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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING Unit 8 Teaching Listening Aims of the unit 1. Why is listening so difficult for students? 2. What do we listen to in everyday life? 3. What are the characteristics of the listening process? 4. What are the principles of teaching listening? 5. What are the common activities in teaching listening

A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING Unit 8 Teaching Listening Aims of the unit 1. Why is listening so difficult for students? 2. What do we listen to

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Page 1: A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING Unit 8 Teaching Listening Aims of the unit 1. Why is listening so difficult for students? 2. What do we listen to

A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Unit 8 Teaching Listening

Aims of the unit

1. Why is listening so difficult for students?

2. What do we listen to in everyday life?

3. What are the characteristics of the listening process?

4. What are the principles of teaching listening?

5. What are the common activities in teaching listening 

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

1 Why does listening seem so difficult?

• It is becoming more and more necessary to understand spoken English in many situations, e.g. face-to-face conversations, telephone calls, business meetings, lectures, speeches, television, etc.

• Among the four skills, foreign language learners often complain that listening is the most difficult to acquire.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

2 What do we listen to in everyday life?

• Since we are teaching our students English not only to help them pass exams, but also to prepare them to use English in real life, it is important to think about the situations they will listen to English in real life and then think about the listening exercises we do in class.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

• Even at the beginning stage, we need to give our students a variety of listening exercises to prepare them for real life use of language.

• In most cases, the listening materials in the classroom are daily conversations or stories, but in reality we listen to far more things.

• e.g.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

• Telephone conversations about business;• Lessons or lectures given in English;• Instructions in English;• Watching movies in English;• Dealing with tourists;• Interviews with foreign-enterprises;• Socializing with foreigners;• Listening to English songs;

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

• Radio news in English;

• Conversations with foreigners;

• Watching television programmes in English;

• Shop assistants who sell goods to foreigners;

• International trade fairs;

• Negotiations with foreign businessmen;

• Hotel and restaurant services.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

3 Characteristics of the listening process

It is important to understand the characteristics or process behind these listening situations so that we as teachers can design appropriate activities to help our students to develop effective listening habits and strategies.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

1. Formal or informal?

2. Rehearsed or non-rehearsed?

3. Can the listener interact with the speaker nor not? – Listening to English songs – Socializing with foreigners– Radio news in English– Watching television programmes in English– Negotiations with foreign businessmen– Hotel and restaurant services

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Characteristics of the listening: (Ur 1996:106-7)

• Spontaneity. We listen to people speaking spontaneously and informally without rehearsing what whey are going to say ahead of time.

• Context. While listening, we know the relationship between the listener and the speaker. The situation helps to predict what we are going to hear.

• Visual clues. Facial expression, gestures, and other body language, and the surrounding environment, these visual clues help us predict and understand what we hear.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

• Listener’s response. In a conversation, we can interrupt the speaker and ask for repetition or clarification.

• Speaker’s adjustment. The speaker can adjust the way of speaking according to the listener’s reaction, e.g. he/she may rephrase or elaborate (to put it in more details).

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

4 Principles of teaching listening

• Focus on process.

• Combine listening and speaking.

• Focus on comprehending meaning.

• Grade difficulty level appropriately.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Focus on process

Listening is not a passive activity. We must do many things to process information that we are receiving.

–Paying attention. –Constructing meaningful messages in the mind by

relating what we hear to what we already know (previous knowledge).

So it is very important to design tasks the performance of which show how well the students have comprehended the listening material.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Combine listening and speakingTwo problems with the traditional listening

classroom:

• No opportunities to practise listening and speaking skills together;

• The questions only test the students, rather than train the students how to listen or how to develop listening strategies.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Focus on comprehending meaning

• In the traditional textbooks, the listening exercises are to test the students’ memory, not their listening comprehension.

• Psycholinguistic studies have shown that people do not remember the exact form of the message they hear, i.e., they don’t remember what they hear word for word, rather, they remember the meaning.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Grade difficulty level appropriately

Three factors that may affect the difficulty level of listening tasks:

• Type of language used;

• Task or purpose in listening;

• Context in which the listening occurs.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Bottom-up model(Hedge, 2000:230) 所谓“自下而上”指在理解语言所表达的信息时,人们

根据所掌握的语言知识,对输入的信息按照语言自下而上的层次作分析、归纳和解释。语言的层次由下而上依次为:1) 语音层次 : 如语音的同化、省音和溶合规则,以及重音与韵律模式;2) 词汇层次 : 如词汇和构词法规则;3) 句法层次 : 如句子结构、时态、语态和格等语法规则;4) 篇章—语用层次 : 如篇章的类型和人际间交流的规则等。

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Top-down model

“ 自上而下”的处理方式指在理解输入信息时,人们利用原有的各种知识 ( 语言知识、社会知识和专业知识等 ) ,对听力材料中的话题、场景和材料本身的结构先做出预测,并根据材料的部分陈述和事实,做出进一步的推断或期待下一个话题。

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Three teaching stages

• Pre-listening activities

• While-listening activities

• Post-listening activities

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Pre-listening activities• Predicting

• Setting the scene

• Listening for the gist

• Listening for specific information

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Predicting

• Good listeners are good predictors.

