗? 但是,

如果您希望

能够有效地沟通,倾听、理解他人同样重要,对吧?

听力之所以如此困难,是因为您听到

的英语通常与您学的英语完全不同。

因此,我想分享五种不同的技巧,您可以使用它们

来提高听力技巧。

也许您已经尝试过其中一些,

也许其中一些是新的。 我绝对

希望你能

在这个视频之后带走一些新想法并将它们付诸实践。

当我准备这节课时,我问了

我的英语社区里的成员嘿女士! 关于他们

在听别人

说英语时最害怕的事情,最担心的事情是什么

,我得到了很多不同的回答,

但前三名是:无法理解单词,

可能是俚语,人们说话太快

当然,这包括链接、

收缩和简化形式。

第三,不熟悉或不适应口音。

你怎么认为? 你同意?

当你不得不听一个说英语的人时,你最担心的

是什么? 在评论中让我知道。

倾听人们的意见是我们一直在做的事情。

你现在在听我说话。 我们听播客,

我们听电视节目和电影。

所有这一切都是被动的倾听,你在吸收声音

和文字,接受你所知道的

并理解它,解释它。

但今天我真的很想谈谈

如何练习以及如何

提高听力技巧,这样您就可以更有信心地加入

对话、结识新朋友并

用英语交流。

先说发音。

提高听力技巧的最好方法之一

就是学习发音,

但我并不是在谈论

学习和练习个人声音

,而是关注自然口语的元素。

诸如缩略、简化形式、句子重音、

语调,所有这些事情,学习听到和

识别英语的发音,

因为英语听起来并不总是像你期望的那样,

是吗? 声音混合在一起,它们会发生变化,

有时它们会完全消失。

难怪

当你在听别人说英语时,你可怜的小脑袋会大声呼救,

难怪你倾向于责怪自己的耳朵和

自己无法听到和理解这些声音,

但这不是你的 过错。 你还没有被

教导听到“你想做什么?”

这就是你希望听到的,不是吗?

你实际上听到的是这样的:

你想做什么?

学习识别这些声音并开始将

这些声音与“你想做什么”这些词联系起来

很有帮助,我有完美的视频来帮助你练习,

这是英语中最常见的 30 种缩略语。

链接在此处,我会将其添加到视频的末尾,

但是如果您学习并学习自然英语口语的发音,

您将能够更好地真正理解

口语英语。

接下来是一起阅读和听力。

现在这真的不应该是一个新想法,因为我一直在

谈论它。 这是我最喜欢的

帮助你提高发音的技巧之一,我刚刚解释过这

是帮助

你提高听力技巧的好方法,对吧?

使用这种技术,您可以在阅读时看到单词,

并且在说出单词时也可以听到它。

因此,您开始

识别声音并将其与单词相关联。

嘿,快速的问题。 您在学习和练习英语时是否使用 Ted Talks

Ted Talks 是帮助您

提高英语听力技巧的绝佳资源。

如果您访问他们的网站,每个视频都有一个交互式脚本,

并且该脚本允许您

在演讲者讲话时跟随脚本,因此非常适合学习新单词

,非常适合听到自然发音

,您甚至可以使用它来暂停 并练习

模仿说话者所说的话。 Ted Talks 也是

聆听不同类型英语人士的一种非常棒的方式,

因为您可以听很多不同的演讲。

聆听那些不同的声音、不同的口音、

不同的节奏,所有这些对于帮助您发展

听力技巧至关重要。

所以这是我的第三个技巧,听不同的口音、

不同的声音和不同的环境。

向不同的声音和

不同的口音敞开心扉是非常重要的。

这不仅与口音有关,还与人们的语调

、他们说话的语速、当然还有

您正在聆听的环境、背景噪音有关,

也许您真的很乐意一对一交谈,

但 当有一个小组并且有多个人在说话时,

他们会互相争吵,

这变得更具挑战性。

因此,我们可以使用所有这些不同的功能。

在所有这些体验中发挥不同,

这将有助于您培养真正强大的聆听技巧。

现在,如果您选择听不同的声音

,一开始可能会有点困难。

从长远来看,这肯定会

为您带来回报,因为您将能够

理解更多的人,

并且当您遇到具有您的口音或语调的人时,您会感到不那么恐惧

。 不熟悉。

那么你怎么知道什么时候应该寻找不同的口音

或不同类型的人来倾听呢?

