IT宅男学英语实用工具包分享
01. 工欲善其事,必先利其器:IT宅男实用工具包分享(1)、词典:解决查词的问题欧路词典
(2)、翻墙:无需向别人请教,谷歌“引号搜索”相关的词汇搭配,帮你核核验表达是否可用及是否地道的问题,油管上找到更多原滋原味的学习素材、订阅自己感兴趣的话题。
(3)、播放器:
Windows:迅雷影音、Kmplayer、portplayer、QQ影音
苹果macbook:Movist, IINA
安卓手机:mxplayer、moboplayer
(4)、语料库:Antconc
(5)、发音的系统并不难,任何一个专业的老师都能在一天内把规则讲完,精听+精读(录读)
听:喜欢美剧的不妨去下一个软件:朗易思听(轻听英语:iphone)
说:省钱找陪练:语言交换(italki)、交流电
读:英文原版书(根据自己的程度和兴趣不同自行选择)、剧本(后面会提到)
写:欲望都市、绝望的主妇、傲骨贤妻(找带有讲述性或旁白题材的电影美剧) 、男性:纸牌屋、老爸老妈的浪漫史;复仇、;年轻一点的,可以选择:绯闻女孩、凯利日记
肖申克的救赎、阿甘正传、冷山等等。
02. 影视英语学习过程中,我踩过的坑和遭遇的瓶颈及突破心得
1、总想着找捷径,(手机上一万个人,你能在一个月内把它们辨识清楚吗?我让你管理一个小区,给你一月把钥匙,你如何在最快的时间内打开每个单元的门)
2、多多益善去泛听
3、看无字幕电影 (站着说话不腰痛)
4、重发音轻思维
如何突破?:集中精力打歼灭战
讲一个例子:
8年前,我在公司做商务,当时面临一个问题:rfi文档(采购部门)、DUE DILIGENCE CHECKLIST(项目部门),涉及到很多商务方面的知识。一个问卷表填下来,少则几十页,多则上百页。之前学的英语完全不够用。后面,我就下定决心学习商务英语。先网上找经验分享的文章,然后从中筛选出认可度比较宽和比较高的推荐类文章,将里面提到的资源和书籍统统备齐。
1、商务类的电影美剧、商务类的教学视频(步入商界)
2、剑桥商务英语考试的书籍、每年的真题
3、学习商务英语的网站及油管上的频道
在当时有很多人推荐VOA、BBC,但是这种新闻体、机械化的阅读尝试之后,果断放弃了。反而选择了像BBC步入商界这种在当时看来可能是老掉牙的教材作为我的精学材料。
有剧情、每个话题既可以独立出来,又能够上下呼应、
语速能够照顾入门级的新人、还有示范性的文章及演讲
内容及用词专业严谨,符合商务人士的思维和习惯
输入的内容解决了,那么如何训练自己的输出呢?
输出它是一个走心的过程,这是你听多少段录音、看多少部美剧,不去尝试这个过程,你将永久是一个写文字捉襟见肘、观点无力、哑口无言、思绪混乱。
写作:记日记、如果没有灵感来源:摘录自己喜欢和有共鸣的台词,
口语:在这个人人都想为人师表,都喜欢展露自己的观点的年代,在我们尚未能做到不别人不需要忍受你来听你发音时,你是需要付费的。比我们水平高的人,比我们更清楚时间的价值。
03. 如何利用影视编剧的行文思维,让你的英语具备感染力
沟通的终极目的:
1、表明观点、交换意见
2、赢得信任与认可(专业:行业内认可;)
3、说服别人接纳自己的观点
04. 看电影美剧学英语我摸索出来的可行方法及精听英语平台如何为大家赋能
组队:一群具有共识、年龄相当、能力相当的人,在一个水平较高且大家认可的老师的带领下,设立一个奖罚制度,将自己输入并消化过的内容呈现出来。大家共同监督打卡,为实现同一目标奋斗。
我前年做了一个尝试,当时招集了四个人,有两个人中途被我请出去了。后面又尝试着补招了两个人,补招的人中有一个人被我请出去了。最后有三个人加上我,完成了半年的学习过程。
这半年下来,还是有成效的,大家也非常的投入,但是因为模型还不够成熟,我个人在这块的运营经验不充足,离我们当初的目标从哑巴英语到脱口而出,还是有很大的差距,我从中做了总结思考,找到了问题的症结:
(1)、微信群语音交流效率会比较低下,很多的时间消耗在沉默的尴尬之中了。
(2)、角色扮演不应该在后期占用太多的时间,大家彼此熟悉认识之后就应该训练观点输出了。
(3)、没有专人去将一些知识点进行归类整理,没有专人负责纠音和私下里指出存在的问题。
(4)、没有相应的配套学习资料,导致大家需要花很长的时间盯着手机,容易视觉疲劳。
宝剑锋从磨励出,梅花香出苦寒来
不要想着什么都完美的时候你再去尝试,而是遇到问题解决问题。我值得我们花时间去关注和研究的是一个成功者背后的辛酸和解决问题的过程,而不是看着他在舞台上。奥巴马说过:“If you're walking down the right path and you're willing to keep walking, eventually you'll make progress.”相信自己,终能锻造自信人生!Hello My dear friends
Because of the rigorous policy implemented by CPC and joint efforts carried out by our beloved doctors, we're all spared from experiencing the undergoing horrid pandemic, but unfortunately, now we have to face an economic downturn, or to some extent, pretty much a financial crisis.
