How to Improve Your English Speaking Skills (By Yourself)
How to Improve Your English Speaking Skills |
Listening to English alone will
never improve your speaking.
You have to actually speak. But what if you don't have
someone to talk to in English?
How can you practice then?
Well, there's a technique that
allows you to learn to speak English by
yourself. No speaking partner is required.
This technique can help improve
many aspects of your spoken English: your sentence structure,
your grammar, your vocabulary,
and most importantly, your ability to express your thoughts and
ideas effectively.
So what is this technique?
Well, here's what it is...
Learning to speak English through
imitation.
When I say imitation, I'm not
talking about repeating after native speakers using the
exact same words to improve your
pronunciation. I'm talking about something a little more
advanced than that.
Here's how it works: you listen
to a conversation, a story, or some kind of speech, and then
try to deliver that speech in
your own words.
Let's see this technique in
action:
When I was a child
When he was a child
my parents liked to pretend, like
many other parents his parents liked to pretend, like many other
parents that Santa Claus would
bring us presents at Christmas. His parents liked to pretend that Santa Claus would
bring them presents at Christmas. So when my siblings and I would wake up on Christmas
morning
So when he and his siblings would
wake up on Christmas morning
there'd be a bunch of presents,
from supposedly Santa Claus, sitting in front of the fireplace. there'd be a
bunch of presents, from supposedly Santa Claus, sitting in front of the
fireplace.
So that's how it works.
But that's just one way to do it.
There're other ways too.
For example, instead of imitating
small portions of speech like phrases and short sentences, you can imitate
larger portions of speech. So in this case, you wait until the speaker
completes a thought or an idea,
then pause and try to express that idea yourself.
Another approach is to simply
listen to the whole speech and then try to deliver that entire speech yourself.
So there are several ways to go
about it, but what I recommend is to combine them all together, and I call this
approach easy-to-hard imitation.
Easy-to-hard imitation is based
on the concept of progressive training. The idea is that you start with
something easy and then increase the difficulty of the activity, forcing
yourself to get better.
A number of studies have found
this kind of training to be very effective.
Here's how you can apply this
concept: start by imitating small portions of speech first like phrases and
short sentences, then move on to imitating larger portions of speech like long
sentences or even groups of sentences, and finally, try to deliver the entire
speech on your own.
This technique offers many
benefits.
You get to listen and imitate
correct English, which helps you learn to form sentences properly.
You get to learn idioms,
expressions, and other speaking patterns that are used in day-to-day
conversations.
you get to learn grammar.
When you imitate other people,
you're learning grammar through a process called implicit
learning. This is the process
where the learning happens without your awareness.
This is how babies and children
learn the grammar rules of their first language.
When you imitate, you don't think
about grammar. You're not trying to understand why the present perfect tense is
used in this situation or in that situation. Instead, you're focused on communication
to understanding and expressing ideas. You're
still learning grammar but you're not aware that it's happening.
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