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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,709 --> 00:00:03,790 Hi, this is AJ. 2 00:00:03,790 --> 00:00:05,120 Time for the next lesson. 3 00:00:05,120 --> 00:00:11,690 Now this is one of my favorite topics by one of my favorite people so I want you to be 4 00:00:11,690 --> 00:00:18,400 extra happy, extra strong body and physiology for this one. 5 00:00:18,400 --> 00:00:20,300 So stand up straight. 6 00:00:20,300 --> 00:00:22,240 Get those shoulders back. 7 00:00:22,240 --> 00:00:23,240 Chest up. 8 00:00:23,240 --> 00:00:26,090 Breathe deep. 9 00:00:26,090 --> 00:00:27,759 Get that air going in there. 10 00:00:27,759 --> 00:00:29,149 Energize your body. 11 00:00:29,149 --> 00:00:32,720 Big, big, super big smile, huge smile. 12 00:00:32,720 --> 00:00:36,670 Make everyone think you’re super crazy. 13 00:00:36,670 --> 00:00:37,670 Now move your body. 14 00:00:37,670 --> 00:00:38,680 Come on, get it moving now. 15 00:00:38,680 --> 00:00:41,129 If you’re standing you just kind of wiggle around. 16 00:00:41,129 --> 00:00:43,270 Move those arms, move those legs. 17 00:00:43,270 --> 00:00:45,050 If you can, start walking. 18 00:00:45,050 --> 00:00:47,420 Get the blood going. 19 00:00:47,420 --> 00:00:48,629 Get that energy going. 20 00:00:48,629 --> 00:00:49,680 Let’s go! 21 00:00:49,680 --> 00:00:51,280 Are you ready? 22 00:00:51,280 --> 00:01:00,809 This lesson is called “The Power of Reading” and it comes from an article by Dr. Stephen 23 00:01:00,809 --> 00:01:01,809 Krashen. 24 00:01:01,809 --> 00:01:03,989 He’s one of my favorite people in the world. 25 00:01:03,989 --> 00:01:10,890 Dr. Stephen Krashen is probably the number one expert on language learning and language 26 00:01:10,890 --> 00:01:14,110 teaching in the world. 27 00:01:14,110 --> 00:01:20,500 He is just an incredible professor, an incredible researcher, an incredible intellectual. 28 00:01:20,500 --> 00:01:28,060 He has done an incredible amount of research on the topic of learning languages. 29 00:01:28,060 --> 00:01:32,000 And today we’re going to talk about just one part of his research. 30 00:01:32,000 --> 00:01:38,230 Really, Effortless English is based a lot on Dr. Stephen Krashen’s research, all of 31 00:01:38,230 --> 00:01:40,009 the methods we use. 32 00:01:40,009 --> 00:01:46,840 But we’re going to talk about just one particular method, one particular idea, very strong idea 33 00:01:46,840 --> 00:01:52,780 that comes from Dr. Stephen Krashen and his research and that is the power of reading. 34 00:01:52,780 --> 00:01:55,430 Specifically it’s the power of pleasure reading. 35 00:01:55,430 --> 00:01:58,200 It’s the power of easy reading. 36 00:01:58,200 --> 00:02:01,009 We’ll talk about that more in a minute. 37 00:02:01,009 --> 00:02:04,000 But first let me read a little bit from this article. 38 00:02:04,000 --> 00:02:07,979 Now this article, as you might guess, is about the power of reading. 39 00:02:07,979 --> 00:02:14,540 And Dr. Krashen did a lot of research about reading. 40 00:02:14,540 --> 00:02:22,971 Specifically about how do people, native speakers, and people learning foreign languages, how 41 00:02:22,971 --> 00:02:26,500 do they learn vocabulary? 42 00:02:26,500 --> 00:02:30,280 How do they get good grammar? 43 00:02:30,280 --> 00:02:35,110 How do they get excellent writing skills? 44 00:02:35,110 --> 00:02:40,860 One of the most important methods is reading. 45 00:02:40,860 --> 00:02:41,860 Reading for pleasure. 46 00:02:41,860 --> 00:02:46,620 Now when we talk about reading there are kind of two different ways to learn reading, even 47 00:02:46,620 --> 00:02:50,660 for small children, learning a native language. 