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  • Hi there. I'm Hilary and welcome to Adept English. This is day one of our seven day

  • course, 'The Seven Rules of Adept English'. Thank you for joining me.

  • Every day, for seven days, you will receive an e-mail with a link to a video like this

  • one attached to it, an MP3 file just of the audio, just of my voice and a PDF file so

  • that you've got a written version, a written transcript of what I'm saying.

  • Now, we're going to be introducing you to a different way of learning English language.

  • Different rules...a different way of learning. Not what you've necessarily come across before.

  • Now the first thing to say is that this course is not aimed at beginners. If you can understand

  • what I'm saying to you or most of it - in this video, you should be fine. You are at

  • the right level. If it's really difficult for you to understand even with the transcript,

  • it's probably better to do a basic course first and then come back to us later. This

  • course is aimed at irmproving fluency. That's specifically what Adept English enables you

  • to do. Now the reason why I've developed this course is because it's a very common experience

  • for people to learn the basics of a language, learn the vocabulary and learn the grammar

  • and have a working knowledge of a language, but that's very different from fluency. Now

  • Adept English aims to help you become fluent at English.

  • You may have had the experience where you can understand what's being said on your language

  • course, but then when you're faced with native English speakers and the way they talk, actually

  • it's really hard to understand. There's a phrase in English [..like a..] 'Rabbit in

  • the headlights' and what we mean by that - when a rabbit is caught in the headlights of a

  • car, it's..it's sort of frozen, it doesn't know what to do. And I think this describes

  • the experience - when you're speaking a foreign language and you construct some sentences

  • and you're speaking with a native speaker. So you say 'your piece'. And then they 'come

  • back at you' with lots and lots of language and it's really fast and it's really fluent

  • and you're like this.... because you don't know...you don't understand it and you don't

  • know what to respond with. Now this is because there's a big difference between learning

  • the mechanics of a language, learning the common words, learning the irregular verbs

  • and being able to have a conversation naturally, that's fluid. And do that without great effort.

  • Now there are many many people in the world who automatically learn English as their second

  • language. [It] Tends to be what's taught in school and if not there, you may have learnt

  • it in college, but it's very common to get stuck before you learn fluency. And sometimes

  • people give up or their language stays frozen in this state for many many years.

  • Now the problem is not so much with the students themselves, but it's with the teaching method.

  • And teaching methods often make it very mechanical. This isn't how language learning happens for

  • people in their native language. I'm guessing that you're very fluent in your

  • own language. That you feel utterly confident and competent to speak it. And that you do

  • it really without thinking about it at all. Now how did this happen?

  • Well, of course, like anybody else, it began to happen when you were very small, when you

  • were still a baby, in fact. Every day you heard spoken around you, your native language.

  • And you heard it and you listened and initially a lot of it didn't un...you didn't understand.

  • And then, bit by bit, you began to understand it. This is the natural route to learning

  • a language. If you observe any child, this is the way

  • that they learn. Later on, they learn to read and spell and write, but the first thing always

  • that they do is...begin to understand. Understanding always always comes before speaking. So small

  • children will understand a great deal more than they can express. Similar with learning

  • a language. So the first rule of Adept English is 'Understand

  • spoken English first'. So focus on this and your brain will do the rest! The speaking

  • of it, will be a much shorter step, if you can improve your understanding.

  • Don't worry so much initially about speaking and writing. You've probably got a reasonably

  • good idea of how to spell the words from your basic language course. The understanding is

  • really the thing to focus on. And the reason why we include a transcript

  • is that you can check the words and phrases that you don't know. But it might be that

  • when you read the transcript of what I'm saying to you now, the words and phrases that you

  • didn't understand when you heard them, make absolute sense when you see them written down.

  • It may be that even when you see it written down, there are some parts of what I'm saying

  • that you don't understand, but you've got opportunity to check them in the dictionary.

  • Now what's really important is that you listen again, once you've understood, because that

  • helps anchor the word in your mind. Now rules of grammar and vocabulary are also learned

  • automatically. That saves a lot of pain and a lot of trouble.

