Can Top 1% Korean Students Speak English? | Street Interview

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  • čas přidán 17. 05. 2024
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    The opinions expressed in this video are those of individual interviewees alone and do not reflect the views of ASIAN BOSS or the general South Korean population.
    0:00 - Intro
    2:14 - Which university are you attending and what’s your major?
    2:34 - How prestigious is SNU?
    4:09 - How would you rate your English skills?
    5:52 - English challenge!
    9:49 - What challenges do most Koreans have when learning English?
    12:54 - How difficult was the English challenge?
    14:11 - When and how do Koreans learn English?
    17:56 - How can colleges teach better English skills?
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @AsianBoss
    @AsianBoss  Před 11 měsíci +149

    Thanks NaoNow for sponsoring this video! Get your free trial now and start sounding like a native English speaker! ► bit.ly/naonow_freetrial

    • @toraryoung
      @toraryoung Před 11 měsíci +4

      Please inform Mr. Kei that his english is perfectly fine.

    • @bendranski6882
      @bendranski6882 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@toraryoung He is not Korea, but Japanese.

    • @spare97
      @spare97 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Considering you took donations a while back saying you wouldn't go down the road of advertising, I am very disappointed to see so much spam on your video from your sponsor. I was one of those who donated to help you out...really don't want to see spam throughout the video if you have a sponsor.

    • @Redmi-xu1yo
      @Redmi-xu1yo Před 11 měsíci +1

      full of trash 🗑️🗑️🗑️🗑️ cloud ☁️☁️🌨️🌨️ chaser kolea utuber trazzzh talk to kork 🤭

    • @markethand
      @markethand Před 11 měsíci

      The interviewer is soo cute

  • @adriancann5056
    @adriancann5056 Před 11 měsíci +4384

    i think their grasp of English is much better than what they think. there only problem is the confidence that comes from using the language more.

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 Před 11 měsíci +22

      More like culture baggage

    • @ryanlopez5851
      @ryanlopez5851 Před 11 měsíci +64

      grammar wise they are fine but their pronunciation and accent is hard to understand for native speakers

    • @eish3291
      @eish3291 Před 11 měsíci +27

      It,s practice, if you are surrounded by English speakers you will pick up the language quicker.

    • @Beckala67
      @Beckala67 Před 11 měsíci +15

      Every non-immigrant American watching this thinking, "I barely speak my first language, English - and you want me to learn another?"🤷🏻‍♀️ It's so common to meet others who've taken the required for language courses from Middle to High School (a total of 6 years) and not know how to speak). All I can think is that it was such a waste of 6 years of opportunities.

    • @mina973
      @mina973 Před 11 měsíci +65

      @@ryanlopez5851 idk i'm native and they sound easily understandable

  • @guguigugu
    @guguigugu Před 11 měsíci +3727

    learning a language should be 50% studying and 50% actually experiencing it through various media and conversations. you cant learn a language properly just from a textbook.

    • @ParkerBG
      @ParkerBG Před 11 měsíci +9

      Cite your sources. Or are you just making stuff up like everyone else in comment sections?

    • @lakshaysingh9743
      @lakshaysingh9743 Před 11 měsíci +154

      ​@@ParkerBG As an Indian who learnt English from textbooks and consuming English media, I would say he's correct. I really started enjoying English after I failed to understand my favourite movie in English.
      Although I am not so sure about that 50-50 thing.

    • @luf4rall
      @luf4rall Před 11 měsíci +32

      You definitely can but it's just easier through conversation.

    • @night_Owl123
      @night_Owl123 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Umm ....i learnt English from textbooks only 💀✌️

    • @elangeleelangele204
      @elangeleelangele204 Před 11 měsíci +3

      I believe what guguigugu meant Was in regards to the phonetics. I believe

  • @Libra8410
    @Libra8410 Před 11 měsíci +1472

    These students are too hard on themselves, they did really well

    • @busubalang2361
      @busubalang2361 Před 11 měsíci +55

      They're afraid of other people's expectation

    • @woutervanlent5181
      @woutervanlent5181 Před 11 měsíci +21

      In front of a camera I wouldn't say either that my English is OK

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 Před 11 měsíci +4

      They are Korean students that par for the course over there.

    • @fatherlouiswilliamssugaada5023
      @fatherlouiswilliamssugaada5023 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Being Korean and SNU academia i guess 😂😊

    • @CentaurisNomadus
      @CentaurisNomadus Před 5 měsíci +1

      Some of them are good, some are not so strong for 'top 1%', IMHO. Expectedly, none of them shocked me with their proficiency (due to a small sample size), as they primarily must do their coursework, not master english to graduate with high marks and a good prospect of employment.
      Personally, I can say if anything could force me to give up my circa 9-hour night sleep and sizeable daydreaming time for drilling down textbooks and doing lots of practice, it would be some extraordinary and unnecessary pressure that drains my energy and precludes me from feeling alright. I am happy to be born outside of a country that has academic competition like in South Korea.
      Edit: most people from my home country speak really bad english.

  • @pontosinterligados
    @pontosinterligados Před 11 měsíci +2167

    Unfortunately for most people, learning a language is not something you can learn “only” from classes at school.

    • @JustMe-12345
      @JustMe-12345 Před 11 měsíci +19

      If it’s good classes you can.

    • @adamsaciid4919
      @adamsaciid4919 Před 11 měsíci +20

      actually I learn english when i'm in primary and secondary education so it's working

    • @zettymariediola3210
      @zettymariediola3210 Před 11 měsíci +40

      you can though, that’s how schools in Southeast Asia are hence people there speak fluent English 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @coffeesweet1
      @coffeesweet1 Před 11 měsíci +18

      the ability to talk in 2nd or 3rd language, is skill, and just like any other skill, you sharpen it by practice. you learn the theory at school or academy and polish it through practice by conversing using the language. by practicing the language, we will learn more vocabulary as well as expression and when and how to use certain words. practice makes perfect.

    • @yeetman1277
      @yeetman1277 Před 11 měsíci

      In my country it is unfortunately true. We have to pay a lot of money for after-school english classes to get a b2 and c2 level certificate.
      At least the internet helps. I have a friend who is learning English for free online and he is doing quite well.

  • @mollyapteros
    @mollyapteros Před 11 měsíci +853

    Some of the girls in particular really sounded like they had lived in the US for a while, even including filler words and sounds. Being interviewed can be stressful enough even in your native language; they all did really well.

    • @Armyblink4life554
      @Armyblink4life554 Před 11 měsíci +7

      I noticed that too

    • @johnninorizon4417
      @johnninorizon4417 Před 11 měsíci +30

      Because some of them are the exchange students or living abroad for a while

    • @maggiechan33
      @maggiechan33 Před 10 měsíci +48

      Right, like the girl @ 6:05, whom spoke American accented English very naturally, + even corrected her own grammar.
      A non-native speaker would be a bit embarrassed + giggle/laugh, like the girl before her.

    • @feelingveryattackedrn5750
      @feelingveryattackedrn5750 Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@johnninorizon4417well that’s why it blew my mind when that girl who only ever studied in Korea sounded sooooo good

  • @katdance2106
    @katdance2106 Před 11 měsíci +1590

    Admittedly I think they underscored themselves. They did really well. I can’t speak any other languages and am always in awe of others who even speak basic languages. Amazing 👏

    • @woutervanlent5181
      @woutervanlent5181 Před 11 měsíci +4

      I like your comment . For English speaking people it's more difficult to learn a language . 1 ) 60% Of the world population speaks more or less English and want to know who you are so they'll speak English to you . 2 ) Our TV movies and computer are in English . As far a I know your TV- movies are all in English ( I have never been in the US ) so you even don't hear an other language .

