Most students want to communicate better in English. If this is one of your goals, it is important to study a balance of the four major skills. Listening, Speaking, Reading and Writing are the main (macro) skills you need to communicate in any language. Being very good at only one of these skills will not help you to communicate. For example you need to be able to read well before you can write well. You also need to be able to listen before you can speak. It helps to think of these communicative skills in two groups.
- IN put
- Listening (in through your ears)
- Reading (in through your eyes)
- OUT put
- Speaking (out through your mouth)
- Writing (out through your hand)
Input and output don't necessarily go in a specific order. Sometimes you speak first and then you listen. Sometimes you write about something you hear. During communication, the person you are communicating with uses one of the opposite skills. Therefore, in order to understand each other, everyone must be skillful in all four areas.
Some students want to know which skill is the most important. Since all of the skills rely on each other, they are all important. However, to communicate we do use some skills more often than others. For example, about 40% of the time that we spend communicating we are simply listening. We speak for about 35% of the time. Approximately 16% of communication comes from reading, and about 9% from writing. These statistics are for an average communicator in English. Depending on someone's job or situation, these numbers may vary.
Each of these main skills have micro skills within them. For example, pronunciation is a type of speaking skill that must be practised in order to improve communication. Spelling is a skill that makes understanding the written word easier. Grammar and vocabulary are other micro skills. Micro doesn't mean they are unimportant. Macro skills such as listening are very general, while micro skills are more specific.
For the best results, create an agenda that combines all four areas of study. Allow one type of studying to lead into another. For example, read a story and then talk about it with a friend. Watch a movie and then write about it. This is what teachers in an English class would have you do, right? EnglishClub.com has lessons in all 4 key skills (and all minor skills), as well as many outside links to help you study further.
1. How to learn LISTENING
- Listen to the radio
Don't always have a pen in hand. Sometimes it helps to just listen.
- Watch English TV
Children's programming is very useful for ESL learners.
Choose programs that you would enjoy in your own language.
Remember that much of what you hear on TV is slang.
- Call Automated Answering Machine recordings
You can find these numbers at the front of telephone books in many English-speaking countries. Before you dial, make sure that you are calling the free numbers.
- Watch movies
Choose ones with subtitles, or one from ESLNotes.com (provides useful notes on popular movies).
- Use Internet listening resources
Every day there are more and more places to listen to English online.
2. How to learn SPEAKING and pronunciation
- Talk to yourself
Talk about anything and everything. Do it in the privacy of your own home. If you can't do this at first, try reading out loud until you feel comfortable hearing your own voice in English.
- Record your own voice
This might feel very uncomfortable, but it will help you find your weak pronunciation points. Listen to yourself a few days later. Which sounds do you have difficulty hearing?
- Use the telephone.
- Participate in class
- Learn common idioms
- Understand the sounds that your language doesn't have
For example, many languages don't have the "r" sound. These sounds require extra practice.
- Recognize that teachers are trained to understand you
When you get out into the real world, average people will have a more difficult time understanding you unless you practise speaking slowly and with proper pronunciation.
- Practise minimal pairs
- Study word and sentence stress
- Practice tongue twisters
3. How to learn READING and vocabulary
- Read something every day
Children's books, simplified readers (Penguin), newspapers, magazines, Internet sites, novels, and much much more...
- Read what interests you.
Remember that you learn better when you are having fun.
- Read at the appropriate level
You want to learn new vocabulary, but you also want to understand what you are reading. If you are looking up every word, the reading is too difficult.
- Review Who, What, Where, When, Why for each story you read
You can do this for almost any type of reading. Who is it about? What happened? Why did it happen? Where did it take place? When did it take place? This is very useful when you have no comprehension questions to answer. You can write or speak your answers.
- Always have an English-English dictionary nearby
It is a bad habit to always rely on a translation dictionary or electronic dictionary.
Think of your English-English dictionary as your life line.
Use online dictionaries when you are using the Internet (keyword online dictionary).
