Hi, this is AJ. Time for the next lesson. Now this is one of my favorite topics by one of my favorite people so I want you to be extra happy, extra strong body and physiology for this one. So stand up straight. Get those shoulders back. Chest up. Breathe deep. Get that air going in there. Energize your body. Big, big, super big smile, huge smile. Make everyone think you’re super crazy. Now move your body. Come on, get it moving now. If you’re standing you just kind of wiggle around. Move those arms, move those legs. If you can, start walking. Get the blood going. Get that energy going. Let’s go! Are you ready?
Reading Power Main Text
Hi, this is AJ. Time for the next lesson. Now this is one of my favorite topics by one
of my favorite people so I want you to be extra happy, extra strong body and
physiology for this one. So stand up straight. Get those shoulders back. Chest up.
Breathe deep. Get that air going in there. Energize your body. Big, big, super big
smile, huge smile. Make everyone think you’re super crazy. Now move your body.
Come on, get it moving now. If you’re standing you just kind of wiggle around.
Move those arms, move those legs. If you can, start walking. Get the blood going.
Get that energy going. Let’s go! Are you ready?
This lesson is called “The Power of Reading” and it comes from an article by Dr.
Stephen Krashen. He’s one of my favorite people in the world. Dr. Stephen Krashen
is probably the number one expert on language learning and language teaching in
the world. He is just an incredible professor, an incredible researcher, an incredible
intellectual. He has done an incredible amount of research on the topic of learning
languages. And today we’re going to talk about just one part of his research.
Really, Effortless English is based a lot on Dr. Stephen Krashen’s research, all of the
methods we use. But we’re going to talk about just one particular method, one
particular idea, very strong idea that comes from Dr. Stephen Krashen and his
research and that is the power of reading. Specifically it’s the power of pleasure
reading. It’s the power of easy reading. We’ll talk about that more in a minute.
But first let me read a little bit from this article. Now this article, as you might
guess, is about the power of reading. And Dr. Krashen did a lot of research about
reading. Specifically about how do people, native speakers, and people learning
foreign languages, how do they learn vocabulary? How do they get good
grammar? How do they get excellent writing skills? One of the most important
methods is reading. Reading for pleasure. Now when we talk about reading there
are kind of two different ways to learn reading, even for small children, learning a
native language. Now one method, the old method, is that you learn reading skills.
So you have to study and analyze vocabulary, for example.
Spelling in English is very difficult and tough so we have to study that a lot in
school. Well, we don’t have to but often with old methods and old teachers we do.
We study, study, study spelling. We study, study, study vocabulary. And we learn
all these skills. We use all these textbooks to learn reading. And, of course, people
learning new language, a foreign language, well guess what. You do the same
things, right? You learn textbooks. You’re reading all these textbooks and you’re
trying to learn all these “reading skills.”
Now the other way, the other method, and this is the method, in fact that works
much, much better according to Dr. Krashen’s research, according to a lot of other
research. It’s just reading for fun, imagine that! And what that means is reading a
lot of easy books. Now for children that might be comic books. It might be just
children’s novels. And it’s just reading, reading, reading, in other words we learn to
read by reading. We learn vocabulary from reading. We learn a lot of our grammar
from reading. We learn our writing skills from reading. Not by analyzing and
studying grammar. Not be trying to memorize vocabulary. If you read something
very easy, you know most of the words. And then you find a new word, you don’t
need to memorize it. You will start to understand that word just because you
understand the general meaning of the story. You understand the whole
paragraph. You understand the sentence.So that one word you can guess the meaning. And then guess what happens? You
see that new word again somewhere else in the book. And then you start, it’s in a
different situation. A little bit different paragraph, a little bit different sentence, and
now you’re “Ah” you understand it a little more. Then you see it again in another
paragraph, somewhere else in the book. And over time you will naturally learn that
word. You’ll never try to memorize it. You will never study it but you will learn it.
You will know it forever. That’s the best way to learn vocabulary. There’s a lot of
research about this. They compare people who try to memorize vocabulary with
books, textbooks, that is. And then other people who learn just by reading easy
books all the time. They’re reading novels all the time. They’re reading, reading,
reading.
Which group of people learns more vocabulary faster? The readers, the people who
are just reading for fun. They’re just reading a lot of fun, easy novels and books.
Those people have much bigger vocabularies than people who are actually trying to
study vocabulary. It’s the same for grammar. People who are studying grammar,
study, study grammar rules, study grammar textbooks. And then other people who
are just reading lots of novels. They’re reading, reading, reading all the time.
Comic books, novels, articles, stories, the readers have better grammar than the
people who are studying grammar from textbooks. It’s a huge difference. And the
more you read over time, the bigger the difference. The better your grammar gets
compared to people who are using textbooks. So this is a huge topic. It is so
important.
So let me read a little bit from Dr. Krashen and then we’ll talk a little more. Okay,
this is from Dr. Krashen:
“When second language learners read for pleasure, they develop the competence
they need to move from the beginning ordinary conversational level to a level
where they can use the second language for more demanding purposes. Such as
the serious study of literature, business and so on. When they read for pleasure
they can continue to improve in their second language without classes, without
teachers, without study. And even without people to converse with.
When we read we really have no choice. We must develop literacy. We rarely find
well-read people who have serious problems with grammar, spelling and so on.
They write acceptably well because they can’t help it. They have subconsciously
acquired good writing style as well as the conventions of writing. Our problem in
language education, as Frank Smith has pointed out, is that we have confused
cause and effect. We have assumed that we first learn language skills and then
apply these skills to reading and writing. But that is not the way the human brain
works. Rather, reading for meaning, reading about things that matter to us is the
cause of language development.”