    • @pabliciosoares903
      @pabliciosoares903 Před 11 měsíci

      Where are you from?

    • @amoldivo
      @amoldivo Před 11 měsíci +7

      Well, maybe because you don't speak other languages 😐😅 lol maybe try and pick one language that you might be interested in... as a hobby 🙂 tbh I believe learning 1 additional language isn't hard, even to the level of SPEAKING it fluently (well, probably not native fluent, because most people have their own accent I don't 🤭)

    • @Smiley957
      @Smiley957 Před 11 měsíci +7

      Whats a basic language?

    • @Hotcheetos777
      @Hotcheetos777 Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@woutervanlent5181 I don't think it's more difficult for english speakers. I'm korean but my first language was english, but I was thrown into an environment where everyone around me only spoke korean + chinese. Korean was easier to pick up on since it was the primary language spoken by people around me. Chinese was admittedly harder, but as long as you keep exposing yourself you start picking up on words here and there. Repetition is key, I feel. Also having conversations in the language you're trying to learn. It's hard to learn a language only if you have people around you that speak your own language. If no one understands you, you're forced to learn lol

  • @The_SeoulJourner
    @The_SeoulJourner Před 11 měsíci +255

    I lived in Korea, many speak english very well but underestimate their abilities. They feel the need to be perfect. Their brain overreacts and they freeze up or become shy. It's a confidence issue more than skill problem.

    • @jase87
      @jase87 Před 11 měsíci +27

      It’s the academic system. Their tests and exams are all about perfect grammar that’s completely irrelevant in everyday convo

    • @andrestrd
      @andrestrd Před 11 měsíci +17

      I think every asian is scared to speak english because we worry too much about grammar. In school we learn more about grammar and not so much speaking and communicating. Im Filipino, I have a Singaporean friend he said theyre also the same.

    • @odysseus0990
      @odysseus0990 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Yea English is difficult but it’s pretty flexible. We can understand English from Europe, South Asia, South America with various accents and non perfect grammar. As long as the foundation is ok, you can get by, doesn’t have to be perfect

    • @user-xh8mg1po6s
      @user-xh8mg1po6s Před 8 měsíci +3

      100프로 동감. 외국어는 자신감인듯..

    • @bumang
      @bumang Před 8 měsíci +1

      yeah, they have an attitude of "Perfect or Nothing". that's burdening them. to me too. haha

  • @aaronmoiche330
    @aaronmoiche330 Před 11 měsíci +384

    The guy in the blue t-shirt wearing glasses has such an amazing English level, his calm and collected demeanour is also impressive and cool

    • @kerri648
      @kerri648 Před 11 měsíci +2

      he's good...I think he studied abroad tbh

    • @goyam2981
      @goyam2981 Před 11 měsíci +9

      These questions are quite hard. I've lived in the US for quite a long time and am now a US citizen. Even then I would have to think quite hard to talk about this stuff. Essentially they have to compose sentences in their head before speaking because that's how they learn in class. Grammar and sentence composition.

    • @goyam2981
      @goyam2981 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Kids on the other hand learn by copying what they hear people around them say.

    • @Garnishes
      @Garnishes Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@kerri648 the way he spoke, sounds like he learnt it in korea rather than studied abroad. just my guess

    • @kerri648
      @kerri648 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Garnishes I don't think he was young ... probably older .I say that as a Korean Canadian immigrant who arrived late

  • @claudiawoods4382
    @claudiawoods4382 Před 11 měsíci +728

    Well done to them all. Not only did they have to carry on a conversation on the spot, they were also being filmed at the same time. That is a LOT of pressure. They did well. ❤😊❤

  • @Dj333cat
    @Dj333cat Před 11 měsíci +181

    Speaking from experience (people in Asia I've known and met personally), they are just humble and tend to underestimate themselves. A lot of them speak really well actually!

    • @The_SeoulJourner
      @The_SeoulJourner Před 11 měsíci +19

      Yes this is true, If they get the chance to live in an english speaking country, they adapt quickly to speaking comfortably.

  • @junsulee1854
    @junsulee1854 Před 9 měsíci +49

    8:27 my man calculated every possible outcome in every parallel universe and determined it was not worth talking about lmfao

  • @squeegie
    @squeegie Před 11 měsíci +539

    I have been living in North America for 30 years, every so often I visit Korea to see my family.
    I remember this one time I went to the local gym to work out in Korea near my parent's neighborhood.
    I got a personal trainer and my trainer was training 40-50 year old man, and a kid around 12-15 I think and me at the same time.
    This teenage kid was supposed to be some really smart kid that goes to some prestigious school in Korea. When this kid learned that I speak fluent English, he wanted to show off his English skills by communicating with me in English only. This is how the conversation went...
    Him: Hello.
    Me: Hey.
    Him: How are you?
    Me: Not too good, I am still trying to get used to the heat in South Korea, but other than that I guess I can't complain.
    Him: * pauses in confusion *
    Him: 왜 "I'm fine thank you. And you?" 하지않아 형?
    At this point my trainer smacked him on the head and said, that's just memorizing text book, not speaking English.

    • @joventopinio6043
      @joventopinio6043 Před 11 měsíci +15

      lol

    • @marzm7491
      @marzm7491 Před 11 měsíci +45

      hahah, I also visited korea a few weeks back and was quite surprised to learn that they can’t speak english very well (most of the time) contrary to what i’ve heard and been told beforehand. But it’s quite understandable since korean language is very different from english.

    • @daisuke910
      @daisuke910 Před 11 měsíci +41

      😂 thanks for sharing this story. To learn language effectively, you need to be put and force into speaking that language. Have a friend from China studying here in the UK. Barely speak English when first met, now he can speak with much more confident and do interview and stuff

    • @vitadude5004
      @vitadude5004 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Lol

    • @vitadude5004
      @vitadude5004 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@sowhat7983 lol

  • @mikezhang6871
    @mikezhang6871 Před 11 měsíci +168

    I used to think Korean students are able to speak much better English than their Chinese counterparts. After watching this video, I start to realize that the situation in Korea is quite similar to that in China, where most people studied English but never got a chance to apply it to a real-life context when they were students. Unless you have the opportunity to study abroad, English is not a medium of everyday communication.

    • @tiaagustinwijayanti6179
      @tiaagustinwijayanti6179 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Same here in my country

    • @user-du2br4yj5n
      @user-du2br4yj5n Před 10 měsíci +8

      Totally agree with you. as a korean, we absolutely no need to speak english. For more than 90% of the people, English exists only for test. So, 2 of the biggest reason why most of Koreans are bad at Eenglish are lack of the chance to practice and textbook-style English which is useless in real life

    • @eseem336
      @eseem336 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Been to both china, korea. They’re the 1st and 2nd on my list of non-english speaking countries. Had a really hard times in these 2 countries.

    • @annieq4049
      @annieq4049 Před 3 měsíci

      You should watch another video about Chinese kids' English, they are doing pretty good.

  • @user-ec6kt2fg7m
    @user-ec6kt2fg7m Před 11 měsíci +138

    Japanse native here! Great piece! They're all good speakers bar a few grammatic mistakes. While I'm no top 1% or korean, I felt to share a short personal story here.
    I got into English much like this girl 11:32 by watching movies, YT, and media based in English-- It was Batman the animated series for me. I wanted to understand it. However, while practicing English I realised that a Language is a tool of basic human communication, it's not at all academic and necessitates books until you make it so. The only thing language needs to grow is a mouth willing to share and an ear willing to care. A mother does not use a book to teach a child, she simply communicates with sounds that seem interesting the the child.
    For me, I sucked major ass in English, got negative score two years in a row. Spelt words like a toddler. Spoke them like a dyslexic. Heard them like someone slurping Yakisoba with a freezing tongue. I was only able to speak and write well because I started played multiplayer video games in western lobbies. I made sure to use new words that I learned in following sentences. This practice took me a year to familiarise accents, dialects, and personal manners of speech. Did it consistantly by playing 3 hours everyday with my mic on and making sure there wasn't a quiet moment in the VC. If someone said I should stop talking I simply changed the squad, team, or the server. ( luckily this never transpired ) lmao
    I say anyone can, with a shamelessly willing desire to talk with other people from across the pond; it takes practice but I'm sure you can do it!
    If you read this here, then I thank you for coming to my unsolicited TED Talk.