- Record vocabulary in a personal dictionary
- Keep this notebook separate from other work
- Record vocabulary in alphabetical order (an English address book works well because it has letters of the alphabet)
- Record the part of speech (sometimes there is more than one)
- Write a sample sentence for yourself (don't use the one from the dictionary)
- Review your personal dictionary (especially new entries) every night before bed
4. How to learn WRITING and spelling
- Keep a diary/journal
Don't always pay attention to grammar. Free-writing can be very useful. It can show you that writing is fun. Have fun with the language.
- Write emails in English
Stay in contact with teachers or other students.
- Rewrite your local news in English
This is another exercise that can be done on a daily basis. Remember that regular activities are the best ones.
- Learn important spelling rules
Remember, you won't always have a dictionary or a spell-checker handy, especially when you are writing a test. Even native English speakers need to review the spelling rules from time to time.
- Learn commonly misspelled words
- Learn common English errors
- Get an ESL penpal
More TIPS for learning English
Don't be afraid of grammar
- Grammar is for communication
Sometimes students get obsessed with grammar. This is especially true for students who grew up with strict grammar schooling. Remember that you only study grammar in order to communicate. Practise with a few exercises, then write an essay or have a conversation and try to use your new tools.
- Isolate your weak points
Don't waste time on grammar exercises that you already understand just because they are easier for you. Concentrate on grammar that is difficult for you. If you are unsure of where your problems are, write a few short essays or paragraphs and ask a teacher to circle repeated errors. Then you can look up your problem and practise it.
- Teach grammar points to a friend
Find a friend who studies at a lower level than you. Teaching will force you to remember the rules and to understand them properly. Try preparing a worksheet for your friend.
Improve your homework skills
- Stay organized. Keep separate notebooks for exercises, writing, and vocabulary.
- Use a pen that you love.
- Study in short, regular periods.
- Allow a short amount of time for review.
- Study in a place where you feel happy and comfortable.
- Don't allow distractions. Consider email, TV, and the telephone (unless in English) off limits while you are studying.
- Have a drink and snack handy so that you don't have to get up.
- If you study in pairs or groups, make an English-only rule.
Visit an English-Speaking Country
- Take a language holiday.
- Stay with a homestay family.
- Learn from native English teachers.
- Gain access to English culture.
- Get a part-time job.
- Volunteer.
- Make native English friends.
- Make friends with people from other countries.
- Become more confident.
- Hire a tutor.
- Offer language lessons/swap in your own native tongue.
Prepare for a standardized test such as TOEIC or TOEFL
- Qualify for a better job in your country (TOEIC).
- Get accepted to an American college or university (TOEFL).
- Use guided-study text books.
- Study a broad range of whole language.
- Track your improvement easily (test scores).
- Learn idiomatic language.
- Learn business English (TOEIC).
- Improve your vocabulary quickly.
- Take classes and get access to many listening exercises.
- Challenge yourself to improve your score.
- Learn and practise proper essay format (TWE/NEW TOEFL).
- Become a grammar expert.
- Improve your general knowledge.
Fun with English Ideas
- Have an English-only evening once a week. Cook in English (rewrite your recipe in English) or watch English movies.
- Write an English love letter. (If your loved one doesn't understand English that's even better!)
- Write English limericks. (These are excellent and simple for writing, pronunciation and rhythm practice.)
- Rewrite fairytales, jokes or instructions in English.
- Go out and pretend you don't understand your native language (try to get by in only English).
- Go online and find the lyrics to your favourite English songs and sing along to them (use a search engine).
- Learn the words to English national anthems. Sing along when you hear them on TV (sporting events).
- Invent an English character for yourself (with job, family, etc). Write this person's biography.
- Buy an English board game (like Monopoly or Scrabble).
- Play cards in English.
- Start up or join an English reading or conversation club.
- Talk to yourself in English while you clean or do the dishes.
- Go around the house and try to name everything in English (furniture, clothes etc). Look up words you don't know.
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