LISTENING COMPREHENSION
Chapter - 1
Sub-Skills of Listening – Listening for Perception -
Comprehension
Listening is an important component of the
language teaching syllabus. A teacher’s role in a listening exercise is to
create interest, reasons for listening, and the confidence to listen. For each
listening exercise the teacher must have in mind -
·
What kind
of listening is appropriate to the text · How the learner will "tune in" to the context.
· Pictures that could be used to contextualize the talk
· And the forming of the learner´s opinion on the topic
Sub-Skills of Listening
The sub-skills that can be emphasized in listening exercises include:
· Listening for specific information
· Following topic shifts
· Predicting
· Recognising transitions and sequence markers
· Recognising word boundaries
· Identifying keywords and
· Taking notes
Activity 1:
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There are two main reasons of
listening - listening for comprehension
and listening for
perception.
Listening for Comprehension
In this the learner is given
practice in developing listening for understanding by using listening materials
and conducting listening activities which take into account the real-life needs
of the learner. Listening for
comprehension is more relevant to the teaching of listening at the middle and
secondary school level. In this, the listening material is based on a
particular context and the learner is given practice in specific areas of
listening, which are related to their needs. Learners usually find these
activities challenging.
Listening
for Perception
Listening for perception is
practiced more at the primary/middle school level where learners are introduced
to the language. In this the learner is given practice in identifying the
different sounds, sound combinations, and stress and intonation patterns of
spoken English. The focus of the listening activity is aural perception.
Comprehension is of secondary importance. The listening exercises do not use
visuals so that the learners concentrate on the sound of words or intonation
patterns. The learner has to rely on his/her ear to repeat these sounds. The
methodology involves repetition of short, individual sounds. The teacher demonstrates
the sounds which she wishes to teach while learners are encouraged to imitate
and identify them using drill and choral repetition.
Another effective way is to use worksheets
to give the students more practice. For example if the teacher wants the students
to differentiate the two sounds
/p/ and /b/ or /s/ and / ʃ / she
makes the necessary worksheet with the relevant words and asks the students to
underline what they hear. e.g.
/p/ and /b/ /s/ and / ʃ /
pin bin sun shun
pun bun soot shoot
pan ban sin shin
pit bit
seer sheer
Activity 2:
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Three Phases of Listening
Pre-listening Activities
Listening activities should consist of some well-structured
pre-listening, while-listening, and post-listening stages. The pre-listening
phase is a kind of preparatory work which is to make the context explicit,
clarify purposes and establish roles, procedures and goals for listening. The
pre-listening stage helps learners to find out the aim of listening and
provides the necessary background information.
Pre-listening work can consist of a whole range of activities,
including:
- the teacher giving background information;
- the students reading something relevant;
- the students looking at pictures;
- discussion and answer session;
- written exercises;
- following instructions for the while-listening activity;
- consideration of how the while-listening activity will be done
Activity 3:
1.
What are the activities
involved in the pre-listening stage?
2.
How do the pre-listening
stage helps in the listening task?
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While-listening Tasks
While-listening activities can be defined as tasks that students are
asked to do during the time of listening to the text. The nature of these
activities is to help learners to listen for meaning that is to elicit a
message from spoken language. They concentrate on comprehension to understand
important information from the passage. The aim of the while-listening stage
for students is to understand the message of the text. While-listening
exercises should be interesting and challenging. They should guide the students
to handle the information and messages from the listening text.
- During the while-listening phase students usually respond to a listening text. They indicate appropriate pictures or answers to multiple-choice questions, complete a cloze test, fill in the blanks of incomplete sentences, or write short answers to the questions etc.
Activity 4:
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Post-listening Task
The post-listening stage comprises of all the exercises which are
done after listening to the text. Some of these activities may be the
extensions of those carried out at pre- and while-listening work but some may
not be related to them at all and present a totally independent part of the
listening session. Post-listening activities allow the learners to ‘reflect’ on
the language from the passage on sound, grammar and vocabulary. There are a few
tasks which teachers may do in the classroom after listening to a text.
- discussing students’ reactions to the content of the listening selection
- asking students thought-provoking questions to encourage discussion
- setting students to work in pairs to create dialogues based on the listening text
- assigning reading and writing activities based on what students listened to.
