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Teaching Listening
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Why does listening seem so difficult for students?
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What do we listen to in everyday life?
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What are the characteristics of the listening process?
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What are the principles and models of teaching listening?
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What are the common activities in teaching listening?
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Why does listening seem so difficult for students?
Quickly forget what is heard. Do not recognize words they know. Understand the words but not the intended message. Neglect the next part when thinking about meaning. Unable to form a mental representation from words heard. Do not understand subsequent parts of input because of earlier problems.
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the total time an individual is engaged in communication
9% is devoted to writing 16% to reading 30% to speaking 45% to listening
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listening can be more difficult than reading
different dialects,accents, stresses, rhythms, intonation, mispronunciations, etc; little or no control over the speed
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listening can be more difficult than reading
cannot go back and listen again cannot pause to work out the meaning of the heard material
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listening can be more difficult than reading
background noise other tasks: note-taking, writing down directions or messages
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Characteristics of the listening process
Listening in real life Spontaneity Context visual clues listener’s response speaker’s adjustment
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Principles and models of teaching listening
Focus on process Combine listening with other skills Focus on meaning Grade difficulty level appropriately
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Bottom-up model Listening comprehension is believed to start with sound and meaning recognitions.
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Top-down model listening for gist and making use of the contextual clues and background knowledge to construct meaning are emphasized.
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Interactive Model listening involves both
‘bottom-up’ processing—recognizing sounds of words, phrases or structures ‘top-down’ processing— referring meaning from broad contextual clues and background knowledge. Comprehension is ‘the result of integration of the information conveyed by the text with information and concepts already known by the listener’ (Rost, 2002:60).
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Three teaching stages of teaching listening
Pre-listening While-listening Post-listening
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Pre-listening activity
Listening for the gist Listening for specific information
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Pre-listening activities
Pre-listening activities should aim to motivate students activate their prior knowledge teach key words or key sentences
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While-listening activities
No specific responses Not giving students any task Listen and tick Tick items as they hear them
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While-listening activities
Listen and sequence Find out the order of things Listen and act listen and respond to commands or directions.
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While-listening activities
Listen and draw Drawing pictures, diagrams, etc. amusing variations, geometric shapes. Listen and fill Listen and take notes Listen and summarize
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types of post-listening activities
Multiple-choice questions The multiple-choice questions Answering questions Open-ended questions
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types of post-listening activities
Note-taking and gap-filling Tidy up the notes Complete the summary Dictogloss Traditional dictation exercise
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