Hey, do you feel like you are not progressing with your English speaking? That’s why you are searching for ‘how to increase your English speaking skills?’ Don’t worry, I got you. Well, today I’m gonna help you out. 5 tips for English speaking that will boost your English speaking journey.
If you follow these 5 simple tips on a daily basis then. Will help you to improve your spoken English and help you to well unstuck. So you can do really well on ESL speaking tests. Are you ready? then read these complete articles Finally, at the end you will get 5 simple tips to Enhance your English speaking.
How to increase your English speaking skills
As a student, one said to me, he said, you know, when I’m I’ve got ideas in English, the English in my head it’s like driving a Ferrari. It’s great. But then when I speak, it’s like a car crash.  Which is a great image, I think for many, many students. Â
So today I’m going to address that and help you improve your spoken  English with these five tips. I’m going to look at the following, how to learn, speaking how to automate your vocabulary, how to increase fluency how to gain confidence and how to make sure you’re choosing the right tools to help you, right? Okey-dokey, let’s begin. Â
1. How to Learn Speaking?
So, first of all, how to learn speaking or how to learn how to speak the most important tip here I think is to learn to speak by listening. Unfortunately, many students around the world learn to speak with books, by looking at words by reading and reading aloud. Â
Why? Well, probably because their teachers told them and the reason their teachers told them is that they learned that at school too. And I think one reason is in the past there was no access to the native speaker’s voice, right? But the world has changed and unfortunately, education has not changed but it needs to.
Why is this important?  Because speaking and writing are two different systems, right? A bit of history to explain.  I like history, we have been speaking right for over 10,000 years we have only been writing for maybe four or 5,000 years, right? We began writing with the Egyptians and the Sumerians with their cuneiforms in about 3000 BC.
Speaking came first. The writing was a way to capture what we say. And grammar is a way to capture what we speak. And it does a pretty good job,  but it’s not perfect. And yet still so many people choose books to help them learn to speak.  It’s the other way around, right? We should start with the speaking and the listening and the books come later.
It’s a bit like that, right? Imagine Messi, the football player comes knocking on your door with his football. And he says, “Hey, Keith would you like to come and play football with me?”  And you go, “No actually, I’m just going to stay at home and read this book about football.”  What? Why would you choose to read about it when you can be doing it? Right, learning really well. Â
I mean, the book can be useful maybe later but start with doing right start with the listening and the speaking. And the writing comes later learning by listening. If I haven’t convinced you let me finish by convincing you learning by listening has the following benefits,  right? First of all, you learn naturally spoken English.
You know that the language is spoken,  not written. You learn pronunciation, you get the context. So you know how to learn,  how to use the language when you’re speaking, it’s a no-brainer. You must begin by listening,  right? And I said earlier, right? The world has changed. We can now. We are surrounded by native speaker texts or proficient speaker audio texts, videos, Netflix, and YouTube. You can get it anywhere. Edu places Speaking Academy if you’ve heard of that. There are audio all over the world at the click of a button. So start using it. Learn your speaking by listening. Â
2. How to automate vocabulary?
Okay, number two. How to automate vocabulary. I love the word automate. Great word, Avi,  Yes. What does automate mean? It’s a good question. And I’m glad you asked to automate something to make it automatic. Like without thinking, do you know the phrase autopilot to do something on autopilot? Sometimes I’m driving on autopilot.
It just means  I’m driving without thinking at the same time. So you may know actually I have a fluency course and the strong focus of the fluency course is to automate grammar. So we look at maybe 16 different grammatical items and through practice automate them. So you’re using them without thinking.  Now you can do the same with vocabulary. Automate your vocabulary. How’d you do it? Very simple tip,  tried and tested method, repeat and juggle. Right? Repeat and juggle.
What do I mean by that? Well,  first of all, you find something to listen to, right? Remember what I said in tip number one,  learn, by speaking through listening. You listen to something and you repeat a word or a phrase,  maybe a collocation, right? So you’re listening to something, for example, an audio tape, And it says, I love Paris and you go stop. I love Paris and you repeat,  right? That’s the repeat easy peasy.
