Balanced English Learning Improve the Way You Study English

Hi, I’m Oli.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

Many English learners have similar problems,
and say the same things: “I’ve been studying

for years, but I still can’t speak fluently!”

“How can I remember vocabulary?”

“How do I stop translating in my head?”

In this video, we’ll talk about what it
means to learn English, why so many learners

have these problems, and what you can do to
learn more effectively.

First, have you seen our website?

Go check it out!

Oxford Online English dot com.

You can find videos, listening lessons, quizzes
and professional teachers who you can study

with if you need classes.

Also, one more thing.

Don’t forget to turn on the captions if you
need them!

All our videos have captions in English, some
have captions in other languages too.

Click the ‘CC’ button in the bottom right
to turn on captions now.

Let’s start with a question: what does it
mean to learn something?

No, really, think about it.

When you say, “I learned this,” what do
you mean?

Actually, it can mean different things.

All learning depends on three things: theory,
memory and practice.

You need to understand ideas and concepts—theory.

You need to remember ideas and how to do things—memory.

And, you need to use things in real life—practice.

When you learn something, you need a balance
between these three things, and you need the

right balance.

If you don’t get the balance right, you’ll
find it difficult to learn.

You’ll waste time and energy, and you’ll probably
get worse results than you could have.

Let’s talk about this balance in more detail.

When you learn different things, you need
different amounts of theory, memorisation,

and practice.

For example, think about learning to ride
a bike.

Do you need theory, or memorisation?

Not really!

No one learns to ride a bike by reading books.

You get on a bike, and you try.

You fall off; you try again.

It’s almost 100 per cent practice.

Let’s take a very different example: aeronautical
engineering, meaning designing aeroplanes

and rockets.

OK, I’ll be honest: I don’t know, because
I’m not an aeronautical engineer, but I’m

guessing that it’s a lot of theory and memorisation,
and less practice, because when you’re designing

a plane or a rocket, you should get it right
first time.

So, what’s the point?

When you learn different things, you need
a different balance of these three areas—theory,

memorisation and practice.

What about learning English?

Here’s my suggestion.

It’s not meant to be something precise.

This isn’t statistics.

What does this mean for you?

Many English learners have problems because
they get this balance wrong, and they get

it wrong in similar ways.

What are the biggest problems English learners
have here?

One: they focus too much on theory.

Two: they try to use theory and memorisation
to replace practice.

Three: they leave memorisation to luck.

And Four: they don’t practice enough, or effectively.

These mistakes lead to all the common English-learner
complaints: “I’ve been studying for years

but I can’t speak fluently!”, “I learn
vocabulary, but I can’t remember it!”,

and so on.

Let’s see what you can do about these problems,
and how you can make your English learning

more effective.

In this section, we’re going to talk about
the first two problems: focusing too much

on theory, and using theory and memorisation
to replace practice.

Actually, this isn’t English learners’
fault.

Many people learn English—and other languages—in
a theory-heavy way at school or university.

Then, they think this is what language learning
means: sitting in a classroom, doing grammar

exercises, and so on.

Theory is part of English learning.

Going to a language class might be useful.

Doing grammar exercises can be helpful in
the right situation.

But, here’s the key point: practice comes
first.

Practice should come before theory.

Using a language is a practical skill.

It’s more like riding a bike than designing an airplane or a rocket.

You can’t replace practice by studying theory.

You can’t learn to speak by doing exercises
from a book.

You can’t learn to write essays by reading
other people’s essays.

Here’s a question: do you have problems
speaking fluently, because you’re translating

whole sentences in your head?

Yes?

If you do, that’s a sign that you’ve studied
English in a way which depends too much on

theory and not enough on practice.

If you do this, you end up trying to ‘calculate’
sentences in your head.

That’s really hard!

It’s like doing complex maths at high speed.

Of course you can’t speak fluently if you’re
doing this.

Again, theory is not useless! Studying theory is not useless.

But, you have to put practice first.

If you want to learn to speak, you have to
speak.

If you want to learn to write, you have to
write.

Theoretical study should support your practice.

What does that mean?

Let’s take something which for many people
is the biggest symbol of boring English lessons—grammar

exercises.

Grammar exercises can be extremely useful!

But, you should only do them only when you
really need them.

For example, imagine you’re speaking English
regularly, but you’re not good at using

the present perfect.

You know something about it, and you hear
other people use it, and you know that you

can’t use it well when you speak.

That’s the right moment to take your grammar
book and read about the present perfect and

do some exercises.

