Road Podcast “ 4 steps to easily understand


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4 STEPS TO EASILY UNDERSTAND



 
Road Podcast

4 STEPS TO EASILY 
UNDERSTAND 
 



4 STEPS TO EASILY UNDERSTAND 
(uplifting instrumental music) - Hello 
everyone and welcome back to English With 
Lucy. Long time no see, right? I know, I had 
a little break. I've moved house, I'm in a 
new house now. And this room will soon be 
my new studio, it's got a lovely window over 
there so there's lots of light, so I'm in the 
middle of setting that up for you guys.
Today I'm going to talk about improving your 
understanding, so being able to understand 
what native speakers say when they're 
talking and when they're talking quickly.
Now I have done a video that is quite similar 
to this, it's along the same lines, it talks 
about the same subject about listening and 
improving your listening skills. If I remember 


correctly I think there were 12 ways that 
you could improve your listening skills in 
that last video, if you wanna see that, you 
can click right here, and I'll put a link in the 
description, but today we're only going to 
focus on four tips. I'm going to be focusing 
less on the academic side of listening and 
more on the real life side of listening and 
the listening skills and the listening 
comprehension skills because it's about 
understanding that you will use on a daily 
basis. So let's get started. So tip number 
one, order your resources. Now the biggest 
tip that any English teacher will give you if 
you're trying to improve your listening is 
listen to movies, listen to audio books, listen 
to more exams and things like that, listen to 
the news, listen to the radio. Excellent tip


it's a tip I give myself, but I want to make 
sure that my students listen to the right
things in the right order. I wouldn't 
recommend a sarcastic British comedy that 
uses the complexities of British English to 
the fullest extent, see they'd use things like 
that, and I almost don't know what I'm 
saying, so you maybe won't either. You 
want to start with easier things and work 
your way up to more difficult things. There 
is no point starting at the top unless you're a 
genius. So I'm gonna give you this sort of 
order of resources that you should go for 
and you can kind of see where you're at, see 
what you understand, and then, you know, 
maybe move up to the next one. So what 
kind of thing should you listen to if you don't 
know any English, if you're a complete 


beginner. Mr. Bean. Joke, that is a joke, in 
Mr. Bean he says very little in English, but it 
is a fantastic TV show so watch that for fun 
first and then you can start your English 
listening practise. So beginners and even 
early intermediate because remember that
listen is often found to be the hardest skill 
of all four skills that they tend to test in 
exams, listening, speaking, reading, and 
writing. I always see with my students they 
get the highest scores in reading and writing 
and it's listening and speaking where they 
start to suffer and listening tends to be the 
worst. Oh my god. Hello and welcome to 
English With Lucy. Oh shut up. Oh my god.
Sorry about that, I got disturbed. Where 
was I? Hello, welcome to English With Lucy.
Stop it. This is why I don't upload more 


regularly. Bye Will. So what I was trying to 
say was don't be afraid if you can actually 
understand way less than you would expect 
a person of your level to understand, so 
even if you're at like an intermediate level 
you might need to listen to lower levels to 
start with. So what I always recommend is 
test out listening to children's TV 
programmes simply because children's TV 
programmes are normally designed to help 
a child learn more and understand more 
and also improve their vocabulary,
especially TV programmes for younger 
children. If you want I have a great 
recommendation for a British TV show
that's designed for kids, it's very 
educational, it's packed full of vocabulary, 
and it is Peppa Pig. Incredibly famous TV 


show that I imagine will be in your country 
as well. See if you can switch it into its native 
language which is British English and it's 
actually really, really funny because it think 
it's designed for parents to watch it with the 
child, so not only area you learning loads it 
is just a really good programme. If you find 
yourself understanding 80% of Peppa Pig or 
whatever you choose to watch that's 
designed for children then you can move up 
to slapstick comedy, comedy that is silly, it's
not got in depth humour and it doesn't play
around with the language, it's just basic 
comedy. Normally and I really don't want to 
offend anyone here, but normally American 
comedy shows are more on this level than 
the English ones. The British English sense of 
humour tends to be darker, more subtle, we 


