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  • Doo-doo-doo-doo. Wonder if there's anything to smoke? Hi. James from

  • engVid. Welcome to Canada's flora. "Flora" is a fancy word for flower;

  • "fauna" being animals, "fauna" being flower. So, some vocabulary to start the

  • lesson. But what lesson am I going to teach you today? I want to do a learning

  • process video, which means I'm going to give you some hints on how to learn

  • better, more effectively, and efficiently; and, also, hopefully make

  • it more fun for you. One of the key things students have... that they have

  • difficulty with is that they say: "Doing English is hard. I have to think about

  • doing it." So, I had the idea: Why don't we think about how to form habits and

  • English work? That way... well, a habit like brushing your teethyou wake up

  • in the morning, you brush your teeth; you don't think about it. You get up, go

  • to the bathroom, brush your teeth, eat your breakfast. It's done before you

  • think about it. If we can make learning English like that, you're gonna soon

  • find that English becomes fun because it's going to be automatic; something

  • that's not workit's just a habit. Cool? Now, in order to do this lesson, I

  • read up on B. J. Fogg, who's a professor out at Stanford, and James Clear. James

  • Clear has a book called: "Atomic Habits"; and B. J. Fogg is, I think:

  • "Tiny Habits". I can't recall exactly. But these two guys are, like, the gods

  • of habits. So, let's delve into it. And that means: Let's go into it. Okay? So,

  • I'm gonna give you three parts. And when we do these three things together, we

  • should be able to form habits that will make English learning fun, effective,

  • and efficient.

  • Number one: Stacking. In North America, especially in the winter, we like to

  • have pancakes. Pancakes, mm. Homer style, you know? We put pancakes on top

  • of each otherthis is called: "stacking". And you're going, right now:

  • "Habits. Pancakes. I think that guy gone crazy. I wouldn't... too much oxygen's

  • going through his head." Bear with me; just stay with me for a second or two.

  • When we stack our pancakes and we put beautiful maple syrup, it's delicious.

  • But the key is: We put one on top of the other, and sometimes we put butter and

  • it sticks together. The butter and the maple syrup gets sticky, and they stick

  • the pancakes together. Okay, I'll explain. What I want to do is I want to

  • take one habit you already do. Do you remember I talked about brushing your

  • teeth? Okay. You do that automatically or going to the washroom, and I want to

  • stack it with another habit that you want to learn. So, in turn, what happens

  • is it becomes something you just do. Okay? So, one habit could be: We go to

  • bed at night. Right? Well, if you want to do more reading, why don't you put a

  • book on your pillow? Stack the habit of going to sleep with that step... the

  • habit of reading. You go and you see the book, you're like: "Oh yeah. I'm gonna

  • go sleep. I'll read a page before I go to bed." Okay? You can stack habits in

  • other ways. When you have the television, instead of having the

  • television turn on, you could have it turned on to a... an English channel.

  • So, the habit of watching TV at night to relaxboomyou are studying. So,

  • "stacking" is taking one habit that you do already, and getting the new habit

  • which is going to be our English studyand putting them close together, so one

  • leads right to the other. You can stack before; you can stack afteryour

  • choice. Okay? So, that's "stacking". That's the first part of our habit form.

  • Okay? So, try and stack your habits. Find habits that go together somewhat.

  • So, you don't want to do reading and running. Okay? You... but you could do

  • audiobooks and running. You like to jog? Good. Stack it with a habit of listening

  • to English audiobooks. Okay. That's number one.

  • What's the second part of our habit-forming principle? Well, it's

  • easy-peasy. A lot of you know I was born in England. Funny thing. A fun fact:

  • There's a website out there that seems to be tracking me, and says I was born

  • in England but I live in Canada. I'm getting scared. I'm getting really

  • scared. Stay away from me. Anyway. What we want to do is make it easy-peasy.

  • That's an English saying for: Make it very easy. How do we make it easy? Well,

  • one of the ways to make something easy is to make it very small. A lot of

  • students have really big goals, and I... I think that's amazing. That's great.

  • But the problem with big goalsit's like trying to reach for the moon.

  • Difficult to do. But a smaller goal, we can do. So, parts we're going to do to

  • make things easy is number one: Make your goals small. Instead of saying:

  • "I'm going to study for an hour on English tonight", tell yourself you're

  • going to study for one minute. Chill. All you guys are like: "He's crazy; he's

  • lost it." No, no, no. Just wait. If you tell yourself you're going to study for

  • one minute every day, you're probably going to do it. If you tell yourself

  • you're going to study for an hour every day, you probably aren't going to do it.

