Shadowing Guide· Shadowing Guide· 15 min 읽기· 4,200 words

The Complete Shadowing Guide:
From Beginner to Advanced,
Your 8-Week Routine.

What is shadowing, why does it work, and how do you actually do it? From the 4-step method to an 8-week routine — the same technique BTS RM used to master English, broken down so anyone can follow along.

Langflix
Langflix Editorial발행 2026-04-22 · 최종 수정 2026-05-01
The Complete Shadowing Guide: An 8-Week Routine from Beginner to Advanced
↳ A learner practicing shadowing while watching a video with headphones on
◆ KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • What Is ShadowingA learning method where you repeat a native speaker's words within 0.5 seconds. It originated from simultaneous interpreter training in the 1960s and has since expanded across language education.
  • Scientific EvidenceA 2025 systematic review confirmed simultaneous improvements in pronunciation accuracy, intonation, and fluency. It has also been shown to expand working memory capacity.
  • Core PrinciplesAlways understand before you repeat. Choose material where you can comprehend at least 80%. Repeat 30-second clips.
  • Getting StartedTED-Ed (beginner) → Friends (intermediate) → The Crown (advanced). 15-20 minutes a day, at least 5 times a week.

In 2021, BTS's RM made a surprise appearance on the Friends: The Reunion special and said, "Ross, Chandler, Monica — they were my American English teachers." As a teenager, he watched Friends DVDs his mother had bought him — first with Korean subtitles, then with English subtitles, and finally with no subtitles at all — repeating the same episodes three times in three different ways.4 What RM practiced instinctively is what linguists call "Shadowing."

CHAPTER 01 ─────What Is Shadowing?

Shadowing is a training technique where you listen to a native speaker's voice and repeat it like a shadow, with a very short delay of 0.5 to 1 second.

It was originally developed to train simultaneous interpreters. Starting from interpreter training in the 1960s, researchers like Professor Kadota at Japanese interpreter training programs systematized it for general foreign language learning in the 1990s.1

The core principle is simple. When you listen and speak at the same time, your brain must activate both the listening circuit and the speaking circuit simultaneously. As this cognitive load is repeated, the connection between the two circuits strengthens, ultimately building a "brain that thinks in English."

“Shadowing is a training that constantly narrows the time gap between listening and speaking. As that gap shrinks, automatization occurs — processing the foreign language without translating through your native language.”

— Kadota, S. 『Shadowing as a Practice in Second Language Acquisition』 (2019)¹

CHAPTER 02 ─────Why It Works — What Science Says

What sets shadowing apart from other learning methods is that a single activity stimulates multiple skills simultaneously.

1. Simultaneous Improvement in Pronunciation, Intonation, and Fluency

According to a 2025 systematic review, shadowing has been confirmed to improve pronunciation accuracy (intelligibility), naturalness (comprehensibility), intonation (prosody), and fluency all at once.2 The effects are especially pronounced in the areas English learners struggle with most — English rhythm, weak forms, and connected speech.

2. Improved Listening Comprehension

Studies from Japan have shown that learners who trained with shadowing demonstrated greater improvements in listening comprehension and phoneme recognition compared to learners who trained with dictation.

3. Expanded Working Memory

According to a neuroscience study published in Frontiers in Psychology in 2021, shadowing training doesn't just improve pronunciation — it actually expands L2 working memory capacity itself.3 This means you become able to process longer sentences in English and follow more complex conversations.

4areas
stimulated simultaneously (pronunciation, listening, intonation, fluency)
0.5sec
delay after native speaker's utterance
80%
comprehension threshold for material selection

CHAPTER 03 ─────The 4-Step Practical Guide

Just as RM repeated Friends episodes with Korean subtitles, then English subtitles, then no subtitles, shadowing has a defined sequence. The most common mistake is skipping Step 1 and jumping straight to Step 4. If you repeat sounds without understanding the content, incorrect pronunciation becomes ingrained.

01ListenListen once without subtitles. Get a feel for the overall flow and tone.
02ReadGo through the script and look up unfamiliar expressions. Make sure you fully understand the meaning.
03MimicSpeak along while reading the subtitles. Follow the mouth shape, stress, and intonation.
04ShadowRepeat without subtitles at a 0.5-second delay. Record yourself and compare.

Listening to the same clip four different ways is far more effective than watching new clips once each. Aim to fully digest a single 30-second clip.

Record and Compare

At Step 4, make sure to record your own voice. Comparing it with the original audio reveals pronunciation differences you wouldn't have noticed otherwise. Your smartphone's built-in recording app is more than enough.

CHAPTER 04 ─────Choosing the Right Content Is Half the Battle

The single biggest factor that determines your shadowing success is material selection. The core principle is simple: choose material where you can understand at least 80% of what you hear. If it's too difficult, you'll just be mimicking sounds; if it's too easy, the learning effect diminishes.

