Your text came at the right time. This year I want to become fluent in English. I would to travel to a primarily English-speaking place to improve my skills as quickly as possible, but unfortunately, I don't know when I'll be able to do that. Anyway, I don't want this to be an obstacle anymore. After all, I've had this goal of becoming fluent in English for a long time, but I never dedicate myself as I should.
Hi @aiuna,
You are right. You don't need to travel to an English speaking country to be fluent. There are many who travel to English speaking countries and never become fluent. My children have only spent a few weeks altogether in America. They attend Korean schools but the decided to speak English to each other.
I recommend keeping a note book for one week. Each day or two learn a new grammar pattern and try at least five of your own sentences.
Also listen with intent. This means choosing a short segment of the type of English you would like to speak. Next listen with no picture and try to write down the key points. Listen again and try to write more. Finally listen with the picture and check the text. Think about why your text may be different from the script text. Maybe there are some grammar points and vocabulary you can learn.
Finally, practice with somebody. When I started learning Korea I had about twelve different friends I bothered with Korean language questions. This made the burden less for them. I think if you kept asking questions to a native speaker about grammar points they would eventually stop talking to you.
This site looks ok for studying English. To get some lessons you have to sign up with an email address, but I think it is all free. https://www.englishclub.com/efl/category/listen-learn/
Thank you so much for your precious tips. I'm going to scour this site right now. God bless you.