12 Ways to Improve English Listening Skills Understand Native Speakers

Hello everyone and welcome back to English with Lucy!

Today I want to talk to you about: How you can improve your English listening skills ?

So, I’ve got some tips that I’m going to give you.

If you do follow all of my English listening tips,

then you should be able to start to understand native speakers

more easily and more effectively.

We’ve got a lot to cover in the lesson.

So, let’s get started !

There’s a word that I’m going to be using a lot in this lesson and it is ‘‘variety’’.

I want you to use a wide range of resources and listen to a wide range of accents as well.

Why?

Well, I know a lot of you come to me and say:

‘Lucy, I want to learn British English and to do that I’m only going to listen to British speakers’

But in my opinion: that’s not the right thing to do !

You are going to meet people from all over the world with all different accents and you’re going to need to understand them.

You don’t want to just be able to understand British people!

So if you’re not doing it already

I want you to listen to as many accents as possible.

and when you’re doing that

I want you to think about the different sounds that each accent makes.

I made a video with the lovely Anna from English like a native

about the differences between our accents

and lots of students found that really really helpful

because there’s not one definitive way of speaking English.

There are lots of variations: regional variations, variations by country.

I mean English spoken in New Zealand is very different to English spoken in America for example.

So you need to be able to recognize more or less everything and diversify your English.

Focusing on that word ‘variety’ again

I want to talk to you about resources.

For my next point, I want you to ask yourself a question

I want you to answer it yourself honestly

How much time do you actually dedicate to practicing and improving your listening skills?

Answer honestly !

Most of the students that I asked say around 1 to 2 hours

and even then they might be exaggerating a little bit

Now you’ve recognized that: You’re probably not practicing enough.

I want you to start practicing

Honestly, practice makes perfect !

You’re not going to suddenly wake up and be perfect at listening.

It takes time, it takes dedication

and it’s called a skill for a reason

is something that you have to develop principally on your own and also with help from others

but what is listening practice you might be asking me.

Well, I’ve got lots of recommendations for you

which brings me to my next point: “Resources and more importantly variety of resources”

Now the most obvious one is watching TV programs or movies in English.

This is great, but I think you can take it a step further.

Maybe you’re watching programs with English subtitles.

That’s good, but you don’t want to rely on the subtitles.

I want you to learn with your ears and not with your eyes.

So what I recommend you do to take your listening to the next level is “Watch each program or movie TWICE!”

Probably, more achievable with programs short ones.

I recommend that you aim for something that’s less than 30 minutes.

So you could try a comedy like: Friends which is American English or maybe BBC news

and you can just watch the headlines which would be British English pronunciation.

So, I want you to watch it first with no subtitles, see how much you can understand.

and then I want you to watch it again with subtitles, and see what you did pick up and what you didn’t pick up and then note it for next time.

Don’t be afraid to replay things again and again and again !

Learn the patterns of voice that we use.

If you’ve got a listening exam or you’re going to have a telephone conversation or some sort of interview over the phone,

you’re not going to be able to read the person’s lips which can be really useful.

So, you really ought to practice listening blindly !

So, one really really good tip that often gets overlooked is use audio books.

Reading is great for building your vocabulary but it doesn’t do much for your listening skills,

because what a book does not offer you is a pronunciation guide normally.

I’m sure some exist that do.

So, I would like you to start listening to audiobooks.

Pick a book that is interesting and relevant to you.

Judge it by your level !

If you’re quite a low-level, choose a children’s book.

For more intermediate maybe go something for teenagers.

and if you’re advanced obviously go for something that’s aimed at adults or maybe has a lot of technical language.

Remember that: If you want to check your understanding you can always buy the book as well listen to a section and then read it, listen to another and then read it.

This is a wonderful way of improving your listening comprehension.

The best website for audiobooks is audible

and if you click in the link in the description box you can get a free audiobook and a 30-day trial.

There’s absolutely no catch, so try it out and see if it works for you.

One resource that often gets overlooked is youtubers.

I’m not talking about us - lovely bunch of online English teachers.

That are all over YouTube at the moment.

