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Teaching Listening and Speaking Joe McVeigh King Saud University PYP 21 January 2013

Teaching Listening and Speaking Joe McVeigh King Saud University PYP 21 January 2013. A joke. A joke. A: “It’s windy.” B: “No, it isn’t. It’s Thursday. C: “So am I. Let’s get off and have a cup of tea.”. Frustrations and challenges in teaching listening. A three-ring circus.

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Teaching Listening and Speaking Joe McVeigh King Saud University PYP 21 January 2013

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  1. Teaching Listening and Speaking Joe McVeigh King Saud University PYP 21 January 2013

  2. A joke

  3. A joke A: “It’s windy.” B: “No, it isn’t. It’s Thursday. C: “So am I. Let’s get off and have a cup of tea.”

  4. Frustrations and challenges in teaching listening

  5. A three-ring circus

  6. One minute to gather short responses. (Facilitator microphones off) • Chime to stop talking. • One minute to report back (twenty seconds for each group, turn on mics as needed.)

  7. Frustrations and challenges in teaching listening

  8. Time to stop. Shhhh.

  9. Report back

  10. Listening basics

  11. How is spoken language different from written language?

  12. Time to stop. Shhhh.

  13. Report back

  14. Real time/speed control • Reductions, blends, false starts • Loose organization of speech: • short, vague language • non-fluent • little subordination • use of gestures and body language

  15. How do we decode language ? • An unbroken stream of sound • Is broken up into groups of sounds • Which are recognized as words • Whose meaning is accessed • And the relationship of the words to each other is established

  16. What do we do when things are ambiguous or unclear? • We use real-world knowledge • We use the immediate context • We use word-order strategies • We use pauses, stress, intonation

  17. Beginning students and poor listeners in general often lack bottom-up skills. • They can’t segment speech • They don’t recognize words • They use the words they do know, even if implausible • They may get some specific information, but have a hard time with main ideas.

  18. Too much going on

  19. How do listeners need to break up the speech stream? • Work with thought groups • Recognize • assimilation • deletion • insertion • strong (tell) and weak (open) forms

  20. Distinguishing sounds: minimal pairs

  21. 1 bin 2 pin 3 Ben 4 pen

  22. Q: Skills for Success Listening & Speaking 1

  23. Q: Skills for Success Listening & Speaking 1

  24. Writing things down dictation

  25. Ways to use transcripts • Ss mark stressed words. • Instead of audio, teach can read and hyper-stress for beginners. • Intermediate/advanced students: Predict stress, then check • A crosses out words in the script and hands the script to B, who listens and restores text as (1) A reads OR (2) both listen again. • Ss try to match the speed and intonation of the script. • For grammatical focus, highlight the forms in the script, or raise hands when they hear that form.

  26. Frustrations and challenges in teaching speaking

  27. Time to stop. Shhhh.

  28. Report back

  29. Working with speaking

  30. Power Tools Using language to get more language

  31. Controlled to less controlled activities

  32. Repetition and drills

  33. Variety

  34. Dialogs

  35. Using dialogues • Read and look up • Partners make mistakes on purpose • Strip stories – reconstruct the dialogue after hearing it • Personalize the dialogue • Voice variations • Physical variations: standing, moving in line, back to back, etc.

  36. Q: Skills for Success Reading & Writing Intro

  37. Time to stop. Shhhh.

  38. Report back

  39. Information gap activities

  40. Q: Skills for Success Listening & Speaking 1

  41. Free conversation

  42. Structure – direction and narrowing the topic

  43. Q: Skills for Success Listening & Speaking 1

  44. Word Stress

  45. pencil today yesterday tomorrow

  46. in ter es ting In tres ting

  47. Sentence stress and reduced forms

  48. Djeet yet? No, joo?

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