More generally, you should only study theory—like
grammar rules or vocabulary exercises—when

you already know what you need.

Don’t take your grammar book, or your vocabulary
book, and start at unit one and say, “I’m

going to study this whole book!”

Have you ever done that?

I have.

It doesn’t work.

You won’t finish the book.

You probably won’t even finish the first
three units.

It’s boring and it doesn’t help you.

Get a good grammar book.

Get a good vocabulary book.

Get books on writing, or IELTS, or whatever
you need.

Then, take what you need when you need it.

If you don’t know what something is, then
you don’t need it yet.

If you aren’t sure whether you need something
or not, then you don’t need it yet.

By the way, I’m not making this stuff up.

It comes directly from my own language-learning experiences.

As you might know, I live in Greece.

My Greek is not that good.

[speak some Greek] I haven’t really studied
formally.

At one point, I realised that I didn’t know
how to form the past tense.

I knew some past verbs, but I couldn’t
make past forms which I hadn’t seen before.

Obviously, using past forms is very helpful.

In any conversation, you’ll probably need
a past verb at some point.

So, I found some grammar notes, did some exercises,
and I learned how to make past forms.

It wasn’t boring or difficult, because I
felt I needed it.

And, it helped me immediately, so I remembered
most of what I studied.

Here’s a summary: put practice first.

When you feel you need something theoretical,
like a grammar point or vocabulary on a certain

topic, then go and study it.

You need to feel that you need it, because
otherwise it probably won’t stay in your

head.

The same is true with memorising things.

There’s no point memorising something unless
you know you need it.

Don’t learn a big list of vocabulary which
you’ll probably never use.

Go out and practise, talk to people, write
something, find out what you can’t say and

which ideas you can’t express, and then
learn those words.

Let’s move on and talk more about memorisation.

Remember the problem that we said many English
learners have with memorisation?

Too many English learners leave memorisation
to luck.

Memorisation isn’t enough by itself to learn
a language.

But, it is an important point.

For example, take a topic which many English
learners find difficult: preposition use.

Should I use ‘at’ or ‘on’?

What’s the difference between ‘to’ and
‘for’?

Why do I need to use ‘on’ here?

Often, leaners approach this like other grammar
topics, where you start by learning rules.

But, there aren’t really rules, or at least,
not so many useful ones.

Learning to use prepositions is more about
memorising lots and lots and lots of information.

You have to memorise specific word combinations
and phrases.

Why do you say ‘it depends on’ and not
‘it depends of’?

There’s no good reason.

You just need to remember: ‘depend’ plus
‘on’.

Many other topics are like this.

They depend more on memory than theory.

If you can’t remember the information, then
you can’t use the language correctly.

At this point, you’ll start thinking in
your language.

Then you’re translating, which means you’re
calculating sentences again, which

doesn’t give you good results.

So, memorisation is necessary.

Here’s another point about memorisation:
it’s measurable.

A question: imagine you try to learn ten new
words.

How many will you remember next week?

How many will you remember next month?

How many will you remember in a year?

What do you think?

Say a number.

When I ask most students these questions,
they almost all say that they’ll remember

zero words in a year.

If that’s true for you, then why learn these
new words?

There’s no point learning something if you’re
just going to forget it again.

Also, that’s not really learning!

So, what’s the solution?

The first part you already know: put practice
first.

You won’t remember things if you’re not using them.

Practice needs to come first.

Don’t try to memorise things you don’t need.

Just like you shouldn’t study theory unless you need it right now.

Secondly: make a system for memorisation.

If you’ve watched our other videos,
you might already know what I’m going to

talk about.

“Is he going to tell us to use Anki again?”

Yes, yes I am.

If you don’t know, Anki is a very powerful
digital flashcard app.

It lets you practice with questions and answers
on your laptop or phone or tablet, and it’s

designed to help you memorise large amounts
of information.

I’m not getting paid by Anki or anything
like that.

I’m telling you this because I know it works
from my experience.

I’ll tell you: I lived in China and I studied
Chinese, including writing.

Learning to write in Chinese involves a huge
amount of memorisation.

To write at a basic level, you need to know
around one to two thousand characters.

I spent three years in China, and at the end
I took a C1-level exam, which is equivalent

to around band 7 or 7.5 in IELTS.

That meant I had to write essays and other
things in Chinese.

So, I went from basically zero to C1 level
in three years, and Anki helped a lot.

You don’t have to use Anki.

There are other flashcard apps.

