Learn English with Movies and TV 5 Powerful Tips from a Master Teacher Rachels English

Today we’re going to go over my top 5 tips for learning English with movies and TV.

Many people successfully learn English this way, and the great thing about it is that you’re learning something in

context, not isolated like in a vocabulary list.

And this will really help you remember it.

In addition, you’re learning from a native speaker, so your pronunciation should be much more accurate

than if you’re learning from a book if you do it right.

But learning English from movies and TV does NOT happen automatically.

Unless you’re using the tips I’m about to teach you, you won’t be learning as much English as you could.

But if you DO make these tips part of your regular movie and TV watching habits,

you’ll have a powerful new learning tool that’s always available to you!

Now, this is not about relaxing and unwinding watching TV or a movie, this is about learning.

It’s an active experience, part of your studies.

Let’s get started.

Tip 1:  Work at your level.  If listening comprehension is a big challenge for you,

and you want to work on that specifically, start with a simple scene involving just a few people

in a quiet environment.

I really like dramas because I think in general the pace of speaking is a little `slower.

HER is a great movie for this: slow pace, clear speech.

What’s the rush?

That was relatively easy to understand.

If your listening comprehension is very good and you’re just looking to pick up new vocabulary or phrases,

or you want to challenge your listening comprehension, you can do this by trying a scene in a noisy room,

or a scene where people are speaking with a non-standard accent.

It’s that or we both better go do something else, pal.

That was likely much harder to understand.

So, work at a level that’s right for you – one that’s not so challenging that you understand almost nothing.

Tip 2:  Use a video player that has the right tools:

a toggle for subtitles and a way to easily skip back in the video. Both Netflix and HBO Go have these features,

and no they did not pay me to say this.

On YouTube, you can do a search on a topic that interests you,

and filter it so you’ll only see videos with a closed captioning file.

But the YouTube player doesn’t have a way to easily jump back a few seconds like Netflix or HBO Go,

they have a skip back 10 seconds button

and I think if you can afford a subscription to one of those services, it’s really useful.

Let’s go on to tip #3 to see why.

Tip 3:  Use subtitles and the following method to learn.

Step 1 is to listen without the subtitles.

When you hear something you don’t understand, or a word you don’t know

(and it’s okay if that’s pretty frequent), pause the player.

Go back 10 seconds and listen again, pause it.

Can you figure it out?

Write down as much of the sentence as you can in a notebook that you have just for this purpose.

Use an app if you like, but I prefer writing by hand.

Then, turn on the English subtitles and go
back and listen again.

Listen and watch with the subtitles on.

Now, maybe the part you didn’t get is a brand new word that you’ve never seen or heard before.

Great, this is an awesome way to learn new vocabulary.

Write the word down, look up the definition, and write down the sentence you heard it in.

Even write down the show or movie and the scene.

Remembering this context will absolutely help you remember the word.

But maybe when you go back and watch with the subtitles you realize you know all those words.

Why didn’t you understand it?

That’s a very important question and answering it is the key to improving your listening comprehension.

Perhaps the phrase was said very quickly

and there were reductions in there that made it very hard to identify the word.

Or maybe a word has a pronunciation that’s completely different than what you thought.

Write down the full sentence now and
circle the words you didn’t understand.

Then use the skip back button to listen many times – five, maybe even more.

Something was pronounced in a way that you were not expecting.

Study how the native speaker pronounces it.

Importantly, say the phrase out loud yourself a few times,

imitating the native speaker as precisely as you can.

Write down the correct pronunciation in your notebook.

Maybe even take it a step further:  Go to Youglish.com and type the word or phrase you didn’t understand.

Hear lots of other examples of native speakers using that word or phrase, and pay attention.

Is it reduced?

Why was it so hard for you to understand the first time?

This kind of work will really pay off.

Youglish is a search engine for YouTube videos with English subtitles and you can filter it to American English,

and skip from clip to clip.

You can also move forward or backward within a clip to get the full context.

It’s a great way to supplement your learning.

Just like in the movies, I did a quick costume change.

I bet that a lot of what gets in the way of your listening comprehension is reductions and linking.

I have playlists for both of those topics –

click here or in the video description to see those playlists.

They’ll definitely uncover some of the mystery of listening comprehension.

Tip 4:  Review it!  If you’ve taken the time to do the work of watching, pausing, writing down sentences,

vocab words, and the context you learned them in, then do yourself a favor and solidify that learning.

Keep your English in Movies notebook close by so if you have a bit of extra time,

waiting for an appointment, or on your commute, or during your lunch break,

you can remind yourself what you learned yesterday.

If you learned a new vocabulary word, try to come up with your own sentences for it now.

Practice speaking your new words and phrases out loud whenever possible.

And Tip 5:  Set manageable goals for yourself.

Don’t try to learn 100 new words or phrases a day.

That’s too many.

Make it your goal to really really learn 5 or 6.

When you learn them in context and review them for seven days, that will get you good results.

Trying to learn too many too often means very little being remembered and leads to burnout.

This method I’ve given you is time-consuming, but it is concrete and you will really learn this way.

If you’ve gotten 5 or 10 good word or phrases in the first few minutes of a show or movie, reward yourself!

Close your notebook and watch the rest
for enjoyment and pleasure.

There is a wealth of TV shows and movies that you can use to help you learn English and speak like a native.

What’s your favorite movie or show to use
to study English with?

Let me know in the comments –

that will give ideas to everyone else.

And let me know which of these 5 tips was most powerful for you!

That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.