  • And maybe you'll do one hour or five hourswhich is really goodon a

  • Sunday, and nothing all week. When we know... and the science says it's the

  • consistency that gets you better. "Consistent" means you keep doing it.

  • That's the second part of easy-peasy. Make the goal so small, but do it daily;

  • every single day do this thing. Make it so small. Maybe not even a... you read

  • for 20 seconds. Maybe you're going to read five words of a book. We both know

  • you're not going to read only five words. Right? And that's the whole

  • point. You make it so easy that you go: "Even a baby could do it." You're not a

  • baby, so do it. And then, you do it every day. Right? Okay.

  • Other thing. Here's what we do: We want to pick a time and a place. Why? Have

  • you ever noticed when you walk in your house where the television is sitting or

  • where your couch is? Most houses in North America, if you see a couch, you

  • see a TV. Hockey Night in Canada is right in front of them all the time.

  • Right? So we know: "couch means TV". Oven and fridge, where are they? In the

  • kitchen. What do you do in there? No, you don't have a shower; you go and

  • cook. Time and place are important. If you pick a particular time of the day...

  • sometimes I think the best time to do something, like English studying, and it

  • depends on the person, is either in the day... at the beginning of the day or in

  • the evening because you have less things on your mind; especially in the

  • beginning of the morning. You've just woken up, so there's not a lot of

  • concerns in your head, so that's a great time because you can absorb more

  • information. Or in the evening when you've chilled from work and you're

  • relaxed a bit — a good thing to do then is to study at that time. But pick a

  • time and a place. And what you want to do is keep it consistent. Remember we

  • talked about daily? So, find a time and a place that you won't be disturbed.

  • Like, someone's disturbing me. Yeah. Tourists. What can I say? But they're so

  • cute. Gotta love them. Anyway. So, you want to find a time and a place that

  • you're going to be consistent. Do you remember we talked about daily? So,

  • we're going to be doing it in the same place daily. That way... don't pick a

  • place where you have to change every four or five daysthat will start

  • breaking your habit. But you'll start finding after a while when you enter at

  • the same time and place, you're going to be drawn or you're going to want to

  • start to study because that's your habit. You make it small. Remember we

  • talked about making the habit small enough, right? Consistencydaily. And

  • now a time and place we've got down. That's the second part of our triad.

  • "Triad" means three. Okay? Just learned some vocabulary. Because I know it's the

  • learning process, but it doesn't mean you can't pick up some other things.

  • Right?

  • So, what's the third part? "Celebrate good times. Come on." Yeah. Go on

  • YouTube. You're on YouTube. Check that song out after; I think it's: "There's a

  • party going on right here." Yeah. "Celebrate". Okay, I'm done. That's it.

  • No Elvis here. So, celebrate. What do we mean by "celebrate"? We got two things;

  • two ways that we want to celebrate. Okay, stay with me. We're gonna start

  • talking about dopamine. "Dopamine" is a drug that your body naturally produces

  • that you are given when you do something really well. Your body goes: "That's

  • just like me. I like that. That's good." It makes you feel good, and it makes you

  • want to do it again. So, for a habit to be successful... if you think about when

  • used to play football, for you Europeans; soccer for you Americans.

  • Okay? When you first got that kick and it went in... the goal went in, what did

  • you do? Boomyou got it in there. You're like: "Yeah! That's like me.

  • That's good!" and you felt really good, and you wanted to do that again. We

  • always do that. When we do something, we score, if you're playing basketball

  • boom, you sink it. You're like: "Yeah!" Golfit's not a sport. Sorry, it's not

  • a sport. But golf. Whenever we do something like that, we get that touch

  • of success, we go: "Yeah!" You want to do that. I know it sounds silly. But how

  • stupid did you look, going: "Yeah!" Yeah, exactly. You didn't care. You felt

  • good; you wanted to do that again. So, we want to celebrate when we're doing

  • these things. So, what do I mean? Once you find that placeremember the

  • easy-peasyyou've got a simple goal, you're doing it consistently in a place,

  • every time you go to that place and sit down, go: "Yeah! I'm doing it!" You can

  • say that just before you start; you can be in the middle of it and go: "Yeah!

  • I'm in the middle of doing it!" Or at the end, like: "Yeah! I kicked its butt.

  • I did it." Celebrate. Tell yourself you're doing a good job. Feel good about

  • it. That dopamine we talked about, that's given to you, will be given to

  • you and you'll feel good. And the next time you walk by that place, some magic

  • will happen: You'll start feeling good just walking by. And you'll even feel

  • better because dopamine is released in anticipation of doing something; not the

  • actual doing. So, it's going to get you sort of kind of motivated to studying. I

  • know, complicated stuff. Don't worry. You got it. Just watch the video again;

  • you'll get what I'm saying. So, "dopamine" is a feel-good drug your body

  • gives you when you've done something good that it thinks is helping you.