Activity 5:
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Chapter - 3
Listening Material
Listening for specific information
These activities are good for training the
students to hear everything and to identify individual words. They are challenging
and students can see an improvement. For lower levels a dialogue can be taken
from a course book. The teacher can then gap-fill the target language and
students listen and write down what they hear.
Listening for general understanding
It is important to set up the task before the tape recorder is played because
by doing so the students would listen with a purpose, expectation, similar to
the way we listen in real life. This activity should be followed by some
sort of feedback so the students can feel assured that they extracted the
information successfully.
Extracting specific information
Very often the listener is
involved in the use of receptive skills for the sole purpose of extracting
specific information (scanning). In other words, the listener will hear a piece
of language for the purpose of finding out only one or two facts.
Getting the general picture
Learners often read because they want to get a general picture. It
is the main idea they are interested in, not the detail. Indeed the skill of
listening to get the general picture presupposes the reader's ability to pick
out the main points and discard the irrelevant.
Inferring opinion
The ability to infer opinion and attitude is largely based on the
recognition of linguistic style and its use to achieve appropriate purposes.
Activity 6:
1.
What are the various listening materials?
2.
How can the various listening materials be used in listening class?
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Using a Tape recorder to
develop listening
Listening practice
Provide ideal
listening practice material for learners. A recording provides an opportunity
for the learner to listen to a sample of language which is clear and of a high
quality, and is spoken by a native speaker of English. If they listen to the
cassette while following the text in the book, learners will be able to see
exactly how the speech stream is broken up into individual words.
Comprehension skills
Using a
cassette and book together can help in important ways with both reading and
listening skills. For example, listening to and understanding the tape before
reading the book will provide useful background knowledge so that reading
proceeds faster.
Authenticity
Listening to
stories is a recreational activity. Many people like to listen for relaxation
and pleasure outside the classroom. Listening to a textbook on cassette is
therefore an authentic type of language activity as well as being a
useful one. For this reason, it may not be necessary to ask students to do more
than simply listen and enjoy the story – to listen and react. The cassettes can
be treated as ‘talking books’.
Activity 7:
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Listening Activities
Dictation
One of the most common listening
exercises which have been practiced continually in schools is dictation. One of the positive
features of dictation is that it involves the learner, who becomes actively
involved with the language. Dictation can become a meaningful and interesting
language activity. The teacher must plan carefully. The teacher dictates a
number of words very quickly and makes the students to write the words she has
dictated and asks them to write a paragraph making use of the words given in
dictation.
Listening and Following a Route
In this activity a route map is used
and exercises are designed to link the spoken description with the map. This
activity can be improvised easily by the teacher. The route she wishes the
learner to mark can be traced on her copy of the map. She can then give the
learner instructions, adding comments and a brief description. A map of a place
they would like to visit as part of a class trip can be given. In this way a
real life context is introduced and the activity becomes more interesting.
Listening to a Telephone Call and Writing the Message
Learners at the middle and secondary
school are often required to make telephone calls for formal and informal
purposes. Listening forms a key element in telephone skills. In this activity
the learner is introduced to a situation where one person has to give an
important message to her friend. If the third person receives the call that
person has to jot down the important message.
Listening to a Sports Commentary
Another interesting listening lesson
is listening to a sports commentary. The learner listens to the commentary for
specific information. In this the learner uses background sounds for clues, for
example, playing of the band for the march past, applause and cheering of the
winner's name, and so on. At times, we may find it useful to use the same
listening material for another class by designing a new worksheet based on the
listening passage.
Jigs Jigsaw listening
In 'Jigsaw listening' class of students are
divided into a small number of groups and each group listens to a different
listening text. All the texts are on the same topic, and then the groups
exchange information to build up the complete picture. The success of a jigsaw
activity depends on each listening text being incomplete in some way which is
crucial for the completion of the task, so that the students need to seek
details from each other and provide accurate information from their own
listening. When there is quite a lot of information contained in the listening
texts, it is useful to provide a while-listening activity which requires the
students to record, on a chart, points which may need to convey to the other
groups at the post-listening stage.
Jigsaw tasks are an excellent way to integrate the skills, as
learners read or listen to a text, and speak and listen to others to
reconstruct the information in the text. Most written texts can be made into a
jigsaw activity easily. Managing a jigsaw listening exercise is more
challenging as it requires multiple tape recorders, enough space to listen
without disturbing other groups, and time.
Activity 8:
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