    • @Moratarp
      @Moratarp Před 11 měsíci +3

      Great piece man!

    • @MajorAddiction
      @MajorAddiction Před 11 měsíci +7

      Great points. The good thing about communicating in video games is you’ll hear a lot of slang and colloquialisms that will make you sound like a native speaker whenever you use them. (And you’ll probably learn curse words too!) 😂

    • @user-ec6kt2fg7m
      @user-ec6kt2fg7m Před 11 měsíci +4

      ​ @MajorAddiction Hello there! Hope you are doing well!
      Indeed, not only that, but it also gives you a scope of how much vocabulary and diction you need to hold a stammer-less conversation.
      And this is if you can clear the hurdle of comprehending colloquial said in that region's dialects and accents, which is a far more significant hurdle than simply knowing English well.
      Slang, for me, spending time in games like Battlefield, DOTA, and COD MW was a very colorful continental shift in verbiage. You went from drawing happy sentences to a verbal landscape stranger than Lovecraftian literature. lol

    • @juliekim4498
      @juliekim4498 Před 11 měsíci +4

      This is exactly how language should be taught- through conversations and getting kids into the media that use that language (ie movies, games). And we need to teach them not to be embarrassed to mess up. It’s great you were able to learn English and your determination is impressive! Also great choice- Batman the animated series is a classic 👍🏼

    • @glaceonus
      @glaceonus Před 8 měsíci +2

      If I ever give up or think I’ve done enough with the reading part, then I’ll definitely try this next.

  • @m1jime
    @m1jime Před 9 měsíci +25

    i currently teach English in Korea and the kids really are shy to speak English but much more when they're older. There is definitely a confidence issue. I've taught in elementary and middle schools, and in the latter they were more hesitant to speak, even if it was just for practice. but other factors like competition or fear of judgment (maybe bullying?) from their peers do come into play as well. the students are good at memorizing but definitely need more help with being comfortable enough to talk freely or make casual conversation. i wish exams like 수능 weren't such a heavy priority, just like some of these SNU students commented.

  • @Hidy_Ho
    @Hidy_Ho Před 11 měsíci +205

    As a 1st gen KoAM, I am very impressed with their speaking ability considering that they didn't really live or study abroad. Some didn't have a heavy K accent! Of course, interviewees would be considered "elite" students.
    My parents were both college educated and when they migrated to the USA, their biggest obstacle was verbal communication. But they probably had easier than other immigrants since they could read and write. I came over at elementary school age and I don't have K-accent. My cousins who came over at a slightly older age (middle and high school ages) generally kept their K-accent.

    • @JungkookieYt
      @JungkookieYt Před 11 měsíci +4

      There's many people, like myself, that never studied abroad and learned it on their own…

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Two of them did.

    • @mondymysan7905
      @mondymysan7905 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Lots of them probably taken English tutors.

    • @sweetaznspice1
      @sweetaznspice1 Před 10 měsíci

      For reference your parents are 1st gen and you would be considered 1.5, like myself who immigrated at 7 years old.

  • @LaneBeScrolling
    @LaneBeScrolling Před 11 měsíci +166

    Everyone did a great job! Even their accents were really good. As a native English speaker, I could only wish to speak another language so well. I wish our language educational system wasn’t such a joke.

    • @kiuhh1118
      @kiuhh1118 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I mean, why bother learning additional languages if your main one is English already anyways. That is the rule for majority atleast, if you really care, then it doesn't matter if language education system in your country is a joke or not, because you will not be actually using it to study either way when internet exists and it can provide you with a way more consistently learning experience.

    • @whocares897
      @whocares897 Před 5 měsíci

      The education system isn’t the problem, classes are classes. They teach grammar and stuff but you will never get good at a language unless you speak to natives and are immersed. You don’t really need classes. That’s why people who live abroad learn fast without classes

    • @benzness
      @benzness Před 5 měsíci

      There are more bilingual Americans than Koreans for sure. Using this to attack your system is not valid. I guess their’s is just trash entirely.

    • @PeterTrimboli
      @PeterTrimboli Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@kiuhh1118 why bother because there are so many Spanish and Chinese speakers in the u.s those 2 languages are great to know

    • @kiuhh1118
      @kiuhh1118 Před 4 měsíci

      @@PeterTrimboli , and they also know English, well, most of them do, so my point still stands. The amount of return you get from learning a language that is not English if you're not planning to move to a new country is just bad.

  • @tk7573
    @tk7573 Před 11 měsíci +18

    This interviewer is really good at keeping the conversation moving forward with relevant follow up questions, as opposed to just asking another question from a prepared list that may not progress the subject matter further. Great job!

  • @KristenLB
    @KristenLB Před 11 měsíci +31

    I seriously fell backwards in my chair when the girl at 6:01 later said she'd only lived in America when she was 2! Holy wow! Well done to everyone, honestly, it's so hard to speak in an interview, let alone in another language. Really impressed with a lot of the really high level vocabulary and expressions people used on the fly as well. :)

  • @TakahashiTakami
    @TakahashiTakami Před 11 měsíci +84

    They did an amazing job. They have good pronunciation and they definitely underscored themselves. It isn't easy to learn a foreign language. I love learning languages too. I'm learning Japanese, Korean, Mandarin Chinese, and Thai. In October, I'm actually moving to Japan to study Japanese more intensively. So I admire these young college students for speaking a second language so well. Especially when it's so different from Korean sentence structure and grammar. The woman in the black leather jacket and the other woman in the plaid shirt both sounded like native English speakers to be honest. The accent and pronunciation were like flawless.

  • @sulianat3083
    @sulianat3083 Před 11 měsíci +79

    They did well to speak english. Wish them well in their studies at SNU.
    A 'helicopter' mum is basically when the mum is always hovering around their child, keeping an eye on everything they do, where they go, who they're with etc 😂

    • @danyomega1472
      @danyomega1472 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Thank you. I learned something new today

    • @MajorAddiction
      @MajorAddiction Před 11 měsíci +5

      I was surprised that she used that phrase. Very good response from her

    • @creviceofbliss
      @creviceofbliss Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@MajorAddiction Actually, in her case, tiger mum is probably more appropriate. These days, helicopter mums are so involved in their kids' lives that they actually call up companies seeking interviews due their kids. They also accompany their kids to interviews and actively tell their kids to either work or reject whichever companies. Some of them actually call the companies to apply for emergency leave for their children. So there's now a generation of coddled young adults who can't struggle on their own. Thank goodness, not all are like that.

  • @coen1052
    @coen1052 Před 9 měsíci +6

    The grammatical structure of Korean language is drastically different from English, so make sense to refer as like a puzzle. As a Japanese, when I study Korean I feel like a genius but studying English always humbles me

  • @pontosinterligados
    @pontosinterligados Před 11 měsíci +82

    I have visited and had presented academic work in at least two top universities in South Korea and, comparing to top Japanese universities I’ve been, Korean students speaks much better English than Japanese. I was wondering why but seems like only people who aims to leave abroad really put some effort learning English

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 Před 11 měsíci +4

      The real reason is they are forced to learn it for a entrance exam and not for some practical reason since few of them will ever live outside Korea. Also if they wanted to teach English to everyone just start at a early age and have class entirely in English taught by native English speakers, where you test speaking, reading, listening and writing.

