Video Description
Discover the four habits intelligent people use to learn languages faster: active listening, solitude, chaos, and challenge. Learn how to adopt these habits and accelerate your English learning voyage. Learning a language isn’t just about words and grammar — it’s about how you think. I break down four habits used by intelligent people and show how they directly improve language learning: listening more than speaking, studying alone to digest ideas, using social interaction to test understanding, embracing chaos to force adaptation, and setting challenges that push real growth. I also explain why accent improvement comes from listening, how confusion actually builds intelligence, and why sticking with language learning already puts you ahead of most people. If you want to learn English in a smarter, more confident way, this lesson will change how you see the process. https://www.engvid.com/the-4-habits-of-intelligent-language-learners
Watch more of my videos about how to learn English:
https://youtu.be/-YTBQH_bPD8
https://youtu.be/COLuxY70LtI
In this lesson:
0:00 Introduction
0:32 1. Listening
3:31 2. Solitude
7:02 3. Chaos
9:52 4. Challenge
13:32 Listening in real life
14:23 Solitude in real life
15:47 Chaos in real life
17:14 Challenge yourself in real life
Transcript:
There you go. You look brilliant, my friend. And so do you, my friend. Why am I doing this lesson today? Because these are the four habits of intelligent people. And you might say, "What does this have to do with language learning?" Well, funny enough, the best language learners use these four habits. And I'm going to go over them today with you, and also give you some hints on how you can actually enhance your learning or make your learning better, faster, deeper, and more fun by following these four habits. Ready? Let's go to the board.
So, the first one it says here is you have to do active listening because it's about listening. And right now, some of you are going, "That's so obvious." And of course it is. Because when you learn a language, I know there's reading, but most of it is done verbally, which is someone speaks, someone listens. And you'll notice here I have you have to learn to do active listening. Right? And active listening is not just being passive. A lot of people think that when they learn languages, they want to speak, not realizing that when they learn their first language, you learned it by listening. Remember, you didn't come out of your mommy saying, "Mama, dad, a car. I want some money." No, you just listened for, like, six months. And then eventually you said, "Ma, ma, da, da." And you would repeat. And they would go, "Yay." And then you would know you did it correctly. So, active listening, which is paying attention, participating, not just sitting there looking, but trying to take the information in. Right? This is an important part of being an intelligent person, but also an important part of language learning. You will learn more from listening than any other way. Okay? You'll also notice it says here "to learn", and this I changed because they just said intelligent people listen actively. They participate more... They speak less in conversation, and they listen more, and that's why they can get more information from people. Now, what I say here is not only do you have to do that to get your vocabulary. Okay? But we learn syntax, where and when, how grammar is structured, how the words should go together. Accent reduction. How many students have I heard that said, "My accent is terrible, blah, blah, blah." And I went, "Just listen." And the joke is this, a lot of the times that they listen, and I say, "Now, make fun of me." And they'll go, "Make fun of me." They'll go, "Okay, man. This is what you sound like." I go, "That's perfect English." You don't have to go to some special course. Just use the things between your... You know, on the sides of your ears, your head, and you hear the sounds properly and perfectly. And if you mimic, you will reproduce those sounds. And that's active listening, not passive. Right? Listening to the tone. I want to say intonation, but they listen to the tone, listen to the breaks. And from that active listening-right?-we learn language, we learn syntax, how we should say what we should say, we reduce the accent naturally, and we pick up new words, new vocabulary. Because almost every time you hear someone speak, whether you're a beginner, intermediate, or advanced student, or a native speaker, someone, if you're speaking to someone of interest, is going to give you new vocabulary that you can learn from, and thus continue the conversation, because when you say, "Well, what does that mean?" they will talk more active listening. Okay?
The next one we're going to do is this. Now, I had the wrong book because Superman has a fortress of solitude, Batman does not. He has a cave. But still, he stays by himself. And you might say, "Why is solitude so important?" [….]