当您在听某人讲话时,也许您现在正在听我讲话,

并且感觉非常好。

我能理解她说的大部分内容。

我感到放松和舒适。

我其实对自己有点满意。

嗯,这是一个标志,它告诉你

你需要稍微改变一下。

如果您感觉舒适,那么您就知道是时候

稍微突破舒适区的界限了。

不是很多,让我们不要发疯,而是一点点。

当您开始与某人交谈时感到一点不适或恐惧

时,您会

意识到他们的口音完全不同,

或者他们说话的速度可能非常快,您只想

注意到恐惧,您

对 无法理解您担心的人。

那是在告诉您,这是您需要

练习的情况。 你听一个人

的越多,你就越了解他们,对吧?

所以,Ted Talks 真的是很好的工具,可以帮助你解决这个问题

,因为演讲的人通常会说

得更清楚一点。 你有成绩单来帮助你练习

,你可以轻松适应不同的口音、不同的节奏、

不同的语调。

让我们继续我的下一个技巧。

写下你听到的。

这是我最喜欢的一个。 我迫不及待地想分享它。

所以我们不是在谈论坐下来观看 YouTube 视频

并写出整个事情,你听到的一切。

那是行不通的,不会很有趣。

这将花费你很长时间。

因此

,如果您想以这种方式练习,我有一些非常具体的步骤要遵循。

第一步是选择视频

、播客或 Ted 演讲的一小部分,

只需 30 秒。

第二步就是听该部分几次。

你还没有写作,你只是在听,

你已经习惯了他们的口音,你已经习惯了他们的

语气和语速。

您也越来越熟悉对话的主题或

上下文。

第三步。

好的,现在您可以拿起笔开始书写了。

所以你想听第一句话,

停顿,写下你听到的内容。

听下一句,停顿,

写下你听到的内容。

现在您可能想稍微放慢音频的速度。

使用 Ted Talks、Audible 和 YouTube 很容易做到这一点

。 我们真的不想让这成为一项不可能

完成的任务。 如果稍微放慢速度

可以帮助您完成练习,

那么这样做完全没有害处。

那么,当你没有完全听懂某些东西时,

也许有一个你不认识的词,你不知道它的

意思,你不认识它,也许这些声音

都被挤在一起了

,所以 这对你没有多大意义。

没关系,留个空隙,继续听,

写下你听到的。

一直这样做到你正在听的那个小部分的结尾,

然后回到开头,再听一遍,

试着填补其中的一些空白。 看看间隙周围的文字。

你能猜出什么可以去那里

或应该去那里吗?

那么告诉我,这种非常简单的技巧

能帮助你提高听力技巧有什么好处呢?

有任何想法吗?

与我今天分享的所有其他提示不同,这个提示

可以帮助您真正发现您没有听到的内容。

当你倾听时,你总是在接受信息。

你接受了你理解的一切

,你把剩下的抛在脑后,

但你不理解的部分

,它们将帮助你学习和成长。

因此,填补这些空白将帮助您理解

并提高您的听力技巧。

最后,无字幕观看。

好的快速投票。

谁看电影或电视节目没有任何字幕?

在这里诚实回答。 我真的很想知道。

在评论中分享它。

用你正在学习的语言看电影或电视节目,

但没有字幕真的很辛苦,

特别是如果你在漫长的一天结束后

坐下来看你最喜欢的节目,

你只是想放松一下。

是的,没有字幕观看更难。 它会教你

如何倾听。 当您在现实生活中聆听人们的声音时

,没有正确的字幕,现实生活中也没有字幕,

因此我们必须通过我们的聆听技巧来建立这种信心和意识

你有你最喜欢的电视节目,你有一个手边的笔记本,

你把它放在你旁边的沙发

上,这样每次你坐下来打开电视时,

你就已经准备好了。

您想关闭字幕并开始关注。

请记住,我们只关注前一分钟,

当您看完一分钟时,

暂停,

拿出笔记本并写下关于

您在该视频的第一分钟看到或听到的内容的一些笔记。

因此,例如,您可能会写一些关于

其中一个角色的内容。

保罗似乎对

安妮决定与她的朋友一起预订假期

而不是先问他感到非常沮丧。

所以然后回去,打开字幕,当然是英文的

,通读一整分钟,

确保你完全理解你写下的所有内容。

这些想法都是清晰和真实的。 这

是您不断提高技能所需的积极聆听练习。

所以你有它!

它们是我的五个技巧,五种不同的技巧,你可以

用来练习和提高你的英语听力技巧。

当然,你也可以自己做。

你可以和学习伙伴一起做,

但我建议你只选择

我们今天讨论的一种技术,然后在一周内付诸实践。

试着做几次,看看它是否粘住。

看看它是否对您

有用,您是否喜欢。

我在描述中留下了一些指向一些非常棒的 Ted

演讲的链接。 您可以使用它们开始学习

,如果您想专注于自然发音,

请在此处观看此视频,该视频是关于

我之前提到的常见缩减的视频,

或者我在 YouTube

上制作的关于链接和自然发音的整个课程。

我在里面见!