Building Confidence

중급 독해 (High Intermediate)

Lesson 57

Building Confidence

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Lesson 57

BUILDING CONFIDENCE

Practice English with your teacher

High Intermediate 25 min Speaking 75%
3 min

Warm-up

Talk about these questions with your teacher.
선생님과 이야기해 보세요.

  1. What was your favorite subject in school and why?
    학교에서 가장 좋아했던 과목은 무엇이고 그 이유는 무엇인가요?
  2. Do you think the education system in Korea is effective?
    한국의 교육 제도가 효과적이라고 생각하시나요?
4 min

Vocabulary

Listen and repeat after your teacher.
선생님을 따라 읽어보세요.

achieve /əˈtʃiːv/
to succeed in reaching a goal  |  달성하다
Even if you were the class nerd in high school, it's never too late to achieve social success.
confidence /ˈkɒnfɪdəns/
belief in your own abilities  |  자신감
You can develop social confidence by following a few simple steps.
improve /ɪmˈpruːv/
to make something better  |  개선하다
By surrounding yourself with others you create a rich supply of opportunities to observe interactions and to improve upon your own social behaviors.
approach /əˈproʊtʃ/
to come near; a method  |  접근하다; 접근법
Think positive Insecure people approach others anxiously, feeling they have to prove that they're witty or interesting.
despite /dɪˈspaɪt/
without being affected by  |  ~에도 불구하고
Self-assured people expect others to respond positively -- despite the fact that one of the most difficult social tasks is to join an activity that is already in progress.
social /social/
relating to social  |  social
Even if you were the class nerd in high school, it's never too late to achieve social success.
5 min

Reading

Read the passage with your teacher.
선생님과 함께 지문을 읽어보세요.

Perhaps the single greatest source of mental energy is positive interaction with others. Even if you were the class nerd in high school, it's never too late to achieve social success. You can develop social confidence by following a few simple steps.
Schedule your social life
To hone your social skills you have to invest time in them. Practice makes perfect, even for the socially secure. By surrounding yourself with others you create a rich supply of opportunities to observe interactions and to improve upon your own social behaviors.
Stop turning down party invitations and start inviting people to your home. Plan outings with acquaintances you'd like to know better.
Think positive
Insecure people approach others anxiously, feeling they have to prove that they're witty or interesting. Self-assured people expect others to respond positively -- despite the fact that one of the most difficult social tasks is to join an activity that is already in progress.
Engage in social reconnaissance
The socially competent are highly skilled at information gathering, always scanning the scene for important details to guide their actions. They are tuned in to people's expression of specific emotions, sensitive to signals that convey such information as what people's interests are, whether they want to be left alone or whether there is room in an activity for another person.
To infer correctly what others must be feeling, you must be able to identify and label your own experience accurately. That is where many people, particularly men, fall short.
Good conversationalists make comments that are connected to what is said to them and to the social situation. You don't have to be interesting. You just have to be interested.
Enter conversations gracefully
Timing is everything. After listening and observing on the perimeter of a group they want to join, the socially competent look for an opportunity to step in, knowing it doesn't just happen. It usually appears as a lull in the conversation. Tuned in to the conversational or activity theme, the deft participant asks a question or elaborates on what someone else has already said. The idea is to use an open-ended question that lets others participate. "Speaking of the election, what does everybody think about so-and-so's decision not to run?"
Once the conversation gets moving, back off and give others a chance to talk. The goal is to help the group have a better conversation.
Learn to handle failure
Everyone will sometimes be rejected. The socially confident don't take rebuffs personally. They don't attribute rejection to internal causes, such as being unlikable or an inability to make friends. They assume it can result from any of many factors -- incompatibility, someone else's bad mood, a misunderstanding.
Self-assured people become resilient, using the feedback they get to shape another go at acceptance. When faced with failure, those who are well-liked turn a negative response into a counterproposal. They say things like, "Well, can we make a date for next week instead?" Or they move onto another group in the expectation that not every conversation is closed.
And should they reject others' bids to join with them, they do it in a positive way. They invariably offer a reason or counter with an alternative idea: "I would love to talk with you later."
Manage your emotions
Social situations are incredibly complex and dynamic. There's all kinds of verbal and nonverbal cues, such as facial expression and voice tone that have to be interpreted before you decide on the best response -- all in a matter of microseconds. No one can do all that without a reasonable degree of control over their own emotional states, especially negative emotions such as anger, fear, anxiety, emotions that usually arise in situations of conflict or uncertainty. The trick is to shift attention away from distressing stimuli toward positive aspects of a situation.
Defuse disagreements
Conflict is inevitable; coping with confrontations is a critical social skill. Instead of fighting fire with fire, socially confident people stop conflict from escalating; they apologize, propose a joint activity, make a peace offering, or negotiate. Sometimes they just change the subject. Managing conflict without aggression requires listening, communicating, taking the perspective of others, controlling negative emotions, and problem-solving. Even just explaining your point of view in an argument is a helpful move.
Laugh a little
Humor is the most prized social skill, the fast track to being liked. There's no recipe for creating a sense of humor. But even in your darkest moments, strive to see the lighter side of a situation.
1.Do you belive in the saying that goes like "Don't mind your problem, let your problem mind you. why?
2.What do you think for those people who are optimistic?
3.What do you think for those people who are optimistic pessimistic?
1. nerd
2. hone
3. create supply of opportunities
4. Think positive
5.Engage in social reconnaissance
6. resilient
7. Dynamic
8. Tuned in
9. dark moments
10. rebuffs
1.Do you have some problems in having self-confidence?
2.What are the things that you are not usually confident of/ of doing?
3.What are the things that you are usually confident of doing?
4.Do you agree to the ways of building self confidence above?
5.Do you have another suggestion on how to build confidence?

3 min

Korean Trap! / 한국인 실수 교정

Common mistakes Korean speakers make.
한국인이 자주 하는 실수를 알아봅시다.

❌ I catched a cold last week.
✅ I caught a cold last week.

"catch"의 과거형은 "caught"입니다. 불규칙 동사에 주의하세요.

5 min

Discussion

Share your thoughts with your teacher.
선생님과 의견을 나눠보세요.

  1. What was the most surprising thing you learned about building confidence from this passage?
    이 지문에서 building confidence에 대해 가장 놀라웠던 점은 무엇인가요?
  2. How does the topic of building confidence affect your daily life?
    building confidence 주제가 당신의 일상에 어떻게 영향을 미치나요?
  3. Do you agree with the main argument presented in the reading? Why or why not?
    읽기 자료에 제시된 주요 주장에 동의하시나요? 왜 그런가요, 왜 아닌가요?
  4. If you could share one idea from this lesson with a friend, what would it be?
    이 수업에서 친구에게 공유하고 싶은 한 가지 아이디어는 무엇인가요?

Lesson Summary / 수업 요약

Today's Topic: BUILDING CONFIDENCE

Level: High Intermediate (H.I)

Review this lesson before your next class! / 다음 수업 전에 복습하세요!