Although I think we could help you a little bit with your listening.

You have an amazing resource full of free videos and listening tools.

Find something that you’re interested in.

Maybe you’re interested in Gossip, celebrities, science, current affairs.

Search for it in English and start listening to it.

My next point is multi task.

Unlike reading or watching TV, listening is something that you can do whilst you do something else.

So once you’ve found your ideal resource, start to build a sort of pack of resources on your smart phone or your computer that you can take with you.

So, if you have a long car journey, on the way to work, on public transport, whilst you’re doing something else like cooking, something you don’t have to concentrate on.

Listen to something in English !

and that links back to my question: “How much time do you actually dedicate practicing your English?”

So, say you spend half an hour traveling to work each day and half an hour traveling back home each day and you listen to something in English for the entirety of those journeys

Each week, you will be doing five hours of listening practice.

That’s amazing !

If you do that, you will definitely improve in no time.

The really great thing is that you’re doing something productive and maybe learning about another topic through English.

That you would normally do.

So, it’s really a win-win situation.

My next tip is do not translate, do not translate.

When you’re speaking to someone in person, I want you to listen for context.

Something I always say to my students is “Fluency over accuracy !”

Now I speak Spanish fluently, but I do not speak it a hundred percent accurately.

I have no problems with listening, I have no problems with understanding, and I have no problems with communicating.

But if you were to film me speaking Spanish and analyze all of the errors that I make, you find quite a few.

It’s really important to understand that you don’t need it to be perfect, you don’t need to understand every single word

You need to understand context and general meaning.

If you spend too much time analyzing each word,

the conversation or monologue will have moved on, by the time you finally understood the word that you are focusing on,

so you actually then have to catch up and you lose understanding.

So, instead of listening word-by-word

listen to phrases as a whole.

My next tip is learn speech patterns.

Okay, I want you to research into how natives speak.

The way in which we write something is certainly not the way in which we say it.

English is not a phonetic language and we don’t always follow our own pronunciation rules.

So, what research can you do?

Well, you can look at homophones.

For example: These are words which have the exact same pronunciation but different spellings and different meanings.

I’ve actually got a video coming out on homophones very soon which i will put in the description box.

An example of a homeophone would be “bear” and “bare”

the same, but different spelling and meaning.

You can also look at minimal pairs.

Minimal pairs are words that have the exact same pronunciation a part from a single vowel sound.

An example of a minimal pair would be “ship” and “sheep”.

…ship…sheep…

So that… and… of the same but the vowel sound is different.

It’s also important that you understand weak forms.

So we have strong forms of words and we also have weak forms.

For example: The word “at”, on its own I say ‘at

But sometimes if I’m using it in a sentence or in conversation and I’m speaking very quickly I will say at with the schwa sound.

I won’t say ‘at three o’clock.

I will say at three o’clock.

It’s important that you recognize that the schwa sound can represent many vowels.

You also need to look at reductions

I’ve got a video all about the reductions “wanna” and “gonna” which is also in the description box,

that will really help you out especially if you want to use those

I know a lot of you do

It’s a really quick way of making yourself sound more native.

and also contractions: I am => I’m; I will => I’ll; she would => she’d.

Important that you learn those.

I’m also making a video on contractions.

So when that’s uploaded I will also put that in the description box.

So that’s it for my lesson on: How to improve your listening skills?

Your homework is to comment below and tell me and everyone else: How you are going to improve your listening skills? now you’ve watched this video.

I want to see you be motivated and I want to see you make a change,

I believe in you and you need to believe in yourselves too.

Don’t forget that: I now upload on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays.

And I also have a free live pronunciation and vocabulary lesson every Sunday at 4:30 gmt which is london time.

On my -English with Lucy- Facebook page.

Don’t forget to connect with me on all of my social media.

My Facebook and my Instagram is where I’m most active

and you can also sign up to my mailing list

If you want to receive emails from me and hear about updates before anyone else.

Alright then, I’ll see you soon for another lesson !

mooah :* <3

大家好,欢迎与露西一起回到英语!