You don’t have to use a flashcard app.

There are other ways to memorise things.

But, you should have a system, and you should
ask yourself how well that system works.

Think about the question you saw before: if
you try to memorise ten things today, how

many will you remember in a year?

It won’t be ten.

Nothing’s perfect!

And, that’s fine.

But, it shouldn’t be zero either.

Whatever you do to memorise things, it should
work.

The information should stay in your head.

If it doesn’t work, then try something different!

Or, don’t do it at all!

There’s no point in memorising something if you’re going to forget it again.

Spend your time on something better.

Don’t leave memorisation to luck.

You don’t have to!

There are tools you can use.

Also, even if you’re lazy, you should do
this.

In fact, especially if you’re lazy, you
should do this.

Why?

Because being systematic about memorisation
will save you so much time, effort and stress

in the long term.

Many English learners get demotivated because
they go in circles, studying the same things

over and over and over again; learning and
forgetting and learning and forgetting and

learning and forgetting…

Everyone’s motivation is limited.

If this is you, you’ll give up eventually.

You’ll waste a lot of time and money and
energy.

So, be systematic about memorisation.

Measure your results!

Be a scientist.

Save your time, save your money, and save
your energy.

But, remember: memorisation isn’t everything.

The most important thing is practice.

Let’s talk about that!

You know this already: practice is the most
important part of learning English.

Here are some questions many English learners
have about practicing:

“How do I find someone to practice with?”

“Can I practice by myself?”

In this section, we’ll talk about effective
practice.

I’ll start by answering these questions.

You might not like my answers!

First: how do you find someone to practice
with?

I don’t know.

You have to solve that problem.

You can make friends with English speakers,
do a language exchange, join a conversation

group, pay for a language school, or pay for
a private teacher.

I don’t know what’s possible for you.

You have to find your own solution here.

I’m not trying to be unkind; it’s just
reality.

But, I’ll say this: learning to do anything
will cost you time or money or both.

If you have more time than money, then use
your time.

Look for English speakers or English-speaking
groups online or near where you live.

Or, start your own!

If you have more money than time, then pay
for a teacher or a class.

What about the second question: can you practice
effectively by yourself?

No, not really.

Why not?

Because effective practice needs feedback.

To be clear, practising by yourself can be
useful, but only if you’re also practising

with other people and getting feedback regularly.

If you’re only practising by yourself,
it won’t work.

So, what should you do to practice effectively?

One: practice as much as possible.

Two: practise as widely as possible.

Talk to many people, about many different
things.

Write different kinds of texts, on as many
different topics as you can.

Three: make sure you have feedback.

Feedback doesn’t have to be formal.

It doesn’t have to come from a teacher,
although sometimes that might be necessary.

Feedback can be simple.

For example, if you say something to someone,
and they go like this [confused face], that’s

feedback!

It tells you that what you said wasn’t clear.

Four: practice accurately.

Accept that you will make mistakes, but don’t
be happy about it.

Try to speak and write as accurately as you
can.

Work on your mistakes and your weaknesses
continually.

Five: practice repetitively.

Practice repetitively?

Why?

Repetition is boring.

OK, I know.

But, it’s effective!

Many English learners ask “How can I stop
translating in my head?”

Well, I’ll tell you the answer right now!

It’s not complicated.

When people ask me this question, I ask them
a question back.

Actually, I have a simple conversation with
them: “Hello!

How are you?

Where are you from?”

Let’s try it now together: hello!

How are you?

Where are you from?

Do you have to translate in your head to answer
those questions?

Most people say that they don’t.

Why not?

It’s because you’ve answered these questions
hundreds of times.

You can answer automatically.

You don’t have to think, and you don’t
have to translate from your language.

That’s the solution right there.

If you don’t want to translate in your head,
then you have to respond automatically.

To do that, you have to practice and repeat
the same things many, many times.

So, when you practice, don’t talk about
a topic once, talk about it many times.

Don’t practice answering a question once;
repeat your answer over and over again.

Don’t write an essay once.

Get feedback, and then write an improved version.

Build repetition into your practice, and you’ll
get better results.

I hope this lesson was useful for you.

Thanks very much for watching!

你好,我是奥利。

欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

许多英语学习者也有类似的问题
,说同样的话:“我学习

了很多年,但我还是不能说流利!”

“我怎么能记住词汇?”

“我如何停止在脑海中翻译?”