48 00:02:50,660 --> 00:02:57,010 Now one method, the old method, is that you learn reading skills. 49 00:02:57,010 --> 00:03:04,330 So you have to study and analyze vocabulary, for example. 50 00:03:04,330 --> 00:03:09,080 Spelling in English is very difficult and tough so we have to study that a lot in school. 51 00:03:09,080 --> 00:03:13,140 Well, we don’t have to but often with old methods and old teachers we do. 52 00:03:13,140 --> 00:03:15,090 We study, study, study spelling. 53 00:03:15,090 --> 00:03:18,820 We study, study, study vocabulary. 54 00:03:18,820 --> 00:03:19,950 And we learn all these skills. 55 00:03:19,950 --> 00:03:23,730 We use all these textbooks to learn reading. 56 00:03:23,730 --> 00:03:28,900 And, of course, people learning new language, a foreign language, well guess what. 57 00:03:28,900 --> 00:03:30,180 You do the same things, right? 58 00:03:30,180 --> 00:03:31,180 You learn textbooks. 59 00:03:31,180 --> 00:03:40,600 You’re reading all these textbooks and you’re trying to learn all these “reading skills.” 60 00:03:40,600 --> 00:03:45,290 Now the other way, the other method, and this is the method, in fact that works much, much 61 00:03:45,290 --> 00:03:50,070 better according to Dr. Krashen’s research, according to a lot of other research. 62 00:03:50,070 --> 00:03:53,810 It’s just reading for fun, imagine that! 63 00:03:53,810 --> 00:03:58,640 And what that means is reading a lot of easy books. 64 00:03:58,640 --> 00:04:01,120 Now for children that might be comic books. 65 00:04:01,120 --> 00:04:04,640 It might be just children’s novels. 66 00:04:04,640 --> 00:04:08,590 And it’s just reading, reading, reading, in other words we learn to read by reading. 67 00:04:08,590 --> 00:04:12,420 We learn vocabulary from reading. 68 00:04:12,420 --> 00:04:15,820 We learn a lot of our grammar from reading. 69 00:04:15,820 --> 00:04:20,229 We learn our writing skills from reading. 70 00:04:20,229 --> 00:04:23,360 Not by analyzing and studying grammar. 71 00:04:23,360 --> 00:04:26,810 Not be trying to memorize vocabulary. 72 00:04:26,810 --> 00:04:31,360 If you read something very easy, you know most of the words. 73 00:04:31,360 --> 00:04:35,150 And then you find a new word, you don’t need to memorize it. 74 00:04:35,150 --> 00:04:39,699 You will start to understand that word just because you understand the general meaning 75 00:04:39,699 --> 00:04:40,860 of the story. 76 00:04:40,860 --> 00:04:42,219 You understand the whole paragraph. 77 00:04:42,219 --> 00:04:43,740 You understand the sentence. 78 00:04:43,740 --> 00:04:47,430 So that one word you can guess the meaning. 79 00:04:47,430 --> 00:04:48,699 And then guess what happens? 80 00:04:48,699 --> 00:04:53,020 You see that new word again somewhere else in the book. 81 00:04:53,020 --> 00:04:55,389 And then you start, it’s in a different situation. 82 00:04:55,389 --> 00:04:58,800 A little bit different paragraph, a little bit different sentence, and now you’re “Ah” 83 00:04:58,800 --> 00:05:00,219 you understand it a little more. 84 00:05:00,219 --> 00:05:04,110 Then you see it again in another paragraph, somewhere else in the book. 85 00:05:04,110 --> 00:05:08,030 And over time you will naturally learn that word. 86 00:05:08,030 --> 00:05:10,190 You’ll never try to memorize it. 87 00:05:10,190 --> 00:05:12,750 You will never study it but you will learn it. 88 00:05:12,750 --> 00:05:14,300 You will know it forever. 89 00:05:14,300 --> 00:05:16,639 That’s the best way to learn vocabulary. 