Sunday 2 February 2014

how to learn english from movies

Following on from this
Jay Doubleyou: learn english from movies
which suggested you need to 'act' the part of a character in a favourite film...

... here are some excellent websites giving tips on how to use films to help you with your English:
English movies - How to learn English through film
Learn English Through Movies ESL Lessons - YouTube
Learn English Through Movies
Good movies for learning English - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
3 Best Movies To Help You Learn The English Language | GM English Learning
ESL Listening Comprehension Exercises: Movie clips to practice English | ELL/ELT

One of my favourite websites is Antimoon:

Why watch movies in English

If you are a fan of movies, you will notice that they are much better in the original. Watching a dubbed film will never be as good as watching the original version. Why? Because in the original version, the actor’s voices are real. Everything is just like the director imagined.
Learning English by watching movies is learning by input. The learning process is similar. First you get lots of correct English sentences into your head. Then you can imitate them and you can make your own sentences. And isn’t that why you are learning English — to be able to make your own sentences? That is why watching movies (just like reading books) is such a great way to learn English.
(You can learn more about how getting correct sentences into your head improves your English in our introduction to input.)
Of course, there are important differences between movies and books. Withbooks, you learn how native speakers write in English. With movies, you learn how they speak English.
  • You learn what words they use. When speaking, native speakers use words and phrases that you often won’t find in a book. Spoken language is different from “book language”. For example:
    BookThe price of five dollars was acceptable, and I decided to purchase it.
    SpokenIt was, like, five bucks, so I was like “okay”.
    In many movies, the dialog is like real spoken English. Movies also let you learn informal and slang words which are not yet in English dictionaries. For example, in a movie you might hear Give me the freaking keys!, but you won’t find the word freaking in a dictionary.
  • You learn how they say these words. Movies let you improve yourpronunciation, not only grammar and vocabulary. If you listen to Americans or Britons speaking English, you can learn to speak like them.
  • You learn to understand spoken language. Movies are made fornative speakers, not for learners of English. So the actors talk fast, just likenative speakers talk in real life.
Watching movies in English | Antimoon

But exactly HOW should we use a film to help us with our English?
Again, from Antimoon:

What to do when you don’t understand something

If you are playing the movie from tape or DVD, you can stop it whenever you don’t understand a sentence. You can then play the sentence many times and perhaps you’ll be able to understand all the words in the sentence. If you still don’t understand a word or two, you can try to look them up in a dictionary (which is not easy, because you have to guess their spelling!).
Most DVDs let you turn on subtitles. With subtitles, there is no problem with quick or unclear dialog — everything is just written on the screen. It is also easy to look up difficult words in your dictionary, because you know their spelling.
The problem with subtitles is that they make you lazy — you stop listening and concentrate on reading. This is not good if you want to exercise your listening skills. Therefore, you should probably try to watch movies without subtitles. Turn subtitles on only if you’re having a hard time understanding the sentences in the movie, and it doesn’t help when you listen to them repeatedly.

Movie guides

There is a great alternative to subtitles. ESLnotes.com is a website which has “guides” to popular movies. A guide is a list of over 100 difficult sentences from a movie with explanations. (Here is an example guide [PDF] to The Graduate.)
Now the most important thing: You first read the explanations; then you watch the movie. So, when you’re watching the film, you already know the necessary vocabulary!
We think this is the best strategy for watching movies, because:
  • It feels great to understand a movie in the original! It’s very, very motivating when you learn a word, and then the knowledge of the word lets you enjoy the movie. It gives you a lot of pleasure — so you will want to learn more English vocabulary to understand even more.
  • You don’t have to stop the movie. (Or you have to stop it less frequently.) You can simply watch it and enjoy it.
A guide doesn’t explain all the difficult sentences in the movie. But the explanations in the guide should be enough to help you understand what’s happening in the movie.

Learning techniques

What else can you do to learn from movies more effectively? The same things that you should do when reading books:
  1. Pay attention to interesting things: new words, phrases, and grammar structures.
  2. Use your dictionary to learn about these interesting things. You can stop the movie to look up difficult words. You can also write down all the interesting sentences, and look them up later. But do use your dictionary!
Watching movies in English | Antimoon

There are alternative places to look for videos than YouTube:
Jay Doubleyou: more videos
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