在本视频中,我们将讨论
学习英语意味着什么,为什么这么多学习者

会遇到这些问题,以及您可以做些什么来
更有效地学习。

首先,您看过我们的网站吗?

去看看吧!

牛津在线英语 dot com。

如果需要课程,您可以找到可以与他们一起学习的视频、听力课程、测验
和专业老师

另外,还有一件事。

如果需要,别忘了打开字幕

我们所有的视频都有英文字幕,有些
还有其他语言的字幕。

单击右下角的“CC”按钮
立即打开字幕。

让我们从一个问题开始:
学习一些东西意味着什么?

不,真的,考虑一下。

当你说“我学会了这个”时,
你是什么意思?

实际上,它可能意味着不同的东西。

所有的学习都取决于三件事:理论、
记忆和实践。

你需要理解想法和概念——理论。

你需要记住想法和如何做事——记忆。

而且,你需要在现实生活中使用东西——练习。

当你学习一些东西时,你需要
在这三件事之间取得平衡,并且你需要

正确的平衡。

如果你没有得到正确的平衡,你会
发现很难学习。

你会浪费时间和精力,而且你可能会
得到比你能得到的更糟糕的结果。

让我们更详细地讨论一下这种平衡。

当你学习不同的东西时,你需要
不同数量的理论、记忆

和练习。

例如,考虑学习
骑自行车。

你需要理论还是记忆?

并不真地!

没有人通过看书学会骑自行车。

你骑上自行车,然后尝试。

你掉下来了; 你再试一次。

这几乎是 100% 的练习。

让我们举一个非常不同的例子:
航空工程,即设计飞机

和火箭。

好吧,老实说:我不知道,因为
我不是航空工程师,但我

猜这需要大量的理论和记忆,
而不是练习,因为当你

设计飞机或 火箭,你应该
第一次做对。

那么,有什么意义呢?

当你学习不同的东西时,你需要
在这三个领域——理论、记忆和实践——之间取得不同的平衡

学英语怎么样?

这是我的建议。

这并不意味着要精确。

这不是统计数据。

这对你意味着什么?

许多英语学习者遇到问题是因为
他们弄错了这种平衡,而且他们

以类似的方式弄错了。

英语学习者在这里遇到的最大问题是什么

一:他们过于注重理论。

二:他们试图用理论和记忆
来代替实践。

三:他们把记忆留给运气。

第四:他们没有足够的练习,或者没有有效的练习。

这些错误导致了所有常见的英语学习者
抱怨:“我学习了多年,

但我不能说流利!”,“我学了
词汇,但我记不住!”

等等。

让我们看看你能做些什么来解决这些问题,
以及如何让你的英语学习

更有效。

在本节中,我们将
讨论前两个问题:过于

注重理论,以及用理论和
记忆代替实践。

其实,这不是英语学习者的
错。

许多人
在学校或大学以理论为主的方式学习英语和其他语言。

然后,他们认为这就是语言学习的
意义:坐在教室里,做语法

练习等等。

理论是英语学习的一部分。

去上语言课可能会有用。

在正确的情况下进行语法练习可能会有所帮助

但是,关键是:实践是
第一位的。

实践应该先于理论。

使用语言是一项实用技能。

这更像是骑自行车,而不是设计飞机或火箭。

你不能用学习理论来代替实践。

你不能通过书本上的练习来学习说话

你不能通过阅读
别人的文章来学习写文章。

这里有一个问题:您是否
因为在脑海中翻译整个句子而无法流利地说话

是的?

如果你这样做了,这表明你学习
英语的方式过于依赖

理论而不够依赖实践。

如果你这样做,你最终会试图
在你的脑海中“计算”句子。

这真的很难!

这就像高速进行复杂的数学运算。

当然,如果你这样做,你就不能流利地说

再说一遍,理论不是没用的! 学习理论不是没有用的。

但是,你必须把练习放在第一位。

如果你想学会说话,你必须
说话。

如果你想学习写作,你必须
写作。

理论研究应该支持你的实践。

这意味着什么?

让我们来看一些对许多人
来说是无聊英语课的最大象征——语法

练习。

语法练习非常有用!

但是,只有在真正需要它们时才应该这样做

例如,假设您经常说英语
,但您不擅长

使用现在完成时。

你对它有所了解,你听到
其他人使用它,你知道

你说话时不能很好地使用它。

那是拿你的语法
书阅读现在完美并

做一些练习的正确时机。

更一般地说,当你已经知道你需要什么时,你应该只学习理论——比如
语法规则或词汇练习

不要拿着你的语法书或词汇
书,从第一单元开始说:“我

要学习整本书!”

