What is the best way to learn English faster?
When it comes to learn English faster you might think what could be the best method to accelerate your learning. And if you google it or search on YouTube, you will find a lots of methods. Some of them takes little efforts and some of them takes huge efforts. I have followed a lots of methods and have found a similarity among them. I call it RWS method.
The best part of this method is anyone can follow this method at any level and it will work for him.
RWS stands for READING , WRITE, SPEAK. As I said earlier it is the easiest method to follow, in the next few lines I will demonstrate how you can implement it.
#1This method works like input and output system. The reading method is called input method. Take any kind of book (or newspaper). It could be story book, biography, magazine, anything that goes with your interest. I highly suggest you to pick up a book on your interest because it will help you to stay focused on your reading long-term and this long term focus is necessary.
And I believe having a topic of interest means you must know about the basics of it. This basic or fundamental knowledge is going to be the supporting pillars in your journey of learning.
Suppose you are interested about cricket, you must be familiar with some cricket vocabularies like wickets, power play, draw, not out, no ball.
So when you will pick a book on cricket those familiar words will initially help you in reading. And surprisingly you will notice that you would be able to guess the meanings of new words while reading just because you already know some words.
Remember that while reading not only focus on learning new words but also focus on understanding the key ideas.
#2 Then you will focus on writing. And by writing I mean only writing not good writing or excellent writing. Remember only the basic format of sentence Sub+verb+obj.
The primary goal of writing should be expressive. So don't hesitate to implement the words that are popping up in your mind.
#3 The ultimate step is Speaking.
If reading is the input and writing is the internal processing, then speaking is the ultimate output. This is where your newly acquired vocabulary and sentence structures truly come to life. Many learners hesitate to speak because they fear making mistakes, but remember: fluency comes before accuracy.
To implement this step, you don't need a native speaker right away. Start by talking to yourself. You can read a paragraph from your book aloud, or try to summarize the paragraph you just wrote in your own words. Focus on getting the words out of your mouth without pausing to check your grammar. The more you speak, the more your brain bridges the gap between knowing a word and using it instantly. By combining Reading, Writing, and Speaking, you complete the learning loop, and that is how you truly master English faster.

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