今天我想和大家聊聊:如何提高英语听力?

所以,我有一些建议,我要给你。

如果您确实遵循了我所有的英语听力技巧,

那么您应该能够

更轻松,更有效地开始理解母语人士。

我们在课程中有很多内容要讲。

那么,让我们开始吧!

在这节课中我会经常用到一个词,那就是“多样性”。

我希望您使用广泛的资源并聆听各种口音。

为什么?

好吧,我知道你们很多人来找我说:

“露西,我想学习英式英语,我只会听英国人说的。”

但在我看来:这不是正确的做法 !

你会遇到来自世界各地的不同口音的人,你需要了解他们。

你不想仅仅能够理解英国人!

因此,如果您还没有这样做,

我希望您尽可能多地听口音。

当你这样做时,

我希望你考虑每种口音发出的不同声音。

我和来自英语的可爱的 Anna 制作了一个视频,

讲述了我们的口音之间的差异

,许多学生发现这真的很有帮助,

因为没有一种确定的说英语的方式。

有很多变化:地区变化,国家变化。

我的意思是,在新西兰说的英语与在美国说的英语非常不同。

因此,您需要能够或多或少地识别所有内容并使您的英语多样化。

再次关注“多样性”这个词,

我想和你谈谈资源。

对于我的下一点,我希望你问自己一个问题,

我希望你自己诚实地回答这个问题,

你实际上投入了多少时间来练习和提高你的听力技巧?

老实回答!

我问过的大多数学生都说大约 1 到 2 个小时

,即便如此,他们也可能有点夸大其词

现在你已经认识到:你可能练习得不够。

我要你开始练习

老实说,熟能生巧!

你不会突然醒来并完美地倾听。

这需要时间,需要奉献

,这被称为技能是有原因

的,你必须主要靠自己和他人的帮助来发展,

但你可能会问我什么是听力练习。

好吧,我有很多建议给你

,这让我想到了我的下一个观点:“资源,更重要的是各种资源”

现在最明显的就是看英语电视节目或电影。

这很好,但我认为你可以更进一步。

也许您正在观看带有英文字幕的节目。

这很好,但你不想依赖字幕。

我希望你用耳朵而不是眼睛来学习。

所以我建议你把你的听力提升到一个新的水平是“看每个节目或电影两次!”

可能,使用短程序更容易实现。

我建议你的目标是少于 30 分钟。

所以你可以试试这样的喜剧:Friends 是美式英语或 BBC 新闻

,你可以只看标题是英式英语发音。

所以,我要你先看不带字幕的,看看你能看懂多少。

然后我要你带字幕再看一遍,看看你捡到了什么,没捡到什么,然后记下下次。

不要害怕一次又一次地重播事情!

了解我们使用的语音模式。

如果您进行了听力考试,或者您将要进行电话交谈或通过电话进行某种形式的采访,

那么您将无法阅读这个人的嘴唇,这可能非常有用。

所以,你真的应该练习盲听!

所以,一个经常被忽视的非常好的技巧是使用有声读物。

阅读对积累词汇量很有帮助,但对你的听力技巧没有多大帮助,

因为一本书没有为你提供的通常是发音指南。

我敢肯定有些存在。

所以,我希望你开始听有声读物。

选择一本有趣且与您相关的书。

以你的水平来判断!

如果你的水平很低,那就选择一本儿童读物。

对于更多的中级可能会为青少年做一些事情。

如果你很先进,显然会选择针对成年人的东西,或者可能有很多技术语言。

请记住:如果您想检查您的理解程度,您可以随时购买这本书,也可以先听一段然后阅读,再听另一段然后阅读。

这是提高听力理解的好方法。

有声读物的最佳网站是可听的

,如果您单击描述框中的链接,您可以获得免费的有声读物和 30 天试用期。

绝对没有问题,所以尝试一下,看看它是否适合你。

经常被忽视的一种资源是 youtuber。

我不是在谈论我们——一群可爱的在线英语老师。

目前,YouTube 上到处都是。

虽然我认为我们可以帮助你一点点倾听。

您拥有一个充满免费视频和收听工具的惊人资源。

找到你感兴趣的东西。

也许你对八卦、名人、科学、时事感兴趣。

用英语搜索并开始收听。

我的下一点是多任务。

与阅读或看电视不同,聆听是您可以在做其他事情的同时做的事情。

因此,一旦您找到了理想的资源,就开始在您的智能手机或计算机上构建一种可以随身携带的资源包。

所以,如果你有长途汽车旅行,在上班的路上,在公共交通工具上,而你正在做一些其他的事情,比如做饭,你不必集中精力。

用英语听一些东西!