    • @awkwardsmile
      @awkwardsmile Před 11 měsíci +3

      Well, not everyone is into globalisation.

    • @pontosinterligados
      @pontosinterligados Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@southcoastinventors6583 language is the least of the problems. That might hold true for any discipline. It’s been a while but In most schools kids just learn how to pass a exam.

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 Před 11 měsíci

      @@pontosinterligados I did say force but there are no way to trick a test where you have to speak to a native or listening comprehension when you can take any video from ransom books on the other hand.

  • @simjaeyunultimatefan6529
    @simjaeyunultimatefan6529 Před 11 měsíci +53

    Learning other languages, not just English but other languages too, you can't really learn it easily by just studying it, you have to make it part of your life, use it as much as possible, be surrounded by people who speak with it, talk to others, may it face to face or digitally, use it like it's your mother tongue, that way, you can really learn it.

    • @simonhrabec9973
      @simonhrabec9973 Před 11 měsíci +2

      exposure

    • @vixxexo6855
      @vixxexo6855 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I learned english from school and I can speak it very fluently.

  • @coffeesweet1
    @coffeesweet1 Před 11 měsíci +37

    i think they did good, English is my 3rd language (as most Indonesian speaks their local language, Bahasa and some English). and being asian, English is a challenge; we only taught theories and grammars at school and rarely have the chance to converse in english with native speakers. i myself sharpen my english while working as a part-time tour guide back when i was in college where i got the chance to converse with foreigners in English. I think one of the most important thing to do in learning any language which is not our 1st language, is confidence to converse in that language (after understanding the theories and grammar). basically practice make perfect and dont be worried or affraid of making mistake, that's how we learn and progress.

    • @zahranafisa8757
      @zahranafisa8757 Před 11 měsíci

      Huaaa finally i found indonesian here in the comments section 🤚🏻😂

    • @coffeesweet1
      @coffeesweet1 Před 11 měsíci

      @@zahranafisa8757 hai haiiiiii 👋👋👋

    • @TumpengDapurNays
      @TumpengDapurNays Před 11 měsíci

      I grew up watching western tv programs and listening to western music back in the 80s and 90s and somehow i learned english better than most of my classmates that way. Bahkan yg kursus di lia aja pada minta contekan ama gw😂

    • @coffeesweet1
      @coffeesweet1 Před 11 měsíci

      @@TumpengDapurNays same with me, from western series and english songs we got new vocabularies. dan jadi tau kapan dan dalam situasi apa certain words can be said or use

  • @pacman10704
    @pacman10704 Před 11 měsíci +4

    they all killed it, I'm extremely impressed. I also find it fascinating that the person who stayed in the US for just 2 years when she was 3 sounds close to native

  • @LoveMadison
    @LoveMadison Před 11 měsíci +35

    So interesting to hear that SNU has a club to connect foreign students with local Korean students. UCLA has a similar club, it's called Global Siblings. The club at UCLA is quite competitive to get into. When you apply you list the languages you speak/are learning, your major and other interests, your experiences abroad and with people from other countries or who speak English as a second/foreign language (I only know the application as a local American student, it is probably a bit different for the foreign students) I was accepted into thie club for my final two years at UCLA and was paired with Korean students both times. My first year was with an exchange student from Korea Natl Uni who was only going to be at UCLA for that one year. She's the one who told me about English teachers in Korea and that I should look into that kind of job if I was interested. She's a middle school English teacher in Seoul now! The second year I was paired with an international student from Korea who studied at UCLA all 4 years (we were both in our final year). By the time I met her I'd already decided I wanted to teach in Korea for at least a year, so she gave me a lot of advice and tips to prepare for moving to and living in Korea. I've had the chance to see them both even after they moved back to Seoul since I moved to Korea as well in 2018 and have been living here for nearly 5 years now.
    I really wish clubs like this were more accessible and could accept more students because it was probably the most important part of my college experience and is the reason I have the life I have today. If I hadn't been accepted into the club at UCLA I never would have even considered the career I have now and probably never would've had many chances to interact with the massive international student population at that school.

  • @jeannetitor
    @jeannetitor Před 11 měsíci +66

    let me tell you from experience that unless you get put on the spot where you absolutely have to speak the language you want to learn otherwise you aren't gonna make fast progress, if you are a student in seoul, you should have PLENTY of opportunities to speak with foreigners and tourists visiting to practice speaking english, but the reality is that a good chunk won't stray out of their comfort zone.

    • @nehalilisays
      @nehalilisays Před 10 měsíci +1

      I almost never have to speak English but I often think in English (like imagining to tell someone something in English) and I sometimes talk to myself in English. So, yeah, there are comfortable ways to make you more comfortable with actively using English in everyday life.

    • @_cloudy5939
      @_cloudy5939 Před 7 měsíci

      I guess that's true... But the problem is, it is considered kinda weird to go up to a unknown person and to start a coverstation with them in Korea.

    • @jeannetitor
      @jeannetitor Před 7 měsíci

      @@_cloudy5939 it's weird everywhere in the world. it's weird because it isn't normalised to make small talk, it isn't normalised because of what? because you are afraid to talk to someone you never met? how did you learn to make friends? hopefully not by force

  • @Anapp19
    @Anapp19 Před 11 měsíci +128

    I'm an undergraduate international student at SNU and I can say from my experience that maybe 70% of my classmates can understand English quite well. In our department (PoliSci) we have lots of readings to do every week and most of these readings are written in a very advanced English with lots of technical words and idioms that unless you studied abroad or are very good at english you wouldn't understand otherwise so its quite interesting for me how when it comes to speaking they either say that they're not good at all at speaking English or they will speak English but with very basic vocabulary and lots of grammatical mistakes. In my case, my mother tongue is not English and I've never lived abroad until I came to study in Korea, but for me speaking in English has never been really hazard as it may seem to be for Koreans around my age, which I find weird because Koreans put so much effort into learning English compared to how English is taught in my country so it would be more logical for Koreans to be better at every aspect, not only reading or listening comprehension but it seems to me, that most of my friends back home (in Latin America) who didn't really receive a good or strict education on the English language, are better at speaking as well as reading and writing. I think the Korean education system should implement more speaking chances for Korean students at public schools so they won't feel worried or down when they think about having to speak in English and also Korean English academies should also focus more on promoting speaking at the same level as they focus on reading, listening and writing.

    • @bleromafia
      @bleromafia Před 11 měsíci +15

      You underestimate the ties between romance languages and Germanic languages, which are still Indo-European as opposed to the distant languages in eastern Asia.

    • @7hz8
      @7hz8 Před 11 měsíci +10

      Are u grew up in a country that speaks local language? I notice people who grew up in multicultural country and speaks 2 or more local language, more easier learn english esp who grew up rich and has access to youtube, esp genZ. The opposite i notice is: we now much more comfortable using more mix english than local language (esp big city).

    • @rpoutine3271
      @rpoutine3271 Před 11 měsíci +4

      After a certain number of hours studying becomes inneficient, so the exposure to English makes a much bigger impact than studying for hours during school days. There are many videos of students that were failing their university grades until they started slacking and focused on efficiency.

    • @ories
      @ories Před 11 měsíci +7

      English is one of the most important subjects in Korea, and it's mostly focused only on being able to comprehend academic and verbose passages. Not speaking, not writing. And almost everyone in SNU would've scored nearly perfectly in English to get in. I guess that explains why they're able to read such advanced English but not speak fluent English. I don't know where you're from, but sometimes I'm amazed at how the average European is much more fluent than Koreans even when English is not their mother tongue either. Their countries are not even as academically competitive as Korea is. Many Koreans pay to learn English professionally from academies from a young age. People say that it's because European languages have a similar sentence structure to English, but I think that only applies up to a beginner to intermediate level (not sure about this though) But Koreans have a pretty clear understanding of English sentence structures. How would they be able to read academic papers otherwise. I wonder what the reason would be.