tend to say things with a straight face, but 
as a huge generalisation American comedy 
TV shows seem to be more in your face, the 
jokes are more obvious, and you can follow 
the plot more easily. A couple of 
recommendations for you are, of course, 
Friends, Friends can be enjoyed in any 
language and chances are you've seen
Friends in your language so you'll 
understand more or less what's going on in 
English as well. If you do want a British TV 
series one that I really like, it's an old one 
now, is The Vicar of Dibley, again, I'll put 
this in the description box. It's very, very 
British, I would say it's slightly more difficult 
than friends because they do use the
language and play with language a little bit, 
but it's a gorgeous British accent, they've 


got a wide variety of accents really. It's 
about a female vicar, Dawn French, one of 
my favourite female comedians, who 
becomes the vicar for a very small village 
that's very set in their ways, they're not 
very modern, they like to do things in a 
traditional way, and it is hilarious. There 
aren't that many episodes, but it's 
something I've always watched with my 
parents at Christmas. Next, I would move up 
to films and TV shows that tend to have less
talking, i.e. action films, detective films, 
films and TV shows where there's time for 
you to think about what's going on and it's 
very visual. And then obviously for the most 
advanced you would want to look at Sci-Fi
because they give in depth explanations,
dark comedies, drama, and also period 


drama, that's quite difficult 'cause they tend 
to use old fashioned language, obviously. 
The next tip is one that is so, so important,
it's practise, but it's not just practise, it's 
practise with consistency. An hour long 
conversation with a native, fantastic, that is 
great practise. An hour long conversation 
with a native every single week with 
feedback, now that is how you're going to 
improve your understanding. And not only 
that, making sure that you work on every 
single other skill as well, obviously we need 
more, obviously it's always good to really 
focus on what you're lacking which is your 
listening skill, but improve your 
pronunciation, improve your reading so that 
you understand more words, writing is also 
incredibly important, speaking and listening 


goes hand in hand. This tips comes thanks to 
the sponsors of today's video, it is Lingoda, 
Lingoda is an online language learning
platform that is very close to my heart, I 
really like what they do there at Lingoda.
You can learn English, French, Spanish, or 
German with real qualified native teachers
in both group and private classes. I've had 
so many English With Lucy students study at 
Lingoda and I've got such great feedback
because it's perfect for busy people. You 
can schedule in classes 24/7, there are 
teachers all over the world, there are always 
group and private classes available. I've 
tried out some of their classes myself and 
they are really high quality. You've got 
fantastically prepared activities with the 
real native qualified teacher, very small 


group sizes, private lessons as well. You pay 
on a monthly basis, there are various
different tiers, different levels, and they 
have given me a special offer to give to you.
You can get 50 dollars or 50 Euros off your 
first month at Lingoda, all you have to do is 
click on the link in the description box and 
use the code that is right here. Please let 
me know how you get on 'cause I love to 
hear about your success stories. Moving on 
to my next point which is more focused on 
real life conversations and how to 
understand native speakers when they're 
talking to you and when they're talking 
quickly. My tip for you is dominate the 
conversation which I know can be quite 
hard especially if you're naturally quite an 
introvert. I have my days, some days I'm an 


introvert and some days I'm an extrovert, 
but I'm not talking about going into a 
conversation and taking over and 
dominating everything, I'm saying take the 
lead with the conversation and direct it 
because if you're speaking with a native 
speaker or somebody who has a much 
higher level than you, you are the one who 
is doing most of the work and they can kind 
of relax. It's very easy for them to not 
understand if they're just native or to forget 
if they did learn once, but now they're at a 
kind of level where they don't have to think 
about anything, it's all natural, it's very easy 
for them to not understand how tough it is 
for a non-native speaker, for a learner of 
English. So I want to make it very clear to 
you, I as a teacher and I as a friend and as a 


native speaker of English have never once 
felt annoyed or frustrated with somebody 
asking me to repeat something. if I know 
that they have been listening and trying to 
understand me. If you know, it's my 
boyfriend who obviously has zoned out who 
wasn't listening to what I was saying and 
then says what, sorry, can you say that 
again? Yes, that is annoying. But if 
someone's obviously not understood me I 
don't mind, in fact I'm glad that they want 
to understand what I'm saying and that they 
care enough about what I'm saying that
they're asking me to repeat it. So there are 
two things that I want you to start getting 
confident at saying. The first one is asking 
for repetition, and the second one is asking 
for somebody to slow down. So asking for 


