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[VoiceTube ProTip: 4 Common English Problems I See in Taiwanese Students.]
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Hello, everyone, I am the director of education at Easee Globe.
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And I'm here today to talk to you about common things an English teacher might come across in Taiwan and how we solved it.
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First, I would like to talk to you about grammar.
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I know you don't like it.
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English grammar's crazy.
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WHY?
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And I know you understand it.
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But the problem is using it.
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So, a couple of mistakes we see a lot.
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No s's on verbs.
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Did you know that "s" is our favorite letter?
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We love the sound of s's.
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Where are your s's?
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Also, "-ed"
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Chinese doesn't have past tense, but English does.
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And we really need to hear that sound, or else it hurts my ears when you're talking.
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I don't understand what you're saying.
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Number 2, English grammar.
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Yeah, we just talked about it, more?
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I know!
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So English grammar's really hard.
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All of my students say "I want really long beautiful sentences!"
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We don't talk like that.
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Americans, we're lazy.
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We use "S.", "V.", "O."
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"subject", "verb", "object"
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Who is doing the action?
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What are they doing?
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And what is the object of the action?
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So, easy, "S.", "V.", "O."
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Number 3, Common words.
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So many students tell me they need so many words.
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How many words are in Chinese?
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How many words are in English?
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Thousands and thousands.
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You'll never learn them all.
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But every day, we only use a few thousand words.
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Three, maybe four, maybe five thousand words.
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Grammar words, verbs, mostly.
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After that, it's a bunch of nouns you'll never need.
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So study the most common words.
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Part number 4.
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There are three or four different steps to learning a language that are critical.
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Input.
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You have to listen and read English to learn it.
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But you also need output.
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You have to say English to learn it.
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And number 3, critically important is frequency.
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Don't quit, keep going, keep going, keep going.
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Another really important part at Easee Globe, as we take into consideration, is the difference between students' needs and students' wants.
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Most students know what they want, but they don't understand what they need.
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There is a real difference between needs and wants.
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And what do I mean by this?
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The student would come to you and say,"I want, as a student, business English.", "I want grammar.", "I want pronunciation."
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I have this goal, and I'm gonna hire a teacher to walk me across a bridge.
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But it doesn't work like that because the goal and the needs are the same.
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It's more like building a building, like Taipei 101.
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You have to build on it, layer by layer.
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Fluency comes from frequency.
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You have to get the input.
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What can you do?
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At home, you can read the newspaper in English.
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You can listen to the news, BBC.
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You can watch TV.
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This is frequency.
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There is also a process involved.
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So, it's one layer by one layer.
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You can't just say, "OK, I'm gonna build the bridge and then be better at English."
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Because it doesn't work like that.
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Also, you have to give me your opinion.
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The output part.
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When your teacher asks you a question, or when I ask a student a question, and they say, "yes.", they say "no".
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That's not practicing.
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That's not building fluency.
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In the USA, when I ask my friend, "Hey, what do you think about Barack Obama?"
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He's not going to say, "I don't know."
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He's going to say, "I think this, this, this. Because, because, because..."
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These are perfect opportunities to practice your English.
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That's all I have for today, guys.
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Thanks, and see us again.