To improve English listening skills, learners should use everyday 'dead time' (like commuting, cooking, or cleaning) to expose their brain to English audio, accept that 100% focus is impossible and that some non-understanding is normal, use the 'Read-Then-Listen' method when comprehension is low, avoid listening to the same audio repeatedly as this causes boredom and reduces learning, and balance repetition with new material to maintain engagement; movies and series are fun rewards but pure audio training (podcasts, audiobooks) is essential for developing true listening comprehension without visual cues.
深度探索
先修知识
- 暂无数据。
后续步骤
- 暂无数据。
深度探索
How to REALLY Improve Your English Listening Skills | English Learning Podcast本站添加:
Hello everyone, and welcome back to another episode of Speak Up English.
My name is Benjamin, and I am so incredibly happy to be your host today.
Thank you for joining me, and for choosing to spend your valuable time practicing your English.
Whether you are taking a walk in the park, driving your car to work, making breakfast in your kitchen, or just relaxing on your comfortable sofa, I am very glad you are here.
This is your safe, relaxing space to learn.
There is no pressure, no exams, and no stress.
Just sit back, take a deep breath, and let the English language flow naturally into your ears.
Today, we are going to talk about something incredibly important.
We are going to talk about listening skills.
How can you get better at listening? How can you use listening to truly learn and acquire the English language?
Listening and reading are the absolute keys to learning any language.
You have to get the language inside of you.
It has to come from the outside world, and you have to get your brain used to the sounds, the rhythm, and the melody of a new language.
Reading is fantastic because it helps you acquire more vocabulary words, but listening is what truly gets your brain used to the language in real life.
Listening comprehension is a tremendously important skill.
Why? Because we all want to speak. We all want to have conversations.
But, if you are speaking to someone and you cannot understand what the other person is saying, the conversation becomes very uncomfortable very quickly.
You cannot have a meaningful conversation if you do not understand the other person.
So, how do we use listening to get better?
Let's break it down into a few simple, practical tips that you can start using today.
First of all, many students think that to practice listening, they need to sit down in a quiet room, close the door, and do nothing but listen.
But, for many people, that is impossible.
If you sit down in a comfortable chair and say, "I am going to spend exactly 30 minutes listening to this English podcast."
What usually happens?
Your mind starts to wander.
You start thinking about what you will eat for dinner, or about a problem at work.
If you have dedicated, quiet study time, it is usually better to use that time for reading or learning new vocabulary.
So, where does listening come in?
Listening has a tremendous advantage. We can do it absolutely wherever we are.
You can put on your headphones, or use your earbuds.
You can listen first thing in the morning when you wake up.
You can listen while you do a 7-minute exercise routine.
You can listen while you make your breakfast. You can listen while you are cleaning the garage, washing the dishes, or driving your car.
You have all this dead time during the day.
Use it to expose your brain to English.
When I tell students to listen while washing the dishes, they often ask, "But Benjamin, if I am doing other things, I am not focusing 100%."
Is that bad?
Listen to me carefully.
It is impossible to focus 100% of the time while listening.
You have to accept imperfection in language learning.
When you speak, you are going to make mistakes, and when you listen, there will be lots of areas you do not understand.
There will also be moments when you completely lose focus. Your mind will wander off somewhere else.
And you know what? That is completely fine.
As long as you notice that your mind wandered, and you bring your attention back to the audio, you are doing great.
Let's say you are in the car for 30 minutes listening to this podcast.
Maybe you only truly focus on my words for half of that time.
Do not worry about the exact percentage.
Even if you are only paying attention 50% of the time, you are still exposing your brain to the language. You are still getting used to the sounds.
Now, there is one very important rule.
You cannot continue to listen to English if you do not understand anything at all.
If you listen to a podcast and you only understand 5%, that is very inefficient.
It just sounds like pure noise.
So, what should you do?
If you listen to something and you don't understand it, you need to read it.
Find the transcript or the subtitles.
Read the text, look up the words you do not know in a dictionary, and try to understand the general meaning.
After you read it, then you listen to the audio again.