The juggle is that you then change a word. What is juggle?  Good question. Let me show you the juggle, right? Oranges, like the magician. Now, why do I call it juggling? I don’t. Why do I call it juggling?  Because you take a word and change it. Right, so in our example, I love  Paris. I changed the word Paris. I love Hanoi. I love New Delhi. I love Manchester,  right? Easy, now you can juggle by changing the word or you can change the tense.  I love Paris. I loved Paris. I will love Paris. I used to love Paris. I’m sure I would love Paris if I could go there, right? So you’re juggling the tense.
Very, very simple, listen, repeat and juggle. And that formula starts to get you automatically using HD wiring, the vocabulary making it active and more automated. Now actually, as I said, education has changed,  right? We are now surrounded by audio and video. There’s lots of it. And there are lots of really good tools you can use. I came across one the other day that I thought was really really good.  And I’m going to show you very briefly, how it works gives you access to lots of audio and video and helps you do this repeating and juggling.Â
Woodpecker, And once you go in there, let me go inside the screen and show you how it works.  So we’ve got a whole bunch of YouTube videos. If you’ve got Netflix, you can go in and sign in and access your Netflix videos. You can go on the web browser and also get some websites here.  And there is a built-in dictionary. I think now let’s imagine on YouTube if you want to select by topic, you can. So if you’re interested in, I don’t know, in books you can find all the videos which are related to books. You can also choose by the channel if you prefer or choose by the teacher.
3. How to increase your fluency when speaking?
Right, number three. How to increase your fluency when speaking? So the tip here is to focus on chunks.  So what are chunks? You ask. Chunks or pieces of language typically have two words together, or maybe three or four words that go together normally.
So your chunks may be, for example, collocations like heavy rain, right? We don’t say big rain. We say heavy rain. These words go together. Like friends,  they stick together. Chunks could be idiomatic expressions like kick the bucket, right? Meaning to die. He kicked the bucket, kick the bucket. It could be a filler like on top of that, right? Â
When we say on top of that, you don’t want to be thinking is it in the top, on top, on top of this, on top of that you don’t want to be thinking you want a ready-made chunk on top of that.
So you learn the chunk without thinking about all the words and this, as you can imagine speeds up your fluency.  I mean, take collocations. Let’s take the word shopping, for example, right? When you learn the word shopping you should also learn some common collocations, right?
You can go to a website like  forumjudi99.com, a brilliant website giving you instant collocations. And you’ll find things like, well weekly shopping, online shopping, late-night shopping a shopping spree or shopping hours,  right? These are chunks of language that if you learn them you can use much more flexibly. Â
You don’t have to think, right? Somebody says, you know, what did you do at the weekend?  Or I did my shopping, you know for Monday to Saturday, you know the shopping for the week. Oh, you mean your weekly shopping? Yes, I did my weekly shopping. Â
If you learn the collocation it just helps you become much more fluent. It’s very simple when you think about it, right? When you learn words, one word you have to think about putting them together.
When you learn chunks you don’t have to think about putting the words together. You just think about putting the chunks together, imagine this, right? Imagine a builder, building a house.  And he’s using bricks. And he puts the bricks one by one. He puts the bricks on top of each other.  That’s quite slow and takes time to build a house. But now imagine somebody has a new invention and gives him four or five bricks in a layer glued together. And all he has to do is put the layers of bricks on top of each other.
It’s much faster, And what’s more, the house is gonna be better because it’ll be more accurately aligned. It’s more accurate. And it’s the same with language,  right? Using these layers or chunks is more accurate, it’s faster. It’s faster, You become more fluent. So when you’re learning vocabulary think and learn and use chunks Let’s move on. Â
4. How to gain confidence?
Right tip number four, right? How to gain confidence? While here my tip for you is to push your comfort zone. Your comfort zone is the area of doing things where you feel comfortable. So maybe you learn English by watching a film. You’re comfortable.
You read a book you’re comfortable but then somebody says, well, listen why don’t you record your voice? Oh no,  I’m not very comfortable. No, no, no. Oh, why don’t you get a speaking partner on Facebook?  Oh no, no, no, no, no. I’m not comfortable with that. Why don’t you go join the classes down the road? Oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no. I’m not comfortable with that, And so you’re,  there’s almost a fear if you like of breaking your comfort zone. But when you use English in the world you are going to have to interact with other people speak to strangers, be nervous,  make mistakes have other people sometimes laugh at your mistakes.
