[English]
- Today, I'm gonna show
you a simple technique
that can dramatically
improve your fluency,
and it just takes five minutes a day.
(bright upbeat music)
Hello my, friends, it's Keith
from the Keith Speaking Academy.
And here today to help you
become a more fluent speaker of English.
Now this one technique I mentioned
is called the chunking method.
Now you've probably heard of this.
I've talked about it a little bit before.
but I want to make it crystal clear,
super easy for you today
so that you can start practicing
this straight away today
and getting to that habit
of five minutes a day
practicing this chunking.
Sound good?
Great.
So in this video,
I'm gonna show you how this
works, how you can practice,
and then we'll finish
up with a little story
to review this.
Let's do it.
(screen whooshing)
Now then, one of the reasons
you're not fluent yet
is probably because you
focus on individual words.
And this is quite normal
for students to do.
The thing is, proficient
speakers and native speakers,
we don't focus on individual words,
we focus on chunks,
two or three words together.
And we speak with chunks
and we think in chunks.
If you focus on individual words,
it slows you down.
And it's because normally,
you've learned through
writing and reading English.
And so you're focusing on the written word
that you see is individual words.
But when we speak, we
don't think in words,
we think in sounds
and we speak with sounds.
So each chunk is a sound
rather than an individual word, right?
When I say "When I say,"
I don't say WEN-AI-SAY.
I say wen-ai-say, "When I say."
It sounds almost Japanese:
when I say, when I say.
But I think in sounds.
And so it's much easier to speak
with more flow and more fluently.
It's a bit like when you go
shopping and you take bananas,
and if you take an individual
banana, put it in your bag
and another, boom and another.
It's quite slow.
If you take a bunch of bananas,
it's much quicker.
And it's the same with chunks.
It's a bunch of words put into one sound.
That's the secret.
Now there are different kinds of chunks.
There are grammatical chunks
and there are lexical chunks.
Let me give you a few examples today.
Grammatical chunks, we've got verb chunks,
like I tend to, I'm used
to, I find it easy to,
I'd like to, okay?
Adverbial chunks, I'm sure you know,
at the moment, at the moment,
by and large, at the end of the day.
And when we say these,
we just say them as one
sound, one chunk, right?
By-and-large, mm-mm.
By and large, by and large.
Meaning generally speaking,
by and large, okay?
So verb chunks, adverbial chunks.
So these chunks are our building blocks,
and as we put them together,
we build and speak with
more flow and more fluency.
And the more you use them
and the more you think in this way,
the more fluent you're gonna become.
Let's move on.
(screen whooshing)
Great, let's have a look
at this five-minute a day fluency drill.
So we're gonna look at three chunks,
three verb chunks that
we can practice with,
and then later we'll
add some adverb chunks.
So the verb chunk is what you do,
the adverb chunk is how you do it.
And then we'll start building with blocks.
So the first chunk
we've got is, over here:
"I tend to do something,"
meaning I usually do something.
It's a habit, right?
I tend to, da da da da da, okay?
So instead of saying "I tend to,"
we say I tend to.
That means repeat.
I tend to wake up early.
Wake up early, another chunk.
Wake up early.
Good, together.
I tend to wake up early.
Got it.
Hear the difference between
I tend to - wake up early,
and I tend to wake up early.
Totally different building blocks
rather than individual words.
Let's try another one.
I tend to - have a big breakfast.
Great, that's true for me.
Tell me something true for you.
Really?
Another one: I tend to - drink tea.
Okay, I tend to drink tea.
Great, and you?
Three chunks now.
I tend to - get nervous - before meetings.
Right, you've got it.
Okay, so what we can do,
we are just kind of repeating
these little chunks.
Let's move on to chunk number two,
which is I am used to doing something.
So instead of, "I am used to,"
it's I'm used to.
I'm used to, that's it,
getting up early.
That's another chunk, getting up early.
I'm used to - getting up early.
I'm used to - working - on my own.
Three chunks, right?
I'm used to - working - on my own.
I'm used to working on my own.
I'm used to - living - in the countryside.
Okay, again, three chunks.
I'm used to - living - in the countryside.
We put them all together
with a bit of intonation.
I'm used to living in the countryside.