Sometimes, even after reading the text, you will listen to the audio and you still won't understand perfectly.
Do not let that bother you.
Do not get frustrated.
From personal experience, I can tell you that what initially sounds like just noise will slowly become clear.
By using a process of reading, looking up words, and listening again, eventually, more and more of the language becomes comprehensible.
It takes time, but it works like magic.
Here is a very common mistake students make. They find one audio lesson, and they listen to it over and over and over again in one sitting.
They try to master that one specific lesson perfectly.
Please, do not do this.
Your brain requires two things to learn.
Repetition and novelty.
Novelty means something new and fresh.
If you listen to the exact same audio 50 times in a row, your brain gets bored.
After a while, the brain stops paying attention, and you are learning less and less.
You should listen to an audio lesson a few times, maybe two or three times, and then move on to the next item.
Keep pushing yourself forward.
Even if you only understood 30% of the first lesson, move on to lesson two.
It is all about exposure.
You must maintain a healthy balance between repeating old things and exposing your brain to new, challenging material.
Keep moving forward.
This leads us to a beautiful part of language learning.
The power of noticing.
Because you are constantly moving forward to new material, eventually, you will come back to review old material.
You might listen to a short English story that you have heard 30 times before over the past few months.
You know the story completely.
But suddenly, on the 31st time you listen to it, you will notice a specific grammar structure, a verb pattern, or a preposition that you had never really noticed before.
You knew the grammar rule vaguely in your head, but suddenly, you truly hear it and understand how it is used naturally.
Give yourself a chance to notice things gradually.
You do not have to notice everything on the first try.
The process of language acquisition is gradual.
If you listen and don't understand, don't get frustrated.
If you listen and read and still don't understand, don't get frustrated. It is completely normal.
Finally, let's talk about watching movies and series on platforms like Netflix.
Watching a movie is a form of listening, but you are watching the images and listening at the same time.
This is fantastic, and it is very rewarding.
It is fun.
When you watch a series with the same group of actors, you almost feel as if you are participating with their family.
You get a great sense of the culture.
However, treat movies and TV series as a fun reward.
To truly master the language, you have to develop the ability to listen without seeing what is going on.
You need to train your brain with pure audio, like podcasts and eventually audiobooks.
When you listen to an audiobook, just hearing the words conjures up the images and the meaning directly in your mind.
You are automatically converting the English sounds into meaning without translating.
As you build up to that level of listening comprehension, you are preparing yourself to become truly fluent in the language.
Great job today, everyone.
I hope this episode showed you that improving your listening skills does not have to be stressful.
Treat listening not only as a primary goal in your learning, but as a fun everyday habit to help your brain become fully accustomed to the beautiful English language.
Listen while you walk, listen while you clean, and most importantly, be patient with yourself.
The results will come gradually.
If you enjoyed this podcast and found these tips helpful, please give this video a like. Share it with a friend who is also learning, and subscribe to the channel to keep growing your English skills with me.
Thank you so much for listening today.
Have a wonderful week. Take care of yourselves, and remember, just keep going.
相关推荐
WIL in Afrikaans is not WILL in English? | Ek leer Afrikaans | Part 6
afrikaanswithannelize
229 views•2026-05-28
How Brits Say British Pronunciation
MrBranicus
1K views•2026-05-30
🎵 A to Z Kids Song | Cute ABC Animation for Children
ABC_Little_Heros
10K views•2026-05-30
basque influence uniquely different spanish
Davantsi
761 views•2026-05-31
10 German Grammar Rules That Unlock the German Language | A1-B1 | Learn German
LearnGermanOriginal
357 views•2026-05-29
How To Express Disappointment In English #english #speakenglish #languagelearning #airlearn #viral
english_w_remi
6K views•2026-05-29
ONLY SENIORS WITH IQ 190+ CAN GET 2 OUT OF 20, | English grammar skills
EforEnglish161
582 views•2026-05-29
Super Fun ABC Vocabulary 🎵 | English Words from A to Z
StarMelodyKids-TV
280 views•2026-05-29