90 00:05:16,639 --> 00:05:18,919 There’s a lot of research about this. 91 00:05:18,919 --> 00:05:24,870 They compare people who try to memorize vocabulary with books, textbooks, that is. 92 00:05:24,870 --> 00:05:28,319 And then other people who learn just by reading easy books all the time. 93 00:05:28,319 --> 00:05:29,710 They’re reading novels all the time. 94 00:05:29,710 --> 00:05:31,280 They’re reading, reading, reading. 95 00:05:31,280 --> 00:05:35,569 Which group of people learns more vocabulary faster? 96 00:05:35,569 --> 00:05:38,289 The readers, the people who are just reading for fun. 97 00:05:38,289 --> 00:05:41,590 They’re just reading a lot of fun, easy novels and books. 98 00:05:41,590 --> 00:05:46,900 Those people have much bigger vocabularies than people who are actually trying to study 99 00:05:46,900 --> 00:05:47,900 vocabulary. 100 00:05:47,900 --> 00:05:50,900 It’s the same for grammar. 101 00:05:50,900 --> 00:05:56,650 People who are studying grammar, study, study grammar rules, study grammar textbooks. 102 00:05:56,650 --> 00:05:59,810 And then other people who are just reading lots of novels. 103 00:05:59,810 --> 00:06:01,620 They’re reading, reading, reading all the time. 104 00:06:01,620 --> 00:06:09,669 Comic books, novels, articles, stories, the readers have better grammar than the people 105 00:06:09,669 --> 00:06:11,639 who are studying grammar from textbooks. 106 00:06:11,639 --> 00:06:14,379 It’s a huge difference. 107 00:06:14,379 --> 00:06:17,680 And the more you read over time, the bigger the difference. 108 00:06:17,680 --> 00:06:21,849 The better your grammar gets compared to people who are using textbooks. 109 00:06:21,849 --> 00:06:23,680 So this is a huge topic. 110 00:06:23,680 --> 00:06:24,779 It is so important. 111 00:06:24,779 --> 00:06:27,970 So let me read a little bit from Dr. Krashen and then we’ll talk a little more. 112 00:06:27,970 --> 00:06:35,090 Okay, this is from Dr. Krashen: “When second language learners read for pleasure, they 113 00:06:35,090 --> 00:06:42,469 develop the competence they need to move from the beginning ordinary conversational level 114 00:06:42,469 --> 00:06:48,620 to a level where they can use the second language for more demanding purposes. 115 00:06:48,620 --> 00:06:55,199 Such as the serious study of literature, business and so on. 116 00:06:55,199 --> 00:07:00,559 When they read for pleasure they can continue to improve in their second language without 117 00:07:00,559 --> 00:07:06,749 classes, without teachers, without study. 118 00:07:06,749 --> 00:07:11,759 And even without people to converse with. 119 00:07:11,759 --> 00:07:14,819 When we read we really have no choice. 120 00:07:14,819 --> 00:07:18,610 We must develop literacy. 121 00:07:18,610 --> 00:07:25,500 We rarely find well‐read people who have serious problems with grammar, spelling and 122 00:07:25,500 --> 00:07:27,059 so on. 123 00:07:27,059 --> 00:07:31,120 They write acceptably well because they can’t help it. 124 00:07:31,120 --> 00:07:40,530 They have subconsciously acquired good writing style as well as the conventions of writing. 125 00:07:40,530 --> 00:07:47,069 Our problem in language education, as Frank Smith has pointed out, is that we have confused 126 00:07:47,069 --> 00:07:49,639 cause and effect. 127 00:07:49,639 --> 00:07:56,990 We have assumed that we first learn language skills and then apply these skills to reading 128 00:07:56,990 --> 00:07:58,189 and writing. 129 00:07:58,189 --> 00:08:02,550 But that is not the way the human brain works. 130 00:08:02,550 --> 00:08:10,759 Rather, reading for meaning, reading about things that matter to us is the cause of language 131 00:08:10,759 --> 00:08:11,759 development.” 