    • @mohammedluay7065
      @mohammedluay7065 Před 11 měsíci +3

      ​@@ories i think the reason the is big diffrence in Language because if u take a look around korea u will find that
      Japan china and the asian country around it all dont speak english well so it is not Coincidence
      But when u go weast u will find country that are good in english like Malaysia and indonesia
      Because their Language is not that diffrent from english (i lived in Malaysia 2 year) and they speak english well
      Then when u arrive at India and arab country they all speak english very good despite the Poor education
      Like in my country which is Iraq (but we have a special type of school that study only english which im in and they also like SNL but highschool)

  • @mishapsmakemagic
    @mishapsmakemagic Před 11 měsíci +14

    I studied abroad in Korea and was part of one of those clubs like the girl was describing, where Korean and foreign students do activities together, and it was a great experience for them to practice their English, and we could also practice Korean with people that we became friends with.

  • @jobel_
    @jobel_ Před 11 měsíci +26

    I was fortunate enough to be part of the club mentioned at 18:40 and even many of those Korean students shared the same sentiments of self-doubt in their English ability. Funnily enough though, their English was comparable to some of my friends back in the US, but being some of the highest achieving people I've met, it always seemed like that pressure skewed their perception. If it isn't perfect then it isn't good enough, whereby perfect in this case is native-like proficiency. Through all my interactions with SNU students not once have I felt that I couldn't communicate in English, or at the very least a combination of Korean and English. All that to say that the people in video did really well and should cut themselves some slack!

  • @sighted7134
    @sighted7134 Před 11 měsíci +17

    As a Filipino learning the American English, not the classroom English I feel the struggle because when you study English, you not just have to learn how to speak it, but you also have to learn the right pronunciation, and the list of different Idioms use in every-day life

  • @Kundtsondolnik
    @Kundtsondolnik Před 11 měsíci +158

    Thank you for the video, I found out that investing is not for everybody, you just need a strong stomach too see your portfolio go down. It might be wiser for a novice to start with copy trading investing, but it is not easy. To invest in growth stocks it is another level, definitely you need to know what are you doing. 0:02

    • @magdafariass
      @magdafariass Před 11 měsíci

      This is a phenomenal advice for a new stock traders and investors who want that quick short term game, but don't see the light at the end of the tunnel

    • @zakiralit
      @zakiralit Před 11 měsíci

      @@Tubibau My portfolio is very much diversified so it's not like i have a particular fund i invest in, plus i don't do that by myself. i follow the trades of Mr's Jane 0:01

    • @Kundtsondolnik
      @Kundtsondolnik Před 11 měsíci

      @@zakiralit 0:03 She is a popular broker you might have heard of. I can correctly say she's worth her salt as a financial advisor as her diversification skills are top notch, because i see that in her results as my portfolio grows by averages of 10 to 15% on a monthly basis, unlike i can say for my IRA which has just been trudging along, my portfolio just mirrors what she trades and not just on some particular industries of my choosing.

    • @valerieconnie
      @valerieconnie Před 11 měsíci

      @@Kundtsondolnik By following her trades do you mean copying her trades? I have heard about copying trades

    • @Kundtsondolnik
      @Kundtsondolnik Před 11 měsíci

      @@valerieconnie Yes, exactly. It's all programmatic and automated, plus it's relatively much easier to set up and connect my accounts than creating a financial plan and drafting investment strategies myself, my account just mirrors her trades in realtime.

  • @ericlee5638
    @ericlee5638 Před 11 měsíci +27

    I've just visited S Korea with my Indian fiance and she noticed that the majority Koreans couldn't speak English.
    It kind of makes sense how most Koreans are obsessed (or at least used to) with learning English and it can make you more marketable in the job market.

  • @kingblackthorn4195
    @kingblackthorn4195 Před 7 měsíci +9

    Using new languages is very difficult. The biggest issue we often face is confidence. I am learning new languages right now and honestly reading and writing in the languages, while also understanding is nice, but speaking it is what gets shaky because you loose confidence.

  • @Gus.Galvao
    @Gus.Galvao Před 11 měsíci +4

    very well done! I really love watching your guys. The vids are always amazing and with a fab quality. Anyways, every single person you guys interviewed sounded quite fluent to my ears. They were able to communicate their thoughts freely, sometimes struggling just to find the right vocabulary to finish their thoughts, but it is actually very common when you are not using the language in your daily life. They would be able to brush up their skills in no time once they start having more contact with English speakers. One thing I do have to agree with is that most of schools teach their students how to pass an examination and have a nice score which is required by some Unis but they forget how to teach their students to become an international citizen. They are taught how to mimic not how to think by themselves and by not being able to express their thoughts freely makes It harder for them to even gain the knowledge and the confidence to explore the language and think outside their boxes.

  • @harlembeatfreak
    @harlembeatfreak Před 11 měsíci +7

    As someone who considers themselves as being good in English in school, I learned very late that being good in understanding written English is different than actually speaking and expressing your opinion in conversations. It opened my eyes that it should be the norm for learning any language and have tried using a more balanced method since then in teaching conversational English.
    And also, I read some of the English questions for the College Entrance Exam they were talking about and the questions were topics you're not even going to talk about in most instances. In my opinion, it's unnecessarily hard, and just enforces passive English usage and overthinking in conversational expressions.

  • @memonomoto7419
    @memonomoto7419 Před 11 měsíci +11

    I'm currently studying Japanese on my own, recently passed the N5 exam which is the most basic Japanese language exam. Some people assume I can already speak Japanese fluently, but just like these students, I'm really struggling because I don't get much practice talking, which I feel is the most important way to learn a language.

  • @kajerlou
    @kajerlou Před 11 měsíci +8

    From my experience from both being an ESL teacher and a regular elementary teacher here in Korea I feel the biggest difference comes from when they start studying, more than anything.
    My students who started in at Korean-5 years of age generally ended up so natural in their speaking that I could put them on the phone with my family back home without them ever thinking that they're speaking to a non-American. My students and coworkers who didn't start studying English until the public school classes started, no matter how hard they work they never really sound natural speaking English. It is so noticeable that often I have worked with Korean English teachers who do not speak English as well as their own students do. Of course, the big X factor here is usually household income. The half-decent English hagwons are quite expensive and the reputable international schools cost more than most universities.

  • @Justin-xd2wp
    @Justin-xd2wp Před 8 měsíci

    the video quality is great!

  • @deuter458624
    @deuter458624 Před 11 měsíci +16

    Kudos for trying your best at speaking English good job guys 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @091lsm._
    @091lsm._ Před 11 měsíci +11

    Honestly I have never absorbed my english while I was studying in school since my teachers tended to explain every single lesson in the most complicated ways, such as grammatical. They also forced us more to focus on grammar instead of another language skills. However when I graduated I was fortunate that I could improve my english by watching series by communicating in person with native speakers which is those ways were the most appropriate ways to be able to absorb vocabulary in my opinion.

  • @ruchunsinletep9169
    @ruchunsinletep9169 Před 8 měsíci

    They did so well. It was a spontaneous interview with camera. So so well. Congratulations kids ❤

  • @psiddartha7115
    @psiddartha7115 Před 9 měsíci +3

    They said their English sucks but after listening to them i was like really even mastering the accent lmao 😂

  • @russellhan3534
    @russellhan3534 Před 11 měsíci +8

    All of them spoke great english! A language, to me, is a tool you use to communicate purpose and intent. As long as I can understand what you mean, you've done a great job in conveying your message. They had definitely undermined their own abilities to speak english. Learning a language beyond your own mother tongue after growing up is very tough, after all.

