Learning and Mastering English
To learn and
master a language is never easy, especially if it is not your first language.
That said, you can still achieve your goal in learning and mastering English,
if you have the desire and the intent to do so.
First and
foremost, you must learn the basics, which involve LISTENING, SPEAKING,
READING, and WRITING. How do I go about that? Well, there is a simple rule to
follow: learn to listen by listening, learn to speak by speaking, learn to read
by reading, and learn to write by writing. This is a simple rule to follow, and
there is no short cut.
LISTENING
Expose
yourself to spoken English as often as possible, such as watching TV, going to
a movie, talking to people who speak English. What if I don't understand much
of the spoken English? Well, you can still make some sense of what is going on
without completely understanding every spoken word. The purpose is to get
yourself accustomed to the sounds of the English words. Remember, the sounds of
English may be very different from the sounds of your native language. That is
how you learn listening by listening.
In listening,
distinguish similar sounds:
Also,
distinguish these English vowel sounds:
SPEAKING
Overcome the
fear of embarrassment when you use the wrong words or say the incorrect sounds.
Learn to use gestures or just about anything to put your message across to the
person you are speaking to, if you don't have the vocabulary. Feel comfortable
speaking to anyone at anytime, without being self-conscious of whatever you are
saying in English. That is how
you learn speaking by speaking.
If you are a
sight reader (i.e. relying on images of what you see), you read faster than an
auditory reader (i.e. depending on hearing the sounds of words). That means an
efficient reader does not have to read word by word, or even understanding
every word that he or she reads.
WRITING
Writing is as
important as reading in that it puts into practice what you have learned. It
enables you to think, to recall what you have learned, and to put it into
application. The most effective way is to write a journal everyday; that is, just writing
something about anything: e.g. your feelings or views on what is happening to
you or around you. Writing something empowers your mind to use words in
sentences and paragraphs to express your thoughts. The best part of it is that
no one, except yourself, is going to read it, and that gives you the freedom to
express yourself without consciousness of making errors.
Writing is as
important as reading in that it puts into practice what you have learned. It
enables you to think, to recall what you have learned, and to put it into application.
The most effective way is to write a journal everyday; that is, just writing
something about anything: e.g. your feelings or views on what is happening to
you or around you. Writing something empowers your mind to use words in
sentences and paragraphs to express your thoughts. The best part of it is that
no one, except yourself, is going to read it, and that gives you the freedom to
express yourself without consciousness of making errors.
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