今天我们将回顾我在电影和电视中学习英语的 5 大秘诀。

许多人通过这种方式成功地学习了英语,而这样做的好处是你在上下文中学习一些东西

,而不是像在词汇表中那样孤立地学习。

这真的会帮助你记住它。

此外,你是在向母语人士学习,所以如果你做得对,你的发音应该

比从书本上学习要准确得多。

但是从电影和电视中学习英语并不是自动发生的。

除非您使用我将要教您的技巧,否则您将无法学习尽可能多的英语。

但是,如果您确实将这些技巧作为您常规电影和电视观看习惯的一部分,

那么您将拥有一个随时可用的强大的新学习工具!

现在,这不是关于放松和放松看电视或电影,而是关于学习。

这是一种积极的体验,是你学习的一部分。

让我们开始吧。

提示 1:按照您的水平工作。 如果听力理解对你来说是一个很大的挑战,

并且你想专门解决这个问题,那么从一个安静的环境中只有几个人的简单场景开始

我真的很喜欢戏剧,因为我觉得总的来说说话的节奏有点“慢”。

HER 是一部很棒的电影:慢节奏,清晰的演讲。

急什么?

那是比较容易理解的。

如果您的听力非常好,并且您只是想学习新的词汇或短语,

或者您想挑战您的听力,您可以尝试在嘈杂的房间中

的场景或人们说话的场景来做到这一点 带有非标准口音。

就是这样,否则我们俩最好去做点别的,伙计。

这可能更难理解。

所以,在适合你的水平上工作——一个不那么具有挑战性以至于你几乎一无所知的水平。

提示 2:使用具有正确工具的视频播放

器:字幕切换和轻松跳回视频的方法。 Netflix 和 HBO Go 都有这些功能

,不,他们没有付钱让我这么说。

在 YouTube 上,您可以搜索您感兴趣的主题,

并对其进行过滤,以便您只能看到带有隐藏字幕文件的视频。

但是 YouTube 播放器没有办法像 Netflix 或 HBO Go 那样轻松地向后跳几秒钟,

它们有一个向后跳 10 秒的按钮

,我认为如果你能负担得起其中一项服务的订阅费用,它真的很有用。

让我们继续提示#3,看看为什么。

提示 3:使用字幕和以下方法学习。

第 1 步是在没有字幕的情况下收听。

当您听到不理解的内容或不知道的单词时

(如果这种情况非常频繁也没关系),暂停播放器。

返回 10 秒再听一遍,暂停。

你能弄清楚吗?

在你为此目的准备的笔记本上尽可能多地写下句子。

如果您愿意,可以使用应用程序,但我更喜欢手写。

然后,打开英文字幕并
返回并再次收听。

开着字幕听和看。

现在,也许你没有得到的部分是一个你以前从未见过或听过的全新词。

太好了,这是学习新词汇的好方法。

写下单词,查找定义,然后写下你听到的句子。

甚至写下节目或电影和场景。

记住这个上下文绝对会帮助你记住这个词。

但也许当你回去看字幕时,你会意识到你知道所有这些词。

你怎么没看懂?

这是一个非常重要的问题,回答它是提高听力理解能力的关键。

也许这句话说得很快,

而且那里有一些减少,这使得很难识别这个词。

或者,一个词的发音可能与你想象的完全不同。

现在写下完整的句子,并
圈出你不明白的单词。

然后使用后退按钮听很多次——五次,甚至更多。

有些东西的发音方式出乎你的意料。

研究母语人士如何发音。

重要的是,自己大声说出这句话几次,

尽可能准确地模仿母语人士。

在笔记本上写下正确的发音。

甚至可以更进一步:访问 Youglish.com 并输入您不理解的单词或短语。

听到许多其他使用该词或短语的母语人士的例子,并注意。

是减少了吗?

为什么第一次理解这么难?

这种工作真的会得到回报。

Youglish 是一个带有英文字幕的 YouTube 视频搜索引擎,您可以将其过滤为美式英语,

并从一个剪辑跳到另一个剪辑。

您还可以在剪辑中向前或向后移动以获取完整的上下文。

这是补充学习的好方法。

就像在电影里一样,我做了一个快速的换装。

我敢打赌,阻碍你听力理解的很多东西都是还原和链接。

我有这两个主题的播放列表——

单击此处或在视频说明中查看这些播放列表。

他们一定会揭开听力理解的一些奥秘。

提示 4:复习! 如果你花时间观察、暂停、写下句子、

词汇和你学习它们的上下文,那么帮自己一个忙,巩固学习。

把你的英语电影笔记本放在身边,这样如果你有一点额外的时间,

在等待约会,或者在你的通勤途中,或者在你的午休时间,

你可以提醒自己昨天学到的东西。

如果你学会了一个新的词汇,现在试着为它想出你自己的句子。

尽可能地练习大声说出你的新单词和短语。

提示 5:为自己设定可管理的目标。

不要试图每天学习 100 个新单词或短语。

那太多了。

以真正学习 5 或 6 为目标。

当你在上下文中学习它们并回顾它们 7 天时,你会得到很好的结果。

试图学习太多太多意味着很少被记住并导致倦怠。

我给你的这个方法很费时间,但是很具体,你真的会这样学。

如果您在节目或电影的最初几分钟内获得了 5 或 10 个好词或短语,那就奖励自己吧!

合上你的笔记本,看看剩下
的,享受乐趣。

您可以使用大量电视节目和电影来帮助您学习英语并像母语一样说话。

你最喜欢用来学习英语的电影或节目是
什么?

在评论中让我知道——

这会给其他人提供想法。

让我知道这 5 个技巧中哪一个对你最有效!

就是这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的英语。