  • @mydogisbailey
    @mydogisbailey Před 11 měsíci +16

    really amazing english for people who didnt grow up in the anglosphere!!!! bravo to anyone who makes the effort of learning foreign languages

  • @macman2132
    @macman2132 Před 11 měsíci +67

    Here in the Philippines, although we grew up speaking English and also as a part of mode teaching in school. A lot of us struggle in having a conversation in English eloquently especially if we need to practice it. But still, our English speaking skills are way better and can carry a passable conversation than other Asian counterparts and like in Korea, Japan, Thailand, China, etc. #RealTalk

    • @jehgelo
      @jehgelo Před 11 měsíci +9

      Yes we filipinos can speak english but not fluent enough unlike Singaporeans . #Realtalk

    • @seraphina111
      @seraphina111 Před 10 měsíci +6

      @@jehgelo lol Singaporeans are fluent? I think Indians are most fluent if we talk about Asia

    • @pmcastillo2166
      @pmcastillo2166 Před 10 měsíci +3

      it depends on your parents/ environment/ exposures/ school and teacher. watching english tv since birth like many Filipino kids. Are/ were very fluent in English before they reach kinder.

    • @andrewxiaoping1852
      @andrewxiaoping1852 Před 7 měsíci +2

      I work with a lot of Filipinos that are in call centers for our company, and most of them speak English extremely well. However, they are the only people I have met whose ability to mimic the correct accent sometimes outpaces their ability to actually comprehend the language (their comprehension is still fine though). Edit: bad comma.

    • @OryyLi
      @OryyLi Před 7 měsíci

      Can't agree anymore, i have a few filipinos friends and they speak english so well compare to us Indonesian, I dont say in general but at least to people around me.

  • @Valentino016
    @Valentino016 Před 11 měsíci +6

    I'm bilingual and my home language is english. I learnt my second language from school. I often would hear people speaking it and I'd do speeches and presentations in it. The language got stuck in my head and now I can switch from my home language and to my second language. I only started realizing I was quiet fluent in it when I was in 7th grade. I thought it was interesting that I was able to do that so it inspired me to start learning more languages like español and German.

  • @GoddessOfWhine
    @GoddessOfWhine Před 11 měsíci +5

    I thought they did quite well. Learning another language isn't easy at all. I went to Korea a few months ago and I was so surprised that so many younger koreans can speak english well. It wasn't the case when I was there 8 years ago.I really appreciate them making the effort to speak in English.

  • @MLOB96
    @MLOB96 Před 10 měsíci +3

    A lot of them speak great English! I just started learning Korean and it is so difficult not having Korean friends to practice with. I learn best through immersion, but I live in Florida. I would love to go to Korea while I'm learning.

  • @marilenebasson2622
    @marilenebasson2622 Před 10 měsíci +2

    These students did really well! I was a teacher at an English kindergarten in Korea, like some of them mentioned. I think this gives them a great advantage. Young kids learn so easily/quickly. And are not as shy about making mistakes. I teach English in Japanese public school now, and my students are in junior high. These older students are more difficult to teach because they already have the midset of "English is difficult" and they fear making mistakes in front of others. It's honestly shocking to experience this low level of English in public school when my kiddies at the kindergarten spoke so well.

  • @rolfw2336
    @rolfw2336 Před 8 měsíci +2

    The woman with the plaid shirt who lived in US at age 3 spoke almost perfectly. That was impressive!

  • @kitcutting
    @kitcutting Před 7 měsíci +3

    Their English is way better than my Korean. Learning how to read Hangul was incredibly easy when I first took it up but past that, it's hard to relate spoken Korean to any other language (besides the occasional Chinese/Japanese comparison.)
    These guys have my respect. English was also my second language, pile on their field of study on top of learning English and you can get a sense of the amount of work these people go through.

  • @joonkim202
    @joonkim202 Před 10 měsíci +4

    What do you call a person who speaks many languages? - A polyglot
    What do you call a person who speaks 3 languages? - Trilingual
    What do you call a person who speaks 2 languages? - Bilingual
    What do you call a person who speaks only one language? - American

  • @ehong671
    @ehong671 Před 7 měsíci

    I’m actually polishing up my Korean (moved to US in 2nd grade) and now will be potentially entering a job position where I’ll be working closely between US and Korea so these videos have helped when relearning certain words/phrases

  • @shakesnbake
    @shakesnbake Před 11 měsíci +43

    They're English is so much better than they thought!

  • @ella549
    @ella549 Před 10 měsíci +14

    I'm an international student in the US rn and I used to work as a mentor for incoming international students. I've noticed that my students especially from South Asian countries struggled more because they were scared of their pronunciation. They didn't want to sound weird or have 'broken English' (they didn't trust me. I understood what they said) so I never pushed them to talk and just left the floor open to whoever wanted to speak and as time went by, they built the courage to talk by themselves. It was quite an experience to see my students grow

  • @tk7573
    @tk7573 Před 11 měsíci +4

    I can totally relate! I’ve been self learning Korean for the past few years and know that my main roadblock is not having anyone to actually speak Korean with so I feel like I haven’t improved much recently. So if anyone in SK wants an English↔️한국어 conversation partner, let me know! 저는 미국인이에요. 같이 연습해요!

  • @1rwjwith
    @1rwjwith Před 5 měsíci +1

    It’s very impressive to hear these young people speaking English so well. Very admirable….most Americans including myself neglected really following through learning another language. It’s hard to learn when you get older.

  • @misterpeekz
    @misterpeekz Před 11 měsíci +1

    Haven’t seen AsianBoss in a minute but Kei is looking good!

  • @ShiiiJie13
    @ShiiiJie13 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Its a combination of both studying & using the language to master it really. In singapore we are mostly bilingual because we study English as our main language in school, and we have to take a 2nd language which is our mother tongue. But since our exams are all in English, our mother tongue becomes not that important, with us not needing to take our mother tongue anymore in our tertiary education, and younger parents speaking English mostly. It makes our 2nd language slowly dying out which is quite sad, some of the younger kids in singapore now only speaks English & not their mother tongue.
    Talking about using the language, I speak Mandarin at home with my parents, watch Chinese dramas & read novels. It helps to make sure that I refresh my memory of the language, so that I won't forget it just because I use English daily at work.
    By the way some of the students interviewed, they spoke really well just lack of confidence.

  • @kopxpert
    @kopxpert Před 11 měsíci +7

    I think one of the factors why koreans struggle with actual english is that most of them think english words in "hangul". Generally speaking, english words that's commonly use in everyday korean language (there are quite a lot actually) are also spelled/written in hangul and that really messes up the pronunciations. If u are not familiar with "konglish" u will definitely struggle to understand the words even though it's "english"

  • @dogwalk3
    @dogwalk3 Před 9 měsíci +1

    they did amazing! im native english speaker in the states with a major in english who, finally after 20 years of half-trying, am studying japanese 6 hours a day. i absolutely connect with the thumbnail image - the more im learning, i realize that's it's almost impossible to "translate" japanese (& i imagine more eastern asian languages like korean) into english - *everything* is "localization." & i love that japanese feels more like learning math than it does learning a language. learning spanish & russian was a lot easier for me & outside of conjugations & other smaller details, it's mostly just about the vocabulary. hardly anything at all is the same in japanese & i just feel it working a different part of my brain that the usual "language center," im used to. again, all of these guests accents, especially, were incredible. delightful glimpse into seeing it work the other way around into english & understanding the struggle 😅

  • @davehue9517
    @davehue9517 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Great interviews again... really impressed how well some know English

  • @squishysoo6867
    @squishysoo6867 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Their english level is actually amazing if you take into consideration the fact that they really need to extensively study the language. English is not part of their daily lives. I am a Filipino and English is our second language. I was a consistent honor student but I only got the confidence to speak English when I started to work. “Learning the language” and “Communicating using the language” are two completely different things

  • @justanextra3304
    @justanextra3304 Před 11 měsíci +6

    Now do "Can top 1% american students speak korean"?"