  • If you think about a child in English might say 'I buyed an icecream'. Eventually they

  • move to saying 'I bought an icecream' because they've heard often enough, that this is the

  • right way to say it. Similarly, they might say 'I goed to the shop', but eventually they

  • hear it enough times that they begin to say 'I went to the shop'. What they don't do is

  • learn lists of irregular verbs. Human brains have been learning language in this way for

  • thousands of years. Why would we make our brains learn language in any other way?

  • All the neural networks are there, ready and waiting to be used.

  • Adept English is not limited to this rule alone - there are six other rules. But this

  • first rule underpins everything else. So 'Understanding First' and achieving understanding by doing

  • lots and lots of listening to spoken language. Now Adept English aims to provide you with

  • all sorts of subjects, contexts and give it to you in a convenient and portable format.

  • So initially, you might be curious to see who I am and what I look like and to look

  • at the video, but I would imagine pretty soon that won't be necessary and I expect the way

  • that you may use this is to download the MP3 files which are fairly small onto a mobile

  • device and listen to my spoken English that way.

  • I'll give you an example from my personal experience of why I believe this method works.

  • When I went to university and did my first degree, I studied Latin. So I learned all

  • about the Romans, their art, their architecture, their history, their politics, their literature

  • and of course, Latin language. Now crucially, Latin is a 'dead language'. It was spoken

  • by the Romans centuries ago, but we don't know how it was ...pronounced. It isn't spoken

  • anywhere in the world now. So a 'dead language' because we don't really know how to say things.

  • And we focused a lot on written Latin. Latin's complicated and the challenge was that it's

  • good exercise for the brain. So we would translate from English into Latin and from Latin into

  • English, so lots of written down Latin. Absolutely zero Latin conversation. Fair enough - it's

  • a dead language. Now at school, I also learned French and German.

  • Now when I think back to my French lessons, we studied it in much the same way. We did

  • a lot of written down French. We learned a lot of vocabulary, we learned the rules of

  • grammar erm....we learnt to spell French words, we..learnt how the language worked. Erm...we

  • did a lot of boring text books. Occasionally, tacked on at the end of the lesson, erm...there'd

  • be a bit of French conversation, but probably not very much. How often did we hear French

  • spoken by genuine French speakers? The only time I remember this happening at all, was

  • in the exam. If we were doing a comprehension or a dictation, we might there. But it was

  • very rare. The lessons were conducted in English. So

  • what happened for me is that at the end of the course, I had largely a written exam,

  • passed some exams, I passed, I did very well. I got a good grade. That was good for my school.

  • Was it good for me? I'm not sure that it was that great. It gave me the basics of French,

  • but did it mean that I could go to France and have conversation with French speakers?

  • No, it certainly didn't! What happened to me at school as well though

  • - I learned German. And my experience in German was completely different. For a start, the

  • whole lesson was conducted in German, from start to finish. Right from the very first

  • lesson - even though we didn't understand to begin with. But we did learn very quickly.

  • So there was that element and also I went on two German exchanges. So I went to stay

  • with two German families, each over a period of about 10 days, or something like that.

  • And I found that the combination of the German language classes being spoken entirely in

  • German and of visiting Germany and living with a German family, this meant that I was

  • immersed in the language and it increased my skill immensely. So German became 'a living

  • language' for me. Now most adults who might want to learn English

  • don't have the opportunity to go on a language exchange and live with a family for 10 days.

  • They perhaps don't even have the chance to go on a language course. And even if they

  • do, it's probably not going to be one where only the language you're learning is spoken

  • in the classroom, nothing else. Now Adept English aims to help you make these

  • conditions for yourself. So it aims to help you, supports you, to learn English in small

  • sections of your ordinary day. So that your understanding of English is vastly improved.

  • So, to sum up - Rule One involves understanding first of all. Focus on this, by doing lots

  • of listening to spoken English by real native speakers. This will have the effect of improving

  • your fluency. That's probably enough for Day One! Thankyou

  • for listening to me and I look forward to seeing you tomorrow. Have a lovely day!

Hi there. I'm Hilary and welcome to Adept English. This is day one of our seven day

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