132 00:08:11,759 --> 00:08:16,849 So, very interesting, what does that mean? 133 00:08:16,849 --> 00:08:19,560 So what it means is that you don’t first learn skills. 134 00:08:19,560 --> 00:08:20,589 You learn writing skills. 135 00:08:20,589 --> 00:08:21,830 You learn spelling skills. 136 00:08:21,830 --> 00:08:23,710 You learn how to do a sentence. 137 00:08:23,710 --> 00:08:26,310 You learn how to make a paragraph. 138 00:08:26,310 --> 00:08:29,309 And then later you can read and write well. 139 00:08:29,309 --> 00:08:32,990 That’s exactly the opposite of what actually happens. 140 00:08:32,990 --> 00:08:35,780 What actually happens is you read and you read and you read. 141 00:08:35,780 --> 00:08:36,780 You read sentences. 142 00:08:36,780 --> 00:08:37,780 You read paragraphs. 143 00:08:37,780 --> 00:08:38,780 You read stories. 144 00:08:38,780 --> 00:08:39,780 You read books. 145 00:08:39,780 --> 00:08:40,780 You read novels. 146 00:08:40,780 --> 00:08:51,640 And after reading so much you subconsciously, you intuitively acquire, get, learn great 147 00:08:51,640 --> 00:08:57,450 reading skills, great writing skills, great vocabulary, great grammar. 148 00:08:57,450 --> 00:09:01,750 It comes from reading a lot for pleasure. 149 00:09:01,750 --> 00:09:03,360 The reading comes first. 150 00:09:03,360 --> 00:09:06,160 And, in fact, I would add listening to that. 151 00:09:06,160 --> 00:09:08,150 And Dr. Krashen adds that as well. 152 00:09:08,150 --> 00:09:12,450 This article is about reading but, in fact, listening is the same thing. 153 00:09:12,450 --> 00:09:16,080 So when you’re reading and listening a lot, that’s the first step. 154 00:09:16,080 --> 00:09:17,990 And you need to do so much of it. 155 00:09:17,990 --> 00:09:23,930 You’ve got to read and listen for pleasure, for fun, a lot, a lot, a lot. 156 00:09:23,930 --> 00:09:27,820 Now the good news is you have to do it a lot but it’s fun, it’s easy. 157 00:09:27,820 --> 00:09:30,290 You’re listening to stuff you like, so it’s okay. 158 00:09:30,290 --> 00:09:32,160 You’re reading stuff you enjoy. 159 00:09:32,160 --> 00:09:33,710 You’re not thinking about grammar rules. 160 00:09:33,710 --> 00:09:35,620 You’re not thinking about vocabulary. 161 00:09:35,620 --> 00:09:39,240 You’re just reading and listening and enjoying yourself. 162 00:09:39,240 --> 00:09:43,420 You do that first, the grammar skills then come later. 163 00:09:43,420 --> 00:09:46,300 They come from the listening and the reading. 164 00:09:46,300 --> 00:09:50,000 The writing skills come from reading a lot. 165 00:09:50,000 --> 00:09:54,850 Your vocabulary comes from reading a lot and listening, too. 166 00:09:54,850 --> 00:09:57,840 Your pronunciation comes from listening a lot. 167 00:09:57,840 --> 00:10:01,760 It’s the input that is the most important. 168 00:10:01,760 --> 00:10:11,830 And specific kind of input, it’s got to be meaningful, real, enjoyable, pleasurable. 169 00:10:11,830 --> 00:10:13,400 So that’s the power of reading. 170 00:10:13,400 --> 00:10:17,210 Now I’m not going to talk about all the specific research studies in this book, but 171 00:10:17,210 --> 00:10:18,850 if you like get his book. 172 00:10:18,850 --> 00:10:24,370 The book is called The Power of Reading, that’s the title, The Power of Reading. 173 00:10:24,370 --> 00:10:27,160 It’s by Dr. Stephen Krashen. 174 00:10:27,160 --> 00:10:33,190 Now Stephen is spelled S‐t‐e‐p‐h‐e‐n. 175 00:10:33,190 --> 00:10:41,390 And Krashen is spelled K‐r‐a‐s‐h‐e‐n, so Dr. Stephen Krashen and the book title, 176 00:10:41,390 --> 00:10:42,570 The Power of Reading. 