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  • How can I get better at English?

  • Sorry, I don’t know.

  • Siri doesn't know.

  • Hey guys. So, Japanese people have been asking me to make videos about learning English for years.

  • Sorry for the wait.

  • I’ll be making a series about it now,

  • and I'll put them into a playlist if you want to watch.

  • Before I start giving advice,

  • I’d like to talk about my experience learning English since I got lots of questions about it.

  • Recently they start teaching English in elementary schools,

  • but my English classes started from junior high school.

  • I was using NEW HORIZON.

  • Which textbook did you use?

  • By the way, I found this textbook the other day.

  • NEW HORIZON for adults.

  • It's published by the same company, but the contents seem very different from when I was in school.

  • I’ll show you guys this textbook some other time.

  • Back to the main topic.

  • So English class started when I was 13,

  • and I followed along until they started teaching present (past) perfect tense.

  • I hated how verbs change their form randomly.

  • And some don't change at all.

  • Why's that, Rachel sensei?

  • I don't know.

  • Even a native English speaker doesn’t know.

  • Anyway, my brain shut down when the English teacher drew a time line on the blackboard to explain.

  • There were many colorful lines all across the backboard and I was like

  • Why are we studying Sci-Fi?”

  • From then on, I kept time traveling during English class.

  • The class was always over before I noticed. (Basically I just fell asleep.)

  • And later on, I got aoten (blue ink) on my English test.

  • I think some of you are familiar with akaten (red ink),

  • which means you got less than half of the average class score.

  • And aoten is half of the akaten.

  • So for example, if the average class score is 100 points, less than 50 is akaten, and less than 25 is aoten.

  • Red akaten ink is like you're-so-embarrassed-you're-blushing level,

  • but blue aoten ink is like you're-so-horrified-the-color-drains-from-your-face level.

  • My English teacher said he only saw aoten twice in his life.

  • Anyway I didn’t like English tests or classes so much but I didn’t dislike the English language.

  • So I went to university and majored English to relearn it.

  • Now I use English for work and to talk to my wife every day.

  • Looking back at the time I got aoten, I wouldn’t have been able to imagine my life now.

  • In short, this is my experience learning English.

  • And I get messages from a lot of people like students who have trouble following their class just like I did,

  • or office workers who need to learn English for their jobs.

  • And the first thing they ask me isHow can I make my English better?"

  • But this question is very broad.

  • I don’t know your purpose for learning English, or what you mean bybetter.”

  • So I can’t answer this question

  • nor can Siri.

  • Everyone has a different reason for learning English.

  • So I asked them their reasons.

  • Quite a few couldn't answer,

  • and some didn't have any purpose.

  • But that's not very good.

  • If you're learning a foreign language, you should know why you're doing that.

  • Your reason doesn't need to be something important.

  • My reason was because I didn't want to get akaten (well I got aoten, though).

  • Some wanted to learn English to get a high score on their TOEIC test so they can use it for job hunting.

  • There was a 67 year old lady who messaged me and said

  • "I want to learn English. I want to travel to foreign countries for the first time in my life."

  • Your reason can be anything, so think about why you want to learn English.

  • The difference between someone with purpose and someone without purpose can be very large.

  • People with purpose have goals to reach and can make use of their efforts,

  • but if you don't know your purpose you might just be wasting your time.

  • So if you don't know your reason for learning, think about it.

  • Your reason can even be "I want to date someone from different country."

  • Will you be my girlfriend, Siri?

  • Wow, this is awkward...

  • The question I get the second most often is

  • there're so many rumors about learning English.

  • I don't know what to trust.

  • Some examples of rumors are like:

  • "Getting a high score on the TOEIC test isn't so great. It's not useful."

  • "The English that we learn in school is useless."

  • "Just listening to these CD materials, you'll be able to speak."

  • There are dozens of rumors like these.

  • So people get confused and ask someone like me.

  • I think people get confused and end up unable to do anything

  • because they mix different purposes for and ways of learning English.

  • Here's a quote from my English teacher.

  • Actually my professor in university said the same thing so maybe this is something used often.

  • "It's easy to understand what kinds of English Japanese people learn if you compare it to martial arts."

  • There are many kinds but we have 4 big types.

  • 1. Exam-oriented English

  • 2. TOEIC/proficiency test English

  • 3. Business English

  • 4. English for studying abroad or traveling

  • There are more but these are the four big types of English we learn.

  • With exam-oriented English you want to reach the weight level (prestige level)

  • of the school you want to enroll in.

  • It's like boxing. I'm sure you guys have gone through this,

  • repeating your basic training and following a strict regimen of studying.

  • TOEIC/proficiency test English is like karate.

  • Depending on your score and level, you can achieve different color belts.

  • Business English is pro-wrestling.

  • English is just a tool for negotiation.

  • You also fight outside of the ring, like negotiating business over casual drinks.

  • English for studying abroad or traveling is like street fighting.

  • As long as you make yourself understood, you win.

  • For example: Person A gets 700 on the TOEIC test,

  • which is considered good enough to go abroad for business.

  • He's a TOEIC karate brown-belt.

  • (Brown is right under black.)

  • And now he challenges a business English pro-wrestler, Person B.

  • And while TOEIC karate Person A is ready to fight,

  • Person C, Person B's tag-team partner, suddenly grabs Person A and throws him out of the ring.

  • And then Person C beats karate brown-belt Person A with a folding chair.

  • And now the audience says, "Ha, (TOEIC) karate is worthless."

  • But pro-wrestling, karate, boxing, and street fighting all have different rules.

  • If you know the rules well, it'll affect your results.

  • And the things you train for won't go to waste.

  • Additionally, the basics are all the same.

  • So if you know your purpose for learning English, you won't be troubled by those rumors.

  • By the way, I've never used (Speed Learning)

  • so I asked one of my friends who has used it,

  • and he said it's for intermediate or advanced learners.

  • It might be a little too difficult for beginners.

  • I'm the kind of person who doesn't want to spend money on materials, so I probably won't use it.

  • But I respect Ryo-kun. *Famous speed-learning character

  • This video got kind of long, but I'll keep making videos like this.

  • And I'd like to introduce at least one tool that I think is useful or I've used in each video.

  • By the way,

  • my English teacher who said my aoten was only the second he'd seen in his life,

  • saw it the first time when he himself got it as a student.

  • But I won't say "If you study hard you'll become fluent in English!"

  • Actually, I'm where I am because I didn't study hard.

  • That might sound confusing, but I'll talk about it in my next video.

  • Thank you for watching.

  • Just kidding. Actually, I'm already married.

  • Ha ha ha, very funny.

How can I get better at English?

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