It’s going to happen. So get used to it and believe it or not. When you do the IELTS speaking test, you do it with a real person.  Yes, the examiners are real people and you will have to get used to being nervous get used to making mistakes in front of them. Get used to those feelings of being uncomfortable. Â
How do you get used to it? Push your comfort zone and do these things that make you uncomfortable, right? And I think one of the best things you can do really is practice with other people.
Yes, you can practice speaking on your own. That’s great.  But to take your confidence up to the next level you should practice with other people. You know,  I’m a big fan of platforms like italki and Cambly or Facebook for finding, you know,  speaking partners. But by doing that you’re gonna be practicing with other people.
Yes,  you will feel uncomfortable. But the great news is you will get used to feeling uncomfortable. You’ll get used to feeling nervous. You’ll get used to making mistakes in front of other people. And then by pushing your comfort zone you’ll be in a much stronger position and have more confidence to face the aisles and examiner on the test date. So go out and push your comfort zone. Â
5. All about choosing the right tools, right?
Good talking of tools. Let’s move on to the next tip number five. It’s all about tools.  Right, tip number five. All about choosing the right tools, right? My suggestion here,  tip number five is to immerse yourself in natural spoken English. It’s all well and good,  right?
Having a course book having a teacher and practicing with English, is for students but it’s really important you don’t forget the real world and that you also engage and immerse yourself in natural spoken English, which is not for students which are used by not normal people. Â
By native speakers or proficient-level speakers of English. Why is this important? Well, because teachers are great, right? But teachers and course books normally limit the language,  they expose you to. They speak slowly. They correct you. They’re polite. They encourage you. It’s kind of an artificial bubble where you can build up your confidence and that’s great. Â
But also the real world is a bit different,  right? People are not so polite. They may not correct you. They speak quickly. They expect you to understand there is no mercy in the ESL outspeaking tests, you must answer straight away. Â
So there’s pressure, right? So I think having, of course, have the teacher the course and the book.  That’s great, but also make sure you’re immersing yourself in spoken English.
And this connects with a lot of things I said earlier, right? About listening, learning, and speaking by listening about using different tools. So nowadays there is so much opportunity and I’m sure you know, through videos and podcasts that you can find on the internet on your television or through your radio if you still have a radio. Call me old-fashioned, if you will.
But there’s lots of opportunity to be listening and watching. I think it’s great to be looking at news broadcasts.  Current affairs shows, chat shows interviews with people. Great, natural English,  TED talks can be great. Obviously, films are good.Â
I mean, bear in mind, films are scripted. So that is semi-natural but still a great source to immerse yourself in English. And also there’s the tool that I mentioned earlier, right?Â
Which I think has a great balance because it’s the Woodpecker Learning app. It gives you not only access to ESL stuff so stuff for students,  but also real-world stuff. You get access I think to hundreds of thousands of videos that you can choose from on the app and be watching them all in one place, lots of, lots of them have got subtitles, right? So that gives you the support if you want the written support. But it’s a great opportunity to submerge yourself or immerse yourself in the natural English language.
Let me know in the comments below what you’re watching on the app now to help improve your English, go and check it out. It’s free.  Of course, lovely. Let’s move on.
So listen, those are my five tips to help you improve your English speaking skills. So we’ve looked at how to learn to speak by listening how to automate vocabulary,  repeat and juggle how to increase fluency with those chunks how to gain confidence by pushing your comfort zone and how to use the right tools and immerse yourself in English.
Great and I think, I mean, remember these are tips but it needs day-to-day practice be patient,  but be persistent. Keep practicing day after day. That’s what it’s really all about because we’re talking about increasing your overall level of English. It takes time,  but it’s fun. It’s great, And I hope these tips, will help you maybe move from being a struggling IELTS student to being a successful IELTS speaker.
Now that would be nice.  Wouldn’t it? Great, that’s it. Please leave me a comment below.  Let me know what you’re watching or listening to help improve your English today.  Brilliant, as always it’s been fun and a pleasure. Take care, my friend. Bye-bye now.
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