177 00:10:42,570 --> 00:10:45,040 You can get it on amazon.com. 178 00:10:45,040 --> 00:10:50,710 So if you want to see all the huge number of research studies at different universities 179 00:10:50,710 --> 00:10:58,220 around the world about this topic of reading and learning better grammar skills, better 180 00:10:58,220 --> 00:11:00,860 vocabulary, better speaking, better pronunciation. 181 00:11:00,860 --> 00:11:04,110 If you want to see the proof, the evidence, then get his book. 182 00:11:04,110 --> 00:11:05,960 You can look at all the different studies. 183 00:11:05,960 --> 00:11:07,500 There’s so many of them. 184 00:11:07,500 --> 00:11:11,750 But, y’know, if you trust me you can take my word for it. 185 00:11:11,750 --> 00:11:17,080 You can trust that I am trying to help you as best I can, that I really care about you. 186 00:11:17,080 --> 00:11:21,550 You can trust that this is in fact how it works. 187 00:11:21,550 --> 00:11:26,530 That if you want to write well, if you want to have a great English vocabulary, if you 188 00:11:26,530 --> 00:11:30,880 want to have great English grammar you need to read and read and read. 189 00:11:30,880 --> 00:11:34,680 And what you need to read are novels. 190 00:11:34,680 --> 00:11:36,780 Novels are the key, easy novels. 191 00:11:36,780 --> 00:11:38,800 So here’s my rule. 192 00:11:38,800 --> 00:11:40,880 What does easy mean for you? 193 00:11:40,880 --> 00:11:46,000 My rule is you should not need a dictionary to read the book. 194 00:11:46,000 --> 00:11:51,040 So if you grab a, let’s say you grab a book by Stephen King, kind of a famous writer in 195 00:11:51,040 --> 00:11:52,040 the United States. 196 00:11:52,040 --> 00:11:56,520 You get a Stephen King book, in English of course, and you start reading it but, oh, 197 00:11:56,520 --> 00:11:59,000 there’s so many words you don’t know. 198 00:11:59,000 --> 00:12:00,000 And you need a dictionary. 199 00:12:00,000 --> 00:12:02,340 You get your dictionary and you’re looking up all these words. 200 00:12:02,340 --> 00:12:04,560 Well, it’s too difficult for you. 201 00:12:04,560 --> 00:12:07,950 If you need a dictionary to understand it, it’s too difficult. 202 00:12:07,950 --> 00:12:11,370 Okay, so, you know, put it aside and wait. 203 00:12:11,370 --> 00:12:14,340 You can read it later when your reading skills are higher. 204 00:12:14,340 --> 00:12:17,570 But for now find an easier book. 205 00:12:17,570 --> 00:12:19,280 I recommend children’s novels. 206 00:12:19,280 --> 00:12:23,310 I think they are a fantastic way to learn. 207 00:12:23,310 --> 00:12:25,260 You can get the Goosebumps books for example. 208 00:12:25,260 --> 00:12:26,310 There’s a whole series. 209 00:12:26,310 --> 00:12:28,280 They’re for kids. 210 00:12:28,280 --> 00:12:31,480 They’re called Goosebumps. 211 00:12:31,480 --> 00:12:35,450 And there’s, I don’t know how many, there’s probably 30 or 50 of them, okay? 212 00:12:35,450 --> 00:12:37,740 They’re short and they’re pretty easy. 213 00:12:37,740 --> 00:12:40,890 You can probably read them without a dictionary. 214 00:12:40,890 --> 00:12:42,440 What you should do is read all of them. 215 00:12:42,440 --> 00:12:44,370 Read all 30 of them. 216 00:12:44,370 --> 00:12:45,990 Read them, just enjoy them. 217 00:12:45,990 --> 00:12:47,430 Don’t use a dictionary. 218 00:12:47,430 --> 00:12:51,810 If you see a word you don’t know, just guess the meaning and keep reading. 219 00:12:51,810 --> 00:12:52,910 If you’re wrong, it doesn’t matter. 220 00:12:52,910 --> 00:12:55,350 You’ll see that word again and again and again. 221 00:12:55,350 --> 00:12:56,990 Eventually you will understand that word. 222 00:12:56,990 --> 00:12:58,400 You won’t need a dictionary. 223 00:12:58,400 --> 00:13:00,920 Just enjoy the story. 