repetition, oh sorry, I didn't catch that. I 
didn't quite understand it, I got the majority, 
but not all of it, I didn't quite catch that.
Sorry, could you repeat that? Note that I'm 
often starting with sorry because it's a good 
interjection to get somebody to stop 
talking. What was that, could you say that 
again? Notice that I'm showing you my ear 
and I'm kind of doing a circle motion, could 
you repeat that? I'm making it very clear 
that I'm having trouble understanding.
About slowing down, you're either asking for 
them to speak a little bit more slowly or to 
speak more clearly, maybe they're joining
their words too much, they're using too 
much connected speech. You could say 
sorry, I'm having a little bit of trouble
understanding what you're saying, would 


you mind speaking a little bit more slowly?
A little bit more slowly, and I think these 
hands here mean separate your words,
don't join them all together. I remember 
living in Spain, I could see English people 
coming over to Spain and speaking slowly, 
but still using words like wanna and gonna 
and don't ya, like connecting all these words 
together and not understanding why people 
weren't getting what they were saying. They 
had no idea, they were trying to be clear. So 
people just need that reminder and you 
have every right to ask someone that so 
dominate the conversation. Another part of 
this tip is you ask the questions. You can 
make sure that the conversation stays on 
track, it stays on the topic that you are 
comfortable talking about if you ask the 


questions. And instead of asking for 
repetition again and again and again, you 
can kind of confirm that what you've heard 
is correct by saying an affirmative 
statement, so you missed the bus. Or by 
using a tag at the end of the sentence, so 
you missed the bus, didn't you? And then 
they will confirm that that's yes what they 
said. Or if you've misunderstood they might 
say, no, no, no, I got the bus, but I almost 
missed the bus. And there we are, it clears it 
up a bit. I think that tip is more of a 
collection of pieces of advice that are often 
overlooked in the English classroom. Asking 
somebody to speak more clearly is 
absolutely fine. One last thing I'd like to add 
to that is asking somebody if they've used a 
specific saying or if it's a slang word. If you 


have no idea what someone has just said
you could say is that a saying, and then they 
will hopefully explain it to you. Or is that 
regional slang or do you say it all over the 
country? And then they will hopefully go on 
to explain what they're talking about and it 
might also serve as a reminder that they 
can't use loads of different slang words and 
loads of different sayings when they're 
talking with an English learner. Obviously if 
you're at a very high level you of course 
want somebody to speak as naturally as 
possible, but there is nothing wrong with 
asking somebody to slightly adapt to you if 
you're really struggling to understand. Now 
my last tip, tip number four, this one is 
incredibly important because it's very easy 
to lose enthusiasm and to feel disappointed


because you're not understanding as much 
as you think you should be able to. I get this 
comment all the time, okay? It is Lucy are 
you speaking really clearly because I can 
understand everything you're saying, but 
when I try to listen to other native speakers 
I can't understand anything. My tip is 
manage your expectations. You need to 
understand that what you study in private 
and what you practise in private is always 
going to be at a higher level than what you 
experience in real life. What I mean to say is 
I'm in a teaching environment right now, I 
am making sure that I'm clear. I'm not 
slowing down a hell of a lot, I still use slang 
phrases, but I will try and explain them. A 
hell of a lot means a lot. But you need to 
understand and expect you're not going to 


be able to comprehend as much outside of 
the classroom and outside of your private 
personal practise as you do in those times. 
And it's very important to have this 
understood from the very beginning 
because it's so easy to lose motivation. And 
really these tips, they all link together. You 
need to practise, in order to practise you 
need to use different resources, but make 
sure you choose the right one, make sure 
you put them in order, understand that you 
might be feeling really confident after an 
English lesson, but when you go out and you 
speak to a native you might not be able to 
communicate as much as you thought 
before, manage that expectation. But 
something that you can do to understand 
more in real life is lead that conversation.


You ask the questions, ask them to slow 
down, ask them to speak more clearly, and 
ask them to repeat things. That's one thing 
that you can do. But in order to understand 
70% of a real life conversation you need to 
make sure that you're understanding 80% in 
the classroom. All right guys, that's it for 
today's video. Thank you so much for 
joining me here in my new house, very 
exciting, it's in a lovely tiny village near 
Cambridgeshire. But it's a very old property 
and I can hear everything my neighbour is 
saying, I can hear everything my boyfriend is 
saying on the phone downstairs, and I can 
see, and I can, well I can see neighbours 
walking past. But I'm very happy here, very 
excited.


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