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Topic: Listening Comprehension

Topic: Listening Comprehension. General objectives: Students will be able to teach listening comprehension with communicative approach. Students will be able to integrate listening with speaking, reading and writing. Lesson One Communicative Approaches to Listening Comprehension.

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Topic: Listening Comprehension

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  1. Topic: Listening Comprehension • General objectives: • Students will be able to teach listening comprehension with communicative approach. • Students will be able to integrate listening with speaking, reading and writing.

  2. Lesson One Communicative Approaches to Listening Comprehension • Pre-task activities • Step One: elicit Kinds of real-life listening • Step Two: elicit characteristics of Real-life listening • Step Three: introduce two approaches to listening--- Bottom-up and top-down • Step Four: identifying different types of listening texts. • Step Five: elicit difficulties in listening to English • as a foreign language. • Step Six: tips in design a listen task • While-task activities • Step Seven: students giving a lesson of listening comprehension. • Post-task activities • Step Eight: students evaluate the lessons.

  3. 1. Real-life listening • 1.1 Kinds of real-life listening • 1.2 Characteristics of Real-life listening • 1.3 Two approaches to listening--- Bottom-up and top-down • 2. Listening to English as a • foreign language. • 2.1 Identifying different types of listening • 2.2 Difficulties in listening to English • as a foreign language. • 3. How to design a listening tasks?

  4. 1.1 Kinds of real life listening • Telephone conversations • Lectures • Instructions • Movies • Songs • Radio • Television • ……

  5. 1.2 Characteristics of Real-life listening l    Spontaneity lPurpose and expectation • lResponse • l Speaker’s adjustment • l        Context • l Visual clues • lShortness • lInformal speech • Redundancy • Noise • Colloquial language • Auditory character

  6. 1.3 Two approaches to listening--- Bottom-up and top-down • Listeners segment the stream of speech into its constituent sounds, link these together to form words, chain the words together to form clauses and sentences and so on . The view is known as the bottom-up approach to listening, • The use of inside the head knowledge, that is knowledge which is not directly encoded in words is known as the top-down view of listening.

  7. 2. Listening to English as a foreign language2.1 A classification of aural texts • Aural texts •   Monologue Dialogue Planned Unplanned interpersonal Transactional Recorded video-taped live Planned Unplanned Planned Unplanned • Unfamiliar Familiar U F U F U F • R V L R V L R V L R V L R V L

  8. 2.2 Difficulties in listening to English as a foreign language • lHearing the sounds • lUnderstanding intonation and stress • lCoping with redundancy and background‘noise’ • l Speed • l Heard only once • l No pause • lPredicting • lUnderstanding colloquial vocabulary • lFatigue • lUnderstanding different accents • l Simultaneously tasks

  9. 3.How to design a listening tasks? lA pre-set purpose • lMotivation • lSuccess • lSimplicity • lFeedback • lVisual materials • l  Combining listening and speaking

  10. Suggestions for classroom activities • Listening for perception • Listening for comprehension

  11. Listening for perception • At word-level • Oral activities • Reading and writing activities • Meaning-based activities • At sentence-level • Oral activities • Reading and writing activities • Meaning-based activities

  12. At word-level • Oral activities • (1)repetition • (2)which category (man men ) ? pen cat rap • 1 2 • (3) same or different ? pin pin bin pin • Reading and wring activities • (1)Reading the right words • A. bat B. bet C.but • (2)writing the right words

  13. At sentence-level • Oral activities • (1)repetition • (2)identifying word-divisions (how many words) • Reading and wring activities • (1) identifying stress and unstress eg • I’m ˊterribly ˊtired. Iˊthink I’ll go and have a ˊrest. • (2)identifying intonation • ……………………………………………….. • (3)dictation

  14. Listening for comprehension • Listening and making no response • Listening and making short response • Listening and making longer response • Listening as a basis for study and discussion

  15. Listening and making no response • Following a written text • Listening to a familiar text • Listening aided by visuals • Informal teacher-talk • Entertainment

  16. Listening and making short response • (1)obeying instructions • a, physical movement • b, constructing models • c, picture dictation • (2)ticking off items • (3)true/false exercises • (4)detecting mistakes • (5)aural cloze • (6)guessing definitions • (7)noting specific information

  17. Listening and making short response • (8)pictures • a, identifying and ordering • b, altering and marking • (9)maps • a, naming features • b, alterations • (10)ground-plan • (11)grids • (12)family tree • (13)graphs

  18. Grid

  19. graph

  20. ground-plan

  21. Listening and making longer responses • Repetition and dictation • Paraphrase • Translation • Answering questions • Answering comprehension questions on texts • Predictions • Filling gaps • Note taking • Summarizing

  22. Listening as a basis for study and discussion • Problem-solving • Jigsaw listening • Interpretative listening • Evaluative and stylistic analysis

  23. Lesson Two The Dictogloss Approach • Pre-task activities • Step One: preparation • While-task activities • Step Two: dictation • Step Three: reconstruction . • Post-task activities • Step Four: Analysis and correction.

  24. The dictogloss approach • 1. Preparation • 2. Dictation • 3. Reconstruction • 4. Analysis and correction.

  25. 1. Preparation. • At this stage. teachers prepare students for the text they will be hearing by asking questions and discussing a stimulus picture. by discussing vocabulary ,by ensuring that students know what they are supposed to do and by ensuring that the students are in the appropriate groups.

  26. 2. Dictation • Learners hear the dictation twice. The first time. they listen only and get a general feeling for the text. The second time they take down notes. Being encouraged to listen for content words which will assist them in reconstructing the text. For reasons of consistency, it is preferable that students listen lo a cassette recording rather than teacher