It's almost one chunk, right?
The more you do it, the
better you get at it.
Chunk number three,
"I find it easy to do something," okay?
For example, for me,
I find it easy to cook, okay?
The difference again between
"I find it easy to cook,"
I find it easy to cook.
Practice that little chunk.
I find it easy.
I find it easy.
Yeah, I find it easy - to learn languages.
I find it easy - to stay organized.
And you?
Excellent, good.
(screen whooshing)
Now let's start combining a bit.
Let's start adding some adverb chunks.
Do you remember like at the moment, okay?
So I might say: "At the moment,
I tend to wake up early."
Kind of three chunks, right?
At the moment - I tend to - wake up early.
I'm slowing it down a bit
so you can hear the chunks.
Obviously, as you put them together.
I would say, at the moment,
I tend to wake up early.
I have the intonation,
but that comes later.
Just focus on the chunks first.
Another one.
Right now, I'm used to living on my own.
Okay, we've got this adverbial
chunk and the verb chunk.
Another one:
By and large - I find it
easy - to stay organized.
Stay organized or stay focused?
Stay organized, yes.
By and large, I find it
easy to stay organized.
And what I could start to do
is extend the sentence
by having a because or since or as.
"At the moment, I tend to wake up early
because I'm on holiday."
No, that wouldn't make sense, would it?
At the moment - I tend to - wake up early
because - I'm very busy.
That would make sense.
But it doesn't matter if it makes sense.
Actually, it's good
not even to make sense.
Say something illogical,
but focus on these chunks.
De, de, de,
and you are building up
your sentences, right?
The idea is not to make
the idea of this practice.
The five-minute fluency drill
is just to practice fluency.
Practice these chunks, okay?
We can do it with a mini story.
Let me develop these into a mini story,
and I want you to really focus
on the sounds of the chunks
as I speak, okay?
Whether it's logical or not.
Here we go.
(screen whooshing)
At the moment, I tend to wake up early.
By and large, I find it
easy to wake up early
because I go to bed early.
Right now, I'm used to going to bed early
because I'm on holiday, right?
Mini story, but I'm just building blocks,
building little sentences.
And in your practice, do this,
make up stupid stories that make no sense,
but just practice the chunks, right?
Later it will all start to work out.
But this is the drill.
This is where you're
kind of like the soldiers
learn to walk and to drill.
It's the basic footsteps.
These are the footsteps of your language,
if you like, okay.
(screen whooshing)
So let me just recap,
summarize this five-minute fluency drill.
Very simple routine.
First of all, pick three verb chunks.
You can use the ones we've done today.
I do have a PDF, boom, boom.
And you can download that
and get lots more chunks
you can practice with.
First, pick three verb chunks.
Practice repeating and changing something.
Take some adverb chunks,
practice repeating.
Put them together,
building up little phrases,
and then make a mini story,
sentence after sentence,
using these chunks or
others, building them up.
It can be totally illogical.
And then if you've got time,
do a mini story but that's true for you.
And that's more difficult
'cause you have to think
about meaning as well.
But if you've got time, record yourself.
Great to listen back
and listen to the sounds and the chunks.
See how well you're doing.
You can do this five minutes a day.
Seriously, three chunks,
some adverb chunks.
It's so easy.
Practice, first of all, with
the ones you've seen today.
Go and get the PDF.
There's loads more there
you can start practicing.
And just with this focus
on sounds and chunks
rather than individual words.
You will notice a difference
after a few weeks.
That's it for today.
If you've enjoyed this video,
subscribe to the channel,
and why not even join my YouTube channel?
Become a member.
You get emojis, custom emojis,
but you also get access to private videos
on all the different topics I talk about,
especially IEL speaking,
model answers really helpful for you.
Join, it's just $2 a month.
It's price of a coffee in most countries.
Anyway, and it also helps me,
but I'll leave it to you.
It would be lovely to see
you as a channel member.
If you want to find out
more about my courses,
go and visit keithspeakingacademy.com.
You can find out all about
the work that I do there.
It's been lovely today.
Thank you so much for watching.
I've really enjoyed it,
and I will see you soon,
maybe in the next video on YouTube.
All the best now.
Take care, bye-bye.
(bright upbeat music)