So, very interesting, what does that mean? So what it means is that you don’t first
learn skills. You learn writing skills. You learn spelling skills. You learn how to do a
sentence. You learn how to make a paragraph. And then later you can read and
write well. That’s exactly the opposite of what actually happens. What actually
happens is you read and you read and you read. You read sentences. You read
paragraphs. You read stories. You read books. You read novels. And after reading
so much you subconsciously, you intuitively acquire, get, learn great reading skills,
great writing skills, great vocabulary, great grammar. It comes from reading a lot
for pleasure. The reading comes first. And, in fact, I would add listening to that.
And Dr. Krashen adds that as well.This article is about reading but, in fact, listening is the same thing. So when you’re
reading and listening a lot, that’s the first step. And you need to do so much of it.
You’ve got to read and listen for pleasure, for fun, a lot, a lot, a lot. Now the good
news is you have to do it a lot but it’s fun, it’s easy. You’re listening to stuff you like,
so it’s okay. You’re reading stuff you enjoy. You’re not thinking about grammar
rules. You’re not thinking about vocabulary. You’re just reading and listening and
enjoying yourself. You do that first, the grammar skills then come later. They come
from the listening and the reading. The writing skills come from reading a lot. Your
vocabulary comes from reading a lot and listening, too. Your pronunciation comes
from listening a lot. It’s the input that is the most important. And specific kind of
input, it’s got to be meaningful, real, enjoyable, pleasurable. So that’s the power of
reading.
Now I’m not going to talk about all the specific research studies in this book, but if
you like get his book. The book is called The Power of Reading, that’s the title, The
Power of Reading. It’s by Dr. Stephen Krashen. Now Stephen is spelled
S-t-e-p-h-e-n. And Krashen is spelled K-r-a-s-h-e-n, so Dr. Stephen Krashen and the
book title, The Power of Reading. You can get it on amazon.com. So if you want to
see all the huge number of research studies at different universities around the
world about this topic of reading and learning better grammar skills, better
vocabulary, better speaking, better pronunciation. If you want to see the proof, the
evidence, then get his book.
You can look at all the different studies. There’s so many of them. But, y’know, if
you trust me you can take my word for it. You can trust that I am trying to help you
as best I can, that I really care about you. You can trust that this is in fact how it
works. That if you want to write well, if you want to have a great English
vocabulary, if you want to have great English grammar you need to read and read
and read. And what you need to read are novels. Novels are the key, easy novels.
So here’s my rule. What does easy mean for you? My rule is you should not need a
dictionary to read the book. So if you grab a, let’s say you grab a book by Stephen
King, kind of a famous writer in the United States. You get a Stephen King book, in
English of course, and you start reading it but, oh, there’s so many words you don’t
know. And you need a dictionary. You get your dictionary and you’re looking up all
these words. Well, it’s too difficult for you. If you need a dictionary to understand
it, it’s too difficult. Okay, so, you know, put it aside and wait. You can read it later
when your reading skills are higher. But for now find an easier book.
I recommend children’s novels. I think they are a fantastic way to learn. You can
get the Goosebumps books for example. There’s a whole series. They’re for kids.
They’re called Goosebumps. And there’s, I don’t know how many, there’s probably
30 or 50 of them, okay? They’re short and they’re pretty easy. You can probably
read them without a dictionary. What you should do is read all of them. Read all 30
of them. Read them, just enjoy them. Don’t use a dictionary. If you see a word you
don’t know, just guess the meaning and keep reading. If you’re wrong, it doesn’t
matter. You’ll see that word again and again and again. Eventually you will
understand that word. You won’t need a dictionary. Just enjoy the story.
Another set of books I like are The Hardy Boys books. These are so old I read them
when I was a kid. And there’s another series of books called Nancy Drew. So The
Hardy Boys books and the Nancy Drew books, another set of kids books, kids
novels, they’re fairly long but not too long, that are really great if you want to do a
lot of pleasure reading that does not require a dictionary. So again, Nancy Drewbooks and The Hardy Boys books, and again, there are so many of them, 20, 30 or
more in each series. You can read the whole series if you want to. And of course
you can just go to any bookstore that has English books.
Look in the children’s section or the young adults’ section. Another series of books I
like are by Roald Dahl, I think Dahl is D-a-h-l, if I’m right. Anyway, he wrote books
such a Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, James and the Giant Peach. He’s got a lot
of books so you could look for some of those. And, of course, there are movies that
go with those books so you could watch the movies, too, and listen to them. You
can also get audiobooks. This is something I think is really great. If you can find an
audiobook and a regular book you can read it and then you can listen to it at the
same time. And again, using children’s novels.
So read a lot of children’s novels. And after you finish all The Hardy Boys books and
after you finish all the Goosebumps books, then find a book maybe by Stephen
King. OR maybe if that’s still too difficult, then find something for young adults.
And then read a lot of those books. Eventually, probably within one year’s time if
you’re reading all the time, if you’re reading every day, within one year you’ll be
reading adult novels. You’ll be reading the same books that I read for pleasure, for
fun, that native speakers read. But don’t start there. Go back and just start with
children’s novels and read and read and read. Your grammar will improve
automatically and effortlessly. Your vocabulary will explode, it will increase so much
so fast. You won’t believe it. It’s amazing. So please, follow this. Reading is so
powerful but it has to be reading for fun, reading for pleasure.
Alright, I hope you enjoyed this topic. I’ll see you next time.