Recommended Content by Level

Beginner (CEFR A2-B1)

  • TED-Ed animations — clear pronunciation, minimal slang, 30 sec - 3 min
  • Disney/Pixar animations — clearly articulated speech, rich emotional expression
  • CNN 10 (student news) — slower pace, standard American pronunciation

Intermediate (CEFR B1-B2)

  • Friends, The Office — everyday conversation, natural speed
  • TED Talks — diverse topics, clear delivery
  • YouTube interviews — close to real conversation speed

Advanced (CEFR B2-C1)

  • The Crown, Succession — fast pace, varied British/American accents
  • Podcasts (NPR, BBC) — unedited natural speech
  • News anchor briefings — complex sentence structures, specialized vocabulary

What Makes a Good Clip

  • 30 seconds to 3 minutes long — anything longer and focus fades
  • 1-2 speakers — avoid scenes with multiple people talking at once
  • Emotionally expressive dialogue — helps you naturally pick up intonation and stress
  • Script/subtitles available — essential for Step 2 (Read)

CHAPTER 05 ─────The 5 Most Common Beginner Mistakes

1. Repeating Without Understanding

This is the most critical mistake. Mimicking sounds without knowing what they mean is no different from being a parrot. You must read the script and look up unfamiliar words before starting to shadow.

2. Choosing Material That's Too Difficult

The mindset of "it's English study, so I should tackle something hard" is poison for shadowing. Pick material where you can understand at least 80% on first listen. The remaining 20% of unfamiliar content is exactly your learning zone.

3. Practicing Too Long

15-20 minutes a day is optimal. Beyond 30 minutes, your mouth muscles fatigue and your pronunciation starts to break down. Even short daily sessions are overwhelmingly more effective than one 2-hour session per week.

4. Listening Once and Moving On

You need to repeat the same 30-second clip at least 4-5 times. Apply the Listen, Read, Mimic, and Shadow process to each clip. Constantly consuming new videos without repeating isn't shadowing — it's just watching.

5. Not Checking Your Own Pronunciation

Without recording, you have no way of knowing how accurately you're shadowing. Build the habit of recording on your smartphone and comparing with the original.

CHAPTER 06 ─────The 8-Week Practical Routine

The routine below is a step-by-step plan designed so that beginners can become comfortable with shadowing in 8 weeks and start noticing real changes in their pronunciation. The key is short clips + daily repetition.

Week 1-230-sec clips · TED-Ed / animations10 min/일
Week 3-41-min clips · YouTube interviews / TED15 min/일
Week 5-62 min · Friends / sitcoms20 min/일
Week 7-83 min · news / documentaries / dramas20 min/일

Phase Descriptions

Week 1-2: Mumbling You don't need to repeat perfectly. Start by surrendering to the rhythm and flow of the native speaker's voice and mumbling along. Focus on the overall shape of the sound rather than individual words.

Week 3-4: Synchronized Speak simultaneously with the native speaker while looking at the text. This is where you start matching stress and pronunciation details. It's perfectly fine to still be reading subtitles at this stage.

Week 5-6: Prosody (Intonation) Now you're mimicking intonation, rhythm, and emotion. Think of it as copying the melody of the entire sentence, not word by word. Establish the habit of recording and comparing with the original during this phase.

Week 7-8: Content Shadowing Listen and repeat using only your ears — no text. This is true shadowing: understanding the content while speaking simultaneously. Once you reach this stage, you'll start to feel the sensation of "English coming out of your mouth naturally."

Consistency Is Everything

Just as RM repeated Friends over and over, the key to shadowing isn't some special technique — it's consistent repetition. Even 10 minutes a day for 30 days will bring clear changes to your pronunciation and intonation. A perfect single day matters less than 10 minutes every day.

CHAPTER 07 ─────Frequently Asked Questions

Does shadowing really work?+
Yes. According to a 2025 study, shadowing has been shown to simultaneously improve pronunciation accuracy (intelligibility), intonation (prosody), and fluency. Long-term research from Japanese interpreter training programs has also consistently reported improvements in both listening comprehension and pronunciation.
Can complete beginners do it?+
Yes, but with one condition: you need to choose material where you can understand at least 80% of what you hear. If you're a total beginner, start with clearly spoken content like TED-Ed animations or children's programs. Repeating sounds without understanding them has no effect.
How many minutes a day is ideal?+
For beginners, 10-15 minutes; for intermediate learners and above, 20-25 minutes is most effective. Going beyond 30 minutes causes mouth muscle fatigue and your pronunciation actually deteriorates. Even if it's short, practicing every day is far more effective than doing one or two long sessions per week.
What content should I start with?+
Beginner: TED-Ed, Disney animations (clear pronunciation, 30 sec - 2 min) → Intermediate: Friends, The Office (natural conversation speed) → Advanced: The Crown, news interviews (fast pace, varied accents). Repeating short 30-second to 3-minute clips is the most effective approach.
Can I become fluent just by shadowing?+
Shadowing excels at pronunciation, listening, and speaking speed, but vocabulary, grammar, reading comprehension, and real conversation (interaction) require separate practice. We recommend combining shadowing with vocabulary study and real conversation practice.
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◆ FOOTNOTES & SOURCES

  1. Kadota, S. Shadowing as a Practice in Second Language Acquisition, Routledge, 2019.
  2. Hamada, Y. (2025). A Systematic Review of Research on the use of Shadowing for Second Language Pronunciation Teaching. Applied Linguistics Review.
  3. Nakayama & Suzuki (2021). Effects of training of shadowing and reading aloud on working memory and neural systems. Frontiers in Psychology.
  4. BTS RM, Friends: The Reunion interview (HBO Max, May 2021).

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