    • @mariners_platter
      @mariners_platter Před 11 měsíci +1

      If their entire lives (from college admissions to career) depended on it, then yeah, they'd probably be pretty darn good.

  • @marniciple
    @marniciple Před 11 měsíci

    Wow! They all did so amazingly!

  • @kdefensemartialarts8097
    @kdefensemartialarts8097 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thank you for your videos.

  • @aaronpugliese
    @aaronpugliese Před 11 měsíci +9

    their english is all passable to good and better than many immigrants who've been in the U.S. for decades so I think they're being too hard on themselves. it's a flaw in the educational system that shames students for making a mistake when in reality they're easily understandable

  • @BiltongJerky
    @BiltongJerky Před 11 měsíci +4

    These students are definitely elite, their English ability for an East Asian country is high. I'd like to see how well students in elite Chinese universities do. One of my favorite methods to learning a language outside of basic grammar and vocabulary is reading a lot of scripts with translations. Just vocalizing a lot helps and probably acting classes in the foreign language. Fake it 'til you make it approach.

  • @uniquevideos74
    @uniquevideos74 Před 5 měsíci

    Watching this made me realize how I overrated myself in being fluent in English. I've been learning English since my kindergarten around 5 years old. I can write in English very well but when it comes to speaking, I kind of having troubles organizing my thoughts and express myself naturally. Seeing this non-native English speakers who speaks very well and rated themselves that low made me realize I have a lot of things to learn in English language. They are so good. I just hope I have that confidence when speaking in English. If it were me in their position and knowing that I am being filmed, OMG, I would have stressed out and felt pressured especcially they are filming this in a public place. But salute to all of you. You maintain your composure and just so natural throughout the conversation.

  • @caramcavinchey4396
    @caramcavinchey4396 Před 10 měsíci

    These students are really underrating themselves! I've been an English teacher in Asia for many years now and I was shocked at their fluency after they had all given themselves such low scores. Really hope all of them will be able to get more English speaking practice for their own confidence :)

  • @rpark2109
    @rpark2109 Před 11 měsíci +4

    First, I've been watching Asian Boss videos for the past several years and have used some of them in my classes. There are a wide range of videos out there that try to understand and/or depict what its like for Koreans (usually those in their 20s/30s) to speak/learn English. Most are made by toursists or short term sojourners. They tend to depict Korea as either a place that is really easy to travel around because so many people can speak English well or as a place where hardly nobody speaks English well. Most of these videos are very short on nuance and none of them critique the current methods of the reliance on the short term sojourners to teach English to Korean children. In other words, in the public schools, English is usually taught with a foreign teacher who is fresh out of college with no teaching experience and with little passion for actually teaching. Because of this, teaching as a profession in Korea is not taken seriously by most foreign teachers (although some due take teaching quite seriously). This lack of respect for the profession is unfortunate not only for career teachers who become stigmatized but also Korean chidren. Teaching is a skill that takes practice, repeitition, and self-reflection but this is often lost in the English education system that relies on foreigners who have no experience or passion for teaching. In terms of the top 1% of students (i.e. SNU students), many of these students have passable English and can hold a conversation well. How do I know this? I've been teaching English language education for the past 8 years in Korea and most of that time to the so called 1% (over 1000 Korean students). These students do have a tendancy to undervalue their skills and can be reserved when asked to speak English. However, I would say 60-70% of them can hold a reasonable conversation if they had to. However, this can't be said of the Korean population as a whole. Like in other countries, privilege is determined by economic standing which provides some families greater opportunities for travel, enrollment in hagwons or English academies, and tutoring. Many of the 1% fall within this privileged status and some of the interviewees reflect this privilege. There are many ways to critique English education from pedagogical standards to English as the hegemonic lingua franca to everything inbetween. If Asian Boss ever wanted to have a conversation about this and not just on degrees of language fluency, I would be all for it.

  • @subhiyadav7130
    @subhiyadav7130 Před 11 měsíci +4

    For me I am actually quite good at english when it comes to writing or understanding but the problem is I don't have anybody around me with whom I can have a proper english conversation.Even if some of them can understand english they are scared of making grammatical mistakes.I think real life conversations are necessary to build up confidence while speaking a new language.

  • @KHobbies_cina
    @KHobbies_cina Před 11 měsíci

    I think confidence is what makes them underscore themselves , given enough exposure and time , they definitely have no problem

  • @corgisrule21
    @corgisrule21 Před 11 měsíci +2

    This was so good…I’ve seen some of the test questions that they get in English for their exit exams and OMG 😣 As a native English speaker I don’t know how they pass them (and I read fast). It seems like mostly strange vocabulary that isn’t helpful in real life and so it’s almost impossible to transition those words or concepts to every day life, I would imagine.
    As someone studying Korean it feels like math (which I’m also not good at 😂), but I was impressed with their English skills! If my Korean was as good as any of their English I’d be thrilled 😅

  • @jieliu8088
    @jieliu8088 Před 11 měsíci +19

    I am a graduate of China University and my major is Telecommunications engineering. I can read various English versions of works and papers in my professional field, but when a foreigner asks me for directions on the street, I don't know how to answer them in English.

    • @goyam2981
      @goyam2981 Před 11 měsíci +4

      You gotta hear it from native speakers first how to give directions because it's different from academic stuff. But these phrases may be useful. Go straight. Take a left. Take a right.

    • @sfzl3190
      @sfzl3190 Před 11 měsíci

      Literally same 😭 I know like a lot advanced vocabulary, I can read books easily, I watch films and videos without subtitles in my native language but when it comes to speaking and writing my English is surprisingly on b1 level. I forgot everything, my mind goes completely blank

    • @pengkun2237
      @pengkun2237 Před měsícem

      这是好事啊,中国人的英语的口语听力差,有利于防止文化入侵。另一方面,读写能力强有利于产业升级。这种“哑巴英语”的状态最好了

  • @jl2006
    @jl2006 Před měsícem +1

    I am European, and learned Chinese in Beijing. Many of my classmates were from Korea (even from the North!). These guys are very sharp minded and great to be with - a lot of fun. While I felt a bit intimidated in the Chinese society in the beginning, the Koreans went full in. They found places to live outside of campus (forbidden when I was there) etc.

  • @envyofmen
    @envyofmen Před 11 měsíci +1

    I think the younger generation are much more fun and outgoing. They are less inhibited now than their seniors when asked to respond in English. This is such a refreshing take on Korea's youth since the general worldview about them is that like Singaporeans, they're too serious with their academic track record amidst the social pressure. With this interview, however, we get a short glimpse of their humor as well. #respect from 🇵🇭

  • @smallwhitebug7566
    @smallwhitebug7566 Před 11 měsíci +11

    8:32 this guy looks anxious 😮

  • @idiotwidowmaker8932
    @idiotwidowmaker8932 Před 11 měsíci +10

    I think fluency is really about talking quickly and confidently over using the completely correct verb conjugation or whatever. I had a Korean manager whos English wasnt great but we communicated just fine because there are tricks like "I go Disneyland with family yesterday" which convey all the information and ultimately that's what language is for.

  • @beverleypatten9641
    @beverleypatten9641 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I am impressed with how the students started so young to learn English. I felt they did well, I watch a lot of Korean content and could not do s well! I don't just watch dramas or movies, I watch the news, Korean TV and music/singing programs. Korean language is very pleasant to hear, my favorite Asian language! Perhaps because I am older it is difficult to learn. I comprehend some Spanish, German and a small amount of Navajo but am far from fluent 🤥. Bravo to these intelligent students!!