你做过吗?

我有。

它不起作用。

你不会完成这本书。

你可能甚至不会完成前
三个单元。

这很无聊,对你没有帮助。

找一本好的语法书。

找一本好的词汇书。

获取有关写作、雅思或任何
您需要的书籍。

然后,在你需要的时候拿走你需要的东西。

如果你不知道某事是什么,那么
你还不需要它。

如果你不确定你是否需要某些东西
,那么你还不需要它。

顺便说一句,我不是在编造这些东西。

它直接来自我自己的语言学习经验。

你可能知道,我住在希腊。

我的希腊语不是那么好。

[说一些希腊语]我还没有真正正式学习过

有一次,我意识到我不知道
如何形成过去时。

我知道一些过去的动词,但我无法
做出我以前从未见过的过去形式。

显然,使用过去的形式非常有帮助。

在任何对话中,您可能
在某些时候需要一个过去动词。

所以,我找到了一些语法笔记,做了一些练习
,我学会了如何制作过去的表格。

这并不无聊或困难,因为我
觉得我需要它。

而且,它立即帮助了我,所以我记得
我学过的大部分内容。

这里有一个总结:把实践放在第一位。

当你觉得你需要一些理论知识时,
比如某个主题的语法点或词汇

,然后去研究它。

你需要感觉到你需要它,
否则它可能不会留在你的

脑海中。

记忆事物也是如此。

除非你知道你需要它,否则记住一些东西是没有意义的

不要学习
你可能永远不会使用的大量词汇表。

走出去练习,与人交谈,
写点东西,找出你不能说的东西和

你不能表达的想法,然后
学习这些词。

让我们继续讨论更多关于记忆的内容。

还记得我们说过许多英语学习者在记忆方面存在的问题
吗?

太多的英语学习者把记忆留给
了运气。

记忆本身不足以学习
一门语言。

但是,这是很重要的一点。

例如,举一个许多英语
学习者觉得困难的话题:介词的使用。

我应该使用“at”还是“on”?

‘to’ 和
‘for’ 和有什么不一样?

为什么我需要在这里使用“on”?

通常,学习者像其他语法主题一样处理这个
问题,从学习规则开始。

但是,并没有真正的规则,或者至少
没有那么多有用的规则。

学习使用介词更多的是要
记住很多很多很多信息。

您必须记住特定的单词组合
和短语。

为什么你说“它取决于”而不是
“它取决于”?

没有充分的理由。

你只需要记住:“依赖”加上
“开”。

其他很多话题都是这样的。

它们更多地依赖于记忆而不是理论。

如果您不记得这些信息,那么
您就无法正确使用该语言。

此时,您将开始用
您的语言进行思考。

然后你在翻译,这意味着你又在
计算句子,这

不会给你带来好的结果。

所以,背诵是必要的。

这是关于记忆的另一点:
它是可测量的。

一个问题:假设你尝试学习十个新
单词。

下周你会记得多少?

下个月你会记得多少?

一年能记住多少?

你怎么认为?

说一个数字。

当我问大多数学生这些问题时,
他们几乎都说他们会

在一年内记住零个单词。

如果这对你来说是真的,那为什么要学习这些
新词呢?

如果你只是要再次忘记它,那么学习一些东西是没有意义的

而且,这不是真正的学习!

那么,解决方案是什么?

你已经知道的第一部分:把实践
放在第一位。

如果您不使用它们,您将不会记住它们。

实践需要先行。

不要试图记住你不需要的东西。

就像你不应该学习理论,除非你现在需要它。

第二:建立记忆系统。

如果你看过我们的其他视频,
你可能已经知道我要说什么

了。

“他是要告诉我们再用 Anki 吗?”

是的,是的,我是。

如果你不知道,Anki 是一款非常强大的
数字抽认卡应用。

它可让
您在笔记本电脑、手机或平板电脑上练习问题和答案,

旨在帮助您记忆
大量信息。

我没有得到 Anki 或
类似的东西的报酬。

我告诉你这个是因为我知道
根据我的经验它是有效的。

我告诉你:我住在中国,学过
中文,包括写作。

学习中文写作需要
大量的记忆。

要进行基本的写作,您需要知道
大约一到两千个字符。

我在中国呆了三年,最后
我考了C1级,

相当于雅思7或7.5左右。

这意味着我必须用中文写论文和其他
东西。

所以,三年时间我从基本零到了
C1,Anki帮了我很多。

你不必使用 Anki。

还有其他抽认卡应用程序。

您不必使用抽认卡应用程序。

还有其他方法可以记住事情。

但是,您应该有一个系统,并且您应该
问自己该系统的运行情况如何。

想想你之前看到的问题:如果
你今天试着记住十件事,

一年你能记住多少?