  • So, now that you've got that, I said there were two ways to celebrate. Right?

  • Celebrate while you're doing the activity. Tell yourself: "I've did a

  • good job. Yeah! That's it. Great. Studied. I did my 20 minutes. Yeah!"

  • Then give yourself a longer-term reward. You finish a book, you wanted to read an

  • English book. You said you want to read it in a month, you didbuy yourself a

  • chocolate bar. Okay, that's not quite a reward, but you catch what I'm saying.

  • Give yourself something good. So, you've done all this work, you keep celebrating

  • that you've done it, and then you finish the goal you wanted to do. Maybe you

  • wanted to learn 100 words in 100 days; maybe you want to be able to read a page

  • of English in under two minutes. I don't know what your goal is. But give

  • yourself your reward when you've done that because your brain is always

  • keeping tabs. It means it's always aware of what you're doing. And if you're

  • moving towards your goals, it's actually motivating you to keep moving towards

  • your goals. And your goal, in this case, is to learn English. Right? If you put

  • the three things I've given you before... what's the first thing?

  • Stacking. Try and find habits that can be put close together. Going to bed

  • put a book on the bed at night. You get upput the book down to help remind

  • you. Okay? Stacking those habits together. You're brushing your teeth

  • think of... when you're thinking it, ten English words when you're standing on

  • one leg. Leg, hand, cheese, bread... just force yourself to do something

  • weird, so you're stacking. You have to do this one; put them together. When

  • you're stacking, if you can do it, make that... stack it, but make it

  • easy-peasy. Pick a small goal. Take a goal and break it down. Right? When

  • you've done that, make it daily. Do it every single day. You brush your teeth

  • every day. Right? Do it every single day. And then what'd we talk about?

  • Celebrate. When you've done that, and you've done this silly thing, and people

  • are going: "What...? What are you doing in there?" You go: "Yeah! I did it! I

  • did it. I brushed my teeth standing on one leg, saying English." Yeah. Okay,

  • don't do that. But you understand. That's the ideathis is what I want

  • you to do. And then give yourself a reward. You're working hard. Life is a

  • journey, my friend. I know it's gonna sound really, really bad. But life is a

  • journey. And we want to remember: You got to live it now. And that's part of

  • the celebration part. If you're not actually happy with what you're doing,

  • you're not going to keep doing it for long.

  • I do have a cup... one... a couple of things I wanted to say to you right now.

  • Because those are the three things I wanted to give you to put together, but

  • I want to go back to that test retest. Do you remember we started the

  • beginning; I said: "What are five things you do every day?" Now your eyes are

  • going: "That's why you said this stuff?" I'm like: "That's why I said it." What

  • are five things you love to do? What are five English goals that you have?

  • Remember I said all of that? And I said how it goes together? I'm gonna give you

  • that ten seconds again. Okay? Take a look at the scenery around me. I'll be

  • back, and you try and put together all the information I've given you, and how

  • that would work. You got it yet? Okay. Before I go and give you your homework,

  • I want to give you a quote by Aristotle. He said: "Quality is not an act; it's a

  • habit." So, if you want to get good at English, and you want to be efficient

  • and effective at itthink like Aristotle. "Quality is not an act; not a

  • one-time thingit's a habit", something you have to continually do.

  • Cool? And as you know, you're gonna get homework because it wouldn't be engVid

  • if I didn't do that to you. So, here's what I want you to do: Take three goals

  • that you have in mind that you want to do in English, or even one. Here's the

  • hard part: Break it into 100 steps. Remember the easy-peasy thing we're

  • talking about? Break it into 100 steps. Find how you can stack each step along

  • the way. And then remember the reward? Once you've hit that 100th step, what's

  • the reward you're gonna give yourself? If you do this particular homework I

  • give you, you will find that you are 80% done learning English. You're like:

  • "What?" I'm like: You've already done the hardest part: Thinking. That's one

  • of the hardest things a human can do. And you've just done it. If you do that,

  • you're going to find that you're already motivated to do all the other things we

  • talked about when you put those other habits/steps in. And you're going to

  • master the habit of learning and learning English. Anyway, hope you had a

  • great time. Before I go, don't forget to go to www.eng as in English, vid as in

  • video.com. No quiz, but go check out the other lessons we have there. There'll be

  • other learning process videos; there'll be other language applications you can

  • do, where we do grammar, conversation, listening. Looking forward to seeing

  • you. Have a good one. Nice day out.

Doo-doo-doo-doo. Wonder if there's anything to smoke? Hi. James from

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