  • @sfidelisg
    @sfidelisg Před 11 měsíci +2

    For people who are not used to conversing in English often, one has a tendency to be flustered and be in panic mode... like when put on the spot to speak in English, one has a tendency to second-guess if what you're going to say is the right English word to what you are trying to say. It's like doing the translation in your head.
    It really helps that you practice speaking in English often. I also hope that those who are fluent in English will help those who are still learning. I've seen some people who, instead of helping those people who struggle, they laugh at them or worse, even insult them. Thus, the ones trying to do their best to speak in English will tend to lose their confidence all the more.
    Let's be patient and helpful.

  • @kuberkumar9424
    @kuberkumar9424 Před 11 měsíci +11

    I'd say that here in India, we have a lot of regional languages to begin with. And we start learning English as early as possible (kindergarten). So official language of literally most of the official documents is english. Even in examinations, english is one of the compulsory language other than the one you choose.
    Looking from the social aspect, people look with respect on those who speak English.
    And because of many other factors, Indians are one of the most adept people in English language.
    (P.S.- every language is great)

  • @Tschitsu
    @Tschitsu Před 10 měsíci +3

    As I can only speak from experience I think as a German I can be quite glad on how and where I grew up. I've been to England a few times and thus could gather experience to talk in English. But I have to say that I gained most of my English skills after school. At least when it came to conversations. There're people from all around the world at my university and also at my bf's. So speaking English as a common language was a must. You have to think and describe a lot when you talk about all the topics you could imagine but you also learn a lot. My grammar probably sucks by now but that's okay I guess. As long as my message comes across xD.

  • @miwami.
    @miwami. Před 11 měsíci +2

    They are actually so good at English, even if they think they aren't as good, I think it's pretty interesting

  • @larryjane06
    @larryjane06 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I think many of them speak English quite well. They especially use higher level vocabulary (which is often used in English vocab textbooks for EFL learners). I wish people told them their English was fluent enough to hold a conversation and not to worry about tiny grammatical errors.

  • @julieb2898
    @julieb2898 Před 11 měsíci +3

    They spoke English so well, yet rated themselves so low. I think confidence has a lot to do with it. Just be brave and give it your best try. I really admire people who learn other languages.

  • @hazwanee25
    @hazwanee25 Před 10 měsíci +3

    All the respondents spoke well for a non-native speaker. I'm an ESL graduate and here's my utmost advice, especially to non-native speakers. It matters not if you feel you're not speaking it correctly. The mindset must be emphasized first. Only then your confidence will flow easily. Our generation, unlike our parents' generation, should have the mindset of learning other languages in order to communicate with everyone around the world. It helps in life, when you travel, and also at work. Being multi-lingual does not make you less in your nationality. It should not hinder your true identity. Secondly, in this example of hangul, the alphabets learned were not roman alphabets. That itself provided the challenges phonetically, most of my korean students & friends have difficulty with L. If you can overcome and understand these two, you'll be more confident in your second or third language acquisition. Good luck to those currently adding more languages to your belt, all the very best!

  • @markymartin6037
    @markymartin6037 Před 11 měsíci

    Great random street interviews. The english skills of these koreans is not bad especially for a particular woman who lived in the US for 3 years(?), and came back to korea for good. She speaks very well and I can understand her clearly. The rest is also understandable although I feel like there is hesitation, in speaking English. At least these Koreans are able to express/understand what is being asked of them. Great job.

  • @simplytotz7400
    @simplytotz7400 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I'm from the Philippines. My niece's husband is Korean, graduated with a degree in Economics in Korea, and even finished his master's degree. I did not confirm what university but he mentioned that it was a top Korean university. He speaks English but not quite well but surprisingly found out that he's very good at written English. He mentioned that tho he understood English very well but he admitted that he has a struggle in the actual conversation. I told him to carry on and forget to think of perfection. After all, even native English speakers commit grammatical errors occasionally. As long as you're able to convey your message across, then you'll be fine.

  • @573355415
    @573355415 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Nobody talk about how good the English of the interviewer is

  • @ddk80
    @ddk80 Před 11 měsíci +11

    The Korean education system focuses too much on reading comprehension and grammar. It should be tweaked to include more conversation, which is more valuable in the real world (especially in business).

    • @user-sj8rl6rl6c
      @user-sj8rl6rl6c Před 11 měsíci +1

      As a Korean college student, there is a reason why Koreans focus on reading and listening English in the Korean entrance exam education. This is because the language of all information in the world is mainly in English. The text of the entrance examination English is mainly made by excerpting the thesis of English-speaking scholars. At Korean universities, there are many cases where I learn mostly English-language documents or theses. Reading English at the thesis level is essential. Most Koreans do not have the opportunity to do business with foreigners when they work. Therefore, English conversation is not necessary except for certain industries.

    • @ddk80
      @ddk80 Před 11 měsíci

      @@user-sj8rl6rl6c I disagree with you. That may be the case at Korean Universities, but I know even my very own family members that studied abroad for college that struggled mightily in English conversation. Their writing and reading comprehension was top notch, but they even told me their conversation skills was a hindrance, especially when working on group projects, socializing, etc.

  • @artpena72
    @artpena72 Před 8 měsíci +1

    most of these students did very well in their english skills, they are too hard on themselves,for them not living in the country where the language is spoken, their level of fluency is amazing. congratulations to them

  • @cynthiaw.3321
    @cynthiaw.3321 Před 4 měsíci

    They all did a really good job. I could understand everyone just fine.

  • @svennielsen633
    @svennielsen633 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I started to learn English in 4th or 5th grade next to learning German. We also learned Latin (forgot it again, never used it) and French (same thing). I learned Swedish from television and pop music. Unfortunately, I never learned Korean, and when you are 35+ years old your ability to learn a new language declines rapidly. So: learn when you are young.

  • @Razear
    @Razear Před 11 měsíci +15

    This really speaks to the mismatch in the pedagogy between learning for test-taking vs. learning for real world pragmatic utility. If a student can score highly on English exam, it would be reasonable to assume that his/her ability would translate over to the person's ability to engage in verbal conversation, but there's clearly an incongruency. The curriculum needs to be overhauled to emphasize organic speech generation and comprehension rather than memorizing the definitions of fancy jargon which have little to no practical benefit.

    • @fireymissile
      @fireymissile Před 11 měsíci

      Yeah, I feel you. Unfortunately this problem is prevalent throughout Asia. Even here in India, there's a clear focus throughout school to ace that entrance exam that you're eventually gonna take at the end of high school. Luckily though, the teaching and overall education here is mostly done in English so we can speak it relatively easily, that's the common language the entire country has and it's also the governmental language. But I keep seeing the exposure issue all over other Asian countries, they just don't get enough opportunity to use it, so it's much harder to learn it in a pragmatic way

  • @kaeona2303
    @kaeona2303 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I was learning Mandarin with a tutor. She went on to work with a high school, so I'm looking for a new one. I would have small chat at local Chinese restaurants. They were so nice about it. When I first started I conpared it to Math. Additionally, my face hurt the first few weeks, having to concentrate on the form of my mouth and tongue for correct pronunciation. But I love it. A few nights ago, I dreamt in Mandarin. It was amazing. However, I am far from fluent. Will probably be learning it the rest of my life. It's important to me to learn new things until I can no longer. Helps to stimulate the brain. I'm 48 now and will always be a stident.

  • @maxhu6121
    @maxhu6121 Před 10 měsíci

    Their english is so good!! :O
    It's so strange that so many other countries emphasize english as an important language that everyone should know. And living in the US, I just don't have that experience of another language being so naturally important alongside english. I wish we did.