What is “practice” for improving your English?
Many people – teachers, students, people on the Internet – think that “practice” means actually speaking English or writing emails, or perhaps talking to yourself in the mirror or repeating what other people are saying (sometimes called “shadowing”).
In applied linguistics, we call this sort of “practice” output.
Output is what, well, comes “out” of something.
Language comes “out” of your brain – through your mouth (speaking) or your keyboard/hand (writing).
There may be some benefits (good things) about a certain amount of output, but the MAIN way of improving your language skills is not through output.
What really helps you is the opposite of output: input.
Input is what goes “in” your brain.
Getting more input is the RIGHT kind of practice for improving your speaking – even though you are not actually speaking!
What exactly do I mean by “input”?
It’s simple: LISTENING and READING.
Think of it this way:
INPUT (listening/reading)–>BRAIN–>OUTPUT (speaking/writing)
What goes in your ears (listening) or eyes (reading) is much more important than any kind of output.
In other words, we get better at speaking not by speaking, but by listening and reading.
Your brain has to “get” or receive language before it can “give” language. If you don’t focus on “getting” more input, you have nothing to “output”!
You have to put money INTO in your bank account before you can take money OUT of your bank account.
Reading and listening are like money you put in your brain’s “language bank account.”
When we study people who become really good at second languages, we find that ALL of them have “practiced” the language thousands of hours by doing these two things: lots of listening and (especially) lots of reading.
So if you’re looking for the fastest way to improve your English speaking, you really do need to “practice” it everyday – even 15 minutes a day will help you.
But don’t sit on the couch (sofa) eating potato chips!
That’s the wrong kind of practice.
Instead, get lots of and lots of INPUT – listen and read as much as you can.*
That’s the way to “winning” better English.
~Jeff
*The input you read or listen to has to be something you can UNDERSTAND, however. It is no good listening or reading things that are too hard for you. That’s also a waste of time.
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- What “take a rain check” means and how to use it in a conversation . . .
- The difference between a “recluse” and a “busybody” . . .
- Why “to fend OFF” means something from “to fend FOR” . . .
- What it means to “take a rain check,” “keep to yourself,” and “to appoint (someone)” . . .
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- How to use phrasal verbs like “to settle in” and “to settle down” (they’re not the same!) . . .
from ESL Podcast Blog https://www.eslpod.com/eslpod_blog/2020/10/06/how-to-practice-your-english/
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