• There are many different activities that can be used to encourage students to predict the content of what they are about to hear.

• Visual aids are immensely helpful in aiding students’ comprehension. “They attract students’ attention and help and encourage them to focus on the subject in hand” (Ur, 1984:30).

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Using pictures for prediction

• In the beginning the students may have difficulty in predicting. In this case the teacher can help them by asking leading questions.

• e.g.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

e.g. 1

T: Where are they? What are they doing? What is the relationship between them?

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

e.g. 2

• T: What do you see in the picture? What is behind the trees? What is in the tree? What is in the river?

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

• Another type of predicting task is to let students read the listening comprehension questions before they listen.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Setting the scene

• The teacher can help provide the background information to activate learners’ schema, so they will be better prepared to understand what they hear.

• e.g. A passage about Michael Jackson

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Listening for the gist

• Listening for the gist is similar to skimming a passage in reading. The key is to ask students one or two questions that focus on the main idea or the tone or mood of the whole passage.

• Notice that students can answer the gist questions even though they do not understand every word or phrase in the passage.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Listening for specific information

• There are situations in real life where we listen only for some specific details and ignore the rest of the entire message. e.g. weather forecast, announcements in train stations/airports

• It is important to expose our students to a variety of types of listening texts for a variety of purposes so that they will develop a variety of listening strategies to use for different situations.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Summary on pre-listening activities

• We may use more than one kind of pre-listening activity;

• Pre-listening tasks should not take much time;

• The purpose of pre-listening activities is to activate the students’ schema, i.e. to provide context.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

6 While-listening activities• The while-listening stage is the most difficult

for the teacher to control, because this is where the students need to pay attention and process the information actively.

• Some tasks for while-listening activities:

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

No specific responses

• For stories, or anything that is interesting, humourous, or dramatic, we just have the students listen and enjoy it.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Listen and tick

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Listen and sequence

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Listen and act

• Total Physical Response:

• for beginners “Stand up”, “Point to the …”;

• for intermediate learners “Pretend you’re …(doing something)”

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Listen and draw (pp. 149-150)

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Listen and fill

• It is important NOT to overdo this type of tasks, since it gives students the impression that they need to understand every word.

• We may ask the students to fill in the blanks with function words, say, prepositions.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Listen and guess

e.g.

• For height, appearance, and personalities

• Four clues about an animal

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Advantages of the above listening activities

• They personalize the lesson and make the listening interesting.

• They integrate listening with the other skills, especially speaking.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Summary on while-listening activities

• Most of the time, it is helpful to provide a task for the students to do something while they are listening.

• By providing a variety of types of tasks, students learn to listen for a variety of purposes, which better prepares them for listening in the real world outside the classroom.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

7 Post-listening activities

• The post-listening stage is where the teacher can determine how well the students have understood what they listened to.

• One important point to keep in mind is whether we are testing the students’ listening comprehension or their memory.

• It is more common for people to understand more than they can remember.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Some types of post-listening activities

• Multiple choice questions

• Answering questions

• Note-taking and gap-filling

• Dictogloss

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Multiple choice questions

e.g. Compare Exercise A and Exercise B:

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Answering questions

• Open-ended questions and inference questions can be asked.

• Note-taking and gap-filling

• for a summary of the text

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Dictogloss

• Preparation: briefly talking about the topic and key words

• Dictation: for two times, first time focusing on the meaning, and second time taking extensive notes

• Reconstruction: working in pairs/groups, reconstructing the text

• Analysing and correction: comparing their own version with the original

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Summary on post-listening activities

• Don’t demand students to remember more details than a native-speaker would in a real-life situation;

• Don’t spend too much time giving students practise with traditional test-taking questions;

• Integrate listening tasks with speaking and writing.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

8 Conclusion

• We must know the nature of listening, both in real language use and in language classrooms

• Focus on the process of listening rather than on the result of listening.

• Don’t merely test the memory.

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A COURSE IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

Homework

• What are the characteristics of the listening process?

• What are the models of teaching listening?

• What are the common activities in teaching listening?