这又回到了我的问题:“你实际上花多少时间练习英语?”

因此,假设您每天花半个小时去上班,每天花半个小时回家,并且在整个旅程中听一些英语内容,

每周,您将进行五个小时的听力练习。

太棒了 !

如果你这样做,你肯定会很快提高。

真正伟大的事情是你正在做一些富有成效的事情,并且可能通过英语学习另一个主题。

你通常会这样做。

所以,这真的是一个双赢的局面。

我的下一个提示是不要翻译,不要翻译。

当你亲自与某人交谈时,我希望你听听上下文。

我经常对学生说的一句话是“流利胜于准确!”

现在我说一口流利的西班牙语,但我说的不是百分百准确。

我听力没有问题,理解没有问题,沟通也没有问题。

但如果你拍摄我说西班牙语的视频并分析我犯的所有错误,你会发现不少。

理解你并不需要它是完美的,你不需要理解每一个单词

你需要理解上下文和一般含义,这一点非常重要。

如果您花太多时间分析每个单词

,对话或独白就会继续进行,当您最终理解您所关注的单词时

,您实际上必须赶上并失去理解。

因此,与其逐字逐句地

听,不如将短语作为一个整体来听。

我的下一个技巧是学习语音模式。

好的,我想让你研究一下当地人的说话方式。

我们写东西的方式肯定不是我们说它的方式。

英语不是语音语言,我们并不总是遵循自己的发音规则。

那么,你能做些什么研究呢?

嗯,你可以看看同音字。

例如:这些词具有完全相同的发音,但拼写不同,含义不同。

实际上,我很快就会有一个关于同音字的视频,我将把它放在描述框中。

同音字的一个例子是“bear”和“bare

”相同,但拼写和含义不同。

您还可以查看最小对。

最小对是单个元音的一部分具有完全相同发音的单词。

最小对的一个例子是“ship”和“sheep”。

…ship…sheep…

所以… 和… 相同但元音不同。

了解弱形式也很重要。

所以我们有强词形式,也有弱词形式。

例如:单词“at”,我自己说’at

但有时如果我在句子或对话中使用它并且我说话很快,我会用 schwa 声音说 at。

我不会说’在三点钟。

我会在三点钟说。

认识到 schwa 声音可以代表许多元音,这一点很重要。

您还需要查看减少

我有一个关于减少“想要”和“将要”的视频,它也在描述框中,

这真的会帮助你,特别是如果你想使用那些

我知道很多的 你这样做

这是一种让自己听起来更本土化的非常快速的方法。

还有收缩:I am => I’m; 我会 => 我会; 她会 => 她会。

学习这些很重要。

我也在制作关于宫缩的视频。

所以当它上传时,我也会把它放在描述框中。

所以这就是我的课程:如何提高你的听力技巧?

你的作业是在下面评论并告诉我和其他人:你将如何提高你的听力技巧? 现在你已经看过这个视频了。

我想看到你有动力,我想看到你做出改变,

我相信你,你也需要相信自己。

不要忘记:我现在在周一、周三和周六上传。

我每周日格林威治标准时间 4:30 也有免费的现场发音和词汇课,这是伦敦时间。

在我的 -English with Lucy- Facebook 页面上。

不要忘记在我所有的社交媒体上与我联系。

我的 Facebook 和我的 Instagram 是我最活跃的地方

如果您想在其他人之前收到我的电子邮件并了解更新,您也可以注册我的邮件列表。

好的,那我下课见!

哞哞:* <3