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Published byAudra Robinson Modified over 8 years ago
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LISTENING: QUESTIONS OF LEVEL FRANCISCO FUENTES NICOLAS VALENZUELA
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RESEARCH INTO LISTENING
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MODELING THE PROCESS Understanding is achieved through a serie of steps. Parallel distributed processing (PDP) The purpose of comprehension is not primary “archive” information
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LEVELS OF PROCESSING The levels at which spoken information is available for interpretation include: 1. Phonetic 2. Phonological 3. Prosodic 4. Lexical 5. Syntactic 6. Semantic 7. Pragmatic
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ACCESSING THE PROCESS Eight processing stages, ranging from the more primitive to more complex. noise - no response distraction - process overload syllable restructuring - mishearing syllable identification key word association linking with more than one keywords recognition of phraser recognition of whole utterances.
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FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE PROCESSING Five characteristics that affect the ease or difficulty of listening. text speaker task listener process
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THE TESTING OF LISTENING, a quite difficult labour to achieve
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Main difficulties for test designer and performer ● Difficulty to design “pure” tests without interference of objects, such as memory and background knowledge. ● Poor listeners of L2 that rely on contextual and topical guessing, should rely more on rapid and accurate linguistic decoding.
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Coping with the process: Skills and strategies Level is important when talking about hierarchical attributes allowing successful listening: ● Lower subskills, like decoding and literal recognition of utterance. ● Higher order subskills, such as interpretation, and critical evaluation.
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Coping with the process: Skills and strategies Three main groups of listening strategies: 1. Metacognitive: Planning, regulating and managing. 2. Cognitive: Facilitate comprehension, e.g. conscious use of context knowledge. 3. Social & affective: Listener requests for clarification, positive self-talk.
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INFLUENCES ON LISTENING TEST PERFORMANCE ● Key variables that affect listening test scores: 1. Input: Lexical characteristics, length of text, register. 2. Task: Clarity of instructions, output required, amount of context provided. 3. Listener: memory, topic knowledge, motivation.
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The teaching of listening: skills and/or strategies ● We should change the actual focus on strategies into skills.: 1. Skills of listening are competencies that natives possess and non-natives need to aquire. 2. Strategies are compensatory and its use should be avoided. 3. Teachers tend to regard strategies as substitute for skills.
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Conclusions ● L2 learning ability does not advances in a straightforward way, but in a muli-dimensional way. ● Listening involves physiological and cognitive processes at different levels. (perception, recognition, interpretation). ● Even most basic spoken messages carry multiple levels of meaning. ● Relationship between overall L2 proficiency and ability to understand spoken language is far from straightforward. ● Listening research in the future probably will include more “human” concepts and less computer-like ones (e.g. Input, processing) ● Technologies will provide teachers with better equipments regarding listening performance (Higher quality videos or sounds).
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