For over the last month, I've developed a habit of being wordy and chatty, now if you all excuses me, here comes the fun part:
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Have the Housewives read too much Camus?
Mark Rowlands
27 January 2005 • 00:01 am
Sisyphus sisters: desperation is part of the human condition
The residents of Wisteria Lane might not look like philosophers, but that's what they are, says Mark Rowlands
When Susan Meyer realised her marriage was in trouble, philosophy was ultimately to blame. Paraphrasing Henry David Thoreau, her ex-husband told her that most men lead lives of quiet desperation. The premise upon which the hit television series Desperate Housewives is built is that so, too, do most women. Or, as Susan puts it: "Really, do most women lead lives of noisy fulfilment?"
Her ex-husband, like the rest of us, is a philosopher. Philosophy is all around us, in the culture we inhabit, in the television programmes we watch and the magazines we read. All of us are the authors, producers, directors, stars and guest stars in various philosophical questions, issues, disputes, conflations and confusions - even though, most of the time, we have no idea of this. If you live life, and ever think about it, you're a philosopher.
The residents of Wisteria Lane, the most desperate place in America and the setting for Channel 4's hit drama series, might not look like philosophers, with their gym-toned bodies and designer underwear, but that's exactly what they are.
The picket fences and polished fingernails are in stark contrast to the harsh realities of human existence. Lynette Scavo, the mother of three ADD children and a baby, is desperate for her husband to stop getting her pregnant. The emotionally repressed Bree Van De Kamp has a husband who wants to leave her, and she is desperate enough to try to kill him rather than letting him do so. Gabrielle Solis is desperate that her husband doesn't find out about her affair with her teenage gardener - there can be no better image of desperation than a woman in a ballgown mowing the lawn. And divorcée Susan is desperate for a date with the new man on the street, Mike the plumber.
Desperation clearly sells: 4.4 million British viewers can't be wrong, can they? Albert Camus, the French existentialist and chronicler of the human condition, knew all about desperation. He took, as a leitmotif for human existence, the myth of Sisyphus, a mortal who had offended the gods; his punishment was to roll a huge rock up a hill. When he reached the top, it would roll back down, and he would have to begin all over again. And that was it - for eternity. What seems so unfortunate about this isn't that the work is difficult. The real horror lies in its sheer futility. There is nothing that it aims at, and nothing that could count as its fulfilment.
Compare this with Teri Hatcher, and her description of her life: "I get up at six every day," she says. "I make the lunch. I clean the litter-box. I feed the dog and the bird. I make breakfast and then I drive 45 minutes to school. I get home and I try to pull myself together so I can look like an attractive human being or come to work. And God forbid I actually try to have a date."
This description probably resonates with most of us. Hatcher does not say whether this frenetic activity makes her happy. But, just as with Sisyphus, happiness is not the point. What is the purpose of her activities? So that the little Hatchers can grow up and do pretty much the same. Camus's point was that each day of each person's life is like one of Sisyphus's journeys to the summit.
In all of this, the existentialists thought, we are ultimately alone. At first glance, the Desperate Housewives were seemed to having each other around. But if you take a deep dive into the following episode, that reality, as Bree, the OCD-driven perfectionist pointed out: "How much do we really want to know about our neighbors?".
After all, their best friend kicked off the series by committing a suicide as a result of some dark family secret. My point being: we all have our secrets, some are as innocent as honest mistakes, some are referred to us as skeletons in our closet. Often, we are a closed book to others and the same may applies to the other side as well. The result, as Mary Alice Young, the narrator puts it, is that: "Loneliness is something my friends understood all too well."
Is there anything to be done about the futility and alienation that characterise our lives? Camus had a straightforward solution: suicide. And suicide is precisely what Mary Alice did to get the ball rolling in episode one, after completing a list of daily chores. Perhaps she had been reading too much Camus, just as Susan's ex-husband had apparently been overdosing on Thoreau? Perhaps a philosophy-based reading group was responsible for the tribulations of Wisteria Lane?
Conversely, Camus thought - and this is philosophical irony at its best - that continuing to live, continuing to deal with the meaningless trivialities of existence, is an act of great heroism; so great that it might actually give life meaning. Something for Lynette Scavo to think about the next time her children hand-paint a classmate.
which we tried so desperately to make it go up in smoke
And this is exactly what I wanna do
Deal All:
With more and more volunteers joining our team, we're able to empower this priviledged VIP group with a wide variety of enticing ingredients (From Movies, TV-shows, to celebrity interviews,Fromm TED Speech, linguistics tutorials to K12 learning materials )
and group learning activities as well as customized services.
别希望寄托在孩子身上,你是想做他的累赘,还是要树立一个榜样。
随着越来越多的志愿者的加入,我们将于下周开始给VIP会员群赋能,我们将扩展我们的资源库,给大家提供更加丰富的学习素材。(最新的影视剧、名人访谈、TED演讲、专家讲座以及K12相关学习资源),包括组队学习、资源定制等个性化服务。
叶公好龙的人、缺乏激情的人、固步自封的人
without passion, with out commitment, and resting on your laurels.
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