不会是十。

没有什么是完美的!

而且,这很好。

但是,它也不应该为零。

无论你做什么来记忆东西,它都
应该有效。

这些信息应该留在你的脑海中。

如果它不起作用,请尝试不同的方法!

或者,根本不这样做!

如果你要再次忘记它,那么记住它是没有意义的。

把时间花在更好的事情上。

不要把记忆留给运气。

你不必!

您可以使用一些工具。

另外,即使你很懒,你也应该这样
做。

事实上,特别是如果你很懒,你
应该这样做。

为什么?

因为从长远来看,系统地记忆
会为你节省很多时间、精力和

压力。

许多英语学习者会
因为兜圈子,一遍又一遍地学习相同的东西

而失去动力; 学习与
遗忘 学习与遗忘

学习与遗忘……

每个人的动力都是有限的。

如果这是你,你最终会放弃。

你会浪费很多时间、金钱和
精力。

所以,要系统地记忆。

衡量你的结果!

做一个科学家。

省时、省钱、
省力。

但是,请记住:记忆并不是一切。

最重要的是练习。

让我们来谈谈吧!

你已经知道了:练习
是学习英语最重要的部分。

以下是许多英语学习者
对练习的一些疑问:

“我如何找到可以练习的人?”

“我可以自己练习吗?”

在本节中,我们将讨论有效的
练习。

我将从回答这些问题开始。

你可能不喜欢我的回答!

第一:你怎么找人一起
练习?

我不知道。

你必须解决这个问题。

您可以与说英语的人交朋友、
进行语言交流、加入对话

组、支付语言学校费用或
支付私人教师费用。

我不知道你有什么可能。

您必须在这里找到自己的解决方案。

我不是要不友善; 这只是
现实。

但是,我要说的是:学习做任何事情
都会花费你时间或金钱,或两者兼而有之。

如果你的时间比金钱多,那就好好利用
你的时间。

在网上或您居住的地方附近寻找说英语的人或说英语的
团体。

或者,开始你自己的!

如果你的钱多于时间,那就花钱
请老师或上课。

第二个问题:你
自己能有效地练习吗?

不,不是。

为什么不?

因为有效的练习需要反馈。

需要明确的是,自己练习可能
很有用,但前提是您还

与其他人一起练习并定期获得反馈。

如果你只是自己练习,
那是行不通的。

那么,你应该做什么才能有效地练习?

一:尽可能多地练习。

二:尽可能广泛地练习。

与许多人交谈,谈论许多不同的
事情。

尽可能多地写不同类型的文本

三:确保你有反馈。

反馈不一定是正式的。

它不一定来自老师,
尽管有时这可能是必要的。

反馈可以很简单。

例如,如果您对某人说了什么,
而他们的表情是[困惑的脸],那就是

反馈!

它告诉你你说的不是很清楚。

四:准确练习。

接受你会犯错误,但不要为此
感到高兴。

尽量准确地说和写

不断地解决你的错误和弱点

五:反复练习。

反复练习?

为什么?

重复很无聊。

好的,我知道。

但是,很有效!

许多英语学习者问“我怎样才能停止
在我的脑海中翻译?”

好吧,我现在就告诉你答案!

这并不复杂。

当人们问我这个问题时,我会反问他们
一个问题。

实际上,我和他们有一个简单的
对话:“你好!

你好吗?

你从哪来?”

现在就一起来试试吧:你好!

你好吗?

你从哪里来?

您是否必须在脑海中进行翻译才能回答
这些问题?

大多数人说他们没有。

为什么不?

这是因为您已经回答了
数百次这些问题。

你可以自动回答。

您不必思考,
也不必翻译您的语言。

这就是解决方案。

如果您不想在脑海中翻译,
那么您必须自动响应。

为此,您必须多次练习并
重复相同的事情。

所以,练习的时候,不要
说一次,要说很多次。

不要练习一次回答问题;
一遍又一遍地重复你的答案。

不要一次写一篇文章。

获得反馈,然后编写改进的版本。

在你的练习中建立重复,你会
得到更好的结果。

我希望这节课对你有用。

非常感谢收看!