224 00:13:00,920 --> 00:13:04,130 Another set of books I like are The Hardy Boys books. 225 00:13:04,130 --> 00:13:07,900 These are so old I read them when I was a kid. 226 00:13:07,900 --> 00:13:10,730 And there’s another series of books called Nancy Drew. 227 00:13:10,730 --> 00:13:18,440 So The Hardy Boys books and the Nancy Drew books, another set of kids books, kids novels, 228 00:13:18,440 --> 00:13:23,410 they’re fairly long but not too long, that are really great if you want to do a lot of 229 00:13:23,410 --> 00:13:28,030 pleasure reading that does not require a dictionary. 230 00:13:28,030 --> 00:13:33,200 So again, Nancy Drew books and The Hardy Boys books, and again, there are so many of them, 231 00:13:33,200 --> 00:13:35,670 20, 30 or more in each series. 232 00:13:35,670 --> 00:13:39,790 You can read the whole series if you want to. 233 00:13:39,790 --> 00:13:43,270 And of course you can just go to any bookstore that has English books. 234 00:13:43,270 --> 00:13:47,050 Look in the children’s section or the young adults’ section. 235 00:13:47,050 --> 00:13:55,720 Another series of books I like are by Roald Dahl, I think Dahl is D-a-h-l, if I’m right. 236 00:13:55,720 --> 00:14:01,840 Anyway, he wrote books such a Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, James and the Giant 237 00:14:01,840 --> 00:14:02,840 Peach. 238 00:14:02,840 --> 00:14:05,240 He’s got a lot of books so you could look for some of those. 239 00:14:05,240 --> 00:14:08,480 And, of course, there are movies that go with those books so you could watch the movies, 240 00:14:08,480 --> 00:14:09,540 too, and listen to them. 241 00:14:09,540 --> 00:14:10,540 You can also get audiobooks. 242 00:14:10,540 --> 00:14:12,900 This is something I think is really great. 243 00:14:12,900 --> 00:14:17,930 If you can find an audiobook and a regular book you can read it and then you can listen 244 00:14:17,930 --> 00:14:20,200 to it at the same time. 245 00:14:20,200 --> 00:14:22,000 And again, using children’s novels. 246 00:14:22,000 --> 00:14:24,880 So read a lot of children’s novels. 247 00:14:24,880 --> 00:14:30,170 And after you finish all The Hardy Boys books and after you finish all the Goosebumps books, 248 00:14:30,170 --> 00:14:34,870 then find a book maybe by Stephen King. 249 00:14:34,870 --> 00:14:38,760 OR maybe if that’s still too difficult, then find something for young adults. 250 00:14:38,760 --> 00:14:40,700 And then read a lot of those books. 251 00:14:40,700 --> 00:14:44,760 Eventually, probably within one year’s time if you’re reading all the time, if you’re 252 00:14:44,760 --> 00:14:49,480 reading every day, within one year you’ll be reading adult novels. 253 00:14:49,480 --> 00:14:55,030 You’ll be reading the same books that I read for pleasure, for fun, that native speakers 254 00:14:55,030 --> 00:14:56,030 read. 255 00:14:56,030 --> 00:14:57,240 But don’t start there. 256 00:14:57,240 --> 00:15:00,820 Go back and just start with children’s novels and read and read and read. 257 00:15:00,820 --> 00:15:03,880 Your grammar will improve automatically and effortlessly. 258 00:15:03,880 --> 00:15:07,990 Your vocabulary will explode, it will increase so much so fast. 259 00:15:07,990 --> 00:15:10,150 You won’t believe it. 260 00:15:10,150 --> 00:15:11,480 It’s amazing. 261 00:15:11,480 --> 00:15:14,750 So please, follow this. 262 00:15:14,750 --> 00:15:19,110 Reading is so powerful but it has to be reading for fun, reading for pleasure. 263 00:15:19,110 --> 00:15:22,340 Alright, I hope you enjoyed this topic. 264 00:15:22,340 --> 00:15:24,470 I’ll see you next time. 22413

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