Can You Listen Your Way to Fluency?

9

- Here's a question that I get on a fairly regular basis

in one shape or another.

Can you just listen your way to fluency?

(swooshing)

Hello, I'm Julian Northbrook from doingenglish.com.

Ladies, gentlemen, boys and girls,

it's an interesting question, isn't it?

And quite an appealing idea, too.

Can we just listen, listen, listen our way

to English mastery?

Yeah.

No, not really, is the simple answer to the question.

It doesn't really work like that

despite what many educational government agencies

and marketers will say quoting research

that is yeah, pretty out of date.

A while a go I went to see a lecture

by guy called Roy Lyster.

Roy Lyster is one of the leading names

in emergent education.

Emergent being the idea of learning a second language

not by studying it as such, but by studying another subject

at school and then getting the second language.

It's a kind of freebee alongside that.

So say that you study history in, I don't know, English.

You learn history but then you also somehow get English

as something that comes along with that as a bonus.

And yes, it is a pretty appealing idea

and I do not want to in any way diminish the accomplishments

of emergent schools and emergent education,

because they do what they set out to do

even if that is often not understood by many people

who expect it to be more than what is realistic.

But basically the ideas have been popular for a long time

originating from ideas that were first conceived

in the 60s and in the 70s and 80s.

Again, about learning a language in what was thought

of as a natural approach.

Learning automatically just by exposing yourself to it.

One of the most popular ideas that came with this

was Stephen Krashen's idea of I plus one,

inputs plus a little bit.

The idea being that if you listened to a lot of English

that was just a little bit over your proficiency level

that would somehow magically build up

and you would become fluent as a result.

Mm, yeah.

The problem however was was that it was

only ever a theoretical idea

and it never really stood the test of empirical research.

Again I wouldn't want to diminish the accomplishments

of emergent schools, emergent education or ideas per se,

but as Peter Skehan very, very rightly points out

in his book, A Cognitive Approach to Language Learning,

kids in emergent schools get goods at what they practice.

And that is passively receiving information,

but speaking skills and productive ability

in the language tends to lag behind in the extremes

so that they become what we call passive bilinguals.

They're able to understand no problem whatsoever,

but when it comes to actually speaking themselves,

yeah, they never really get that good.

This does not bode well for you if you are hoping

that you can just listen to a shitload of English

and suddenly get fluent in the language.

The brain, she don't work like that.

Now this is a complex process so my explanation here

is somewhat simplistic but part of the problem

is that the brain is very, very good

at filling in information that you actually don't notice,

don't get and then not really aware of.

When you're listening to someone in conversation,

they will say a lot of things that you simply don't catch,

but your brain just fills in the holes

using extra information, visual information,

context, body language, facial expression

and a whole host of other things.

This is fantastic for actually comprehending

what people say because well, it means you don't actually

have to understand and catch everything

to be able to do it.

But it's pretty useless when it comes to acquiring language

and moving it from passive to active

so that you can actually use it.

One of the other big problems

is that often we understand the surface level meaning.

But don't really notice

or get the underlying deeper meanings

and intentions behind what people say.

So although we believe to have comprehended

and understood what is being said to us,

actually we haven't quite got it on the level

or depth that we thought we had.

And all this simply means that

well you actually aren't learning

like you think you are learning.

In order to improve in a language two things

have got to happen repetitively.

Input, output.

That is a learning stage.

The learning of the language that you need to use

in conversation and not just surface level learning,

not just learning the words, and the rules,

and a few phrases and expressions,

and kind of understanding what they mean.

Perhaps if a translation in your native language,

but a deeper level of learning,

actually understanding what people say,

what it means and why they say it in the way that they do.

That is the underlying deeper intentions behind the phrases

and expressions that we use in conversation.

Then the second step, output, is simply practicing that.

Taking what you have learned

and consciously practicing it to fluency.

Both of these steps have to happen

and they have to happen repetitively

in order for improvement to happen.

And so straight away you can see

that the idea of just listening, listening, listening

where the reality is, is you're actually missing 99%

of what's coming your way and not consciously understanding,

processing and then actually implementing that

isn't gonna get you fluent particularly quickly.

Now, this video is starting to run long,

but there's a word I've mentioned a couple of times today.

Intention.

This is a very, very important word to understand

when it comes to understanding

the language learning process.

I'm not going to talk about it today,

but in tomorrow's video what I'm gonna do

is I'm going to take a concrete example

from next week's extraordinary English speakers lesson.

Members if you haven't done this week's yet,

well you've got, by my reckoning, one day to get it done.

Link in the description.

Go get her done, but I'm gonna take a concrete example

from next week's extraordinary English speaker's lesson

and I'm gonna use that to demonstrate the idea

of intention and that's coming in tomorrow's video.

I look forward to it.

Again, extraordinary English speaker's members

make sure you get this week's lesson done

before you move on to next week's

which is gonna be published tomorrow.

If you are struggling to improve your English conversation,

you are going to want

to check out my English learning group,

Extraordinary English Speakers although it's only open

to people who have already read my book,

Master English Fast!

Which you can find at masterenglishfast.com.

Alright, that's it from me today.

If you found this video extraordinarily helpful,

give it a nice big old thumbs up.

If you hated it, give it a thumbs up anyway.

And regardless, I'll see you my friend

in tomorrow's video where we are going to talk about,

like I said, intention.

Buh-bye.

(upbeat music)

Look at that bastard there.

Crikey.

Spots at my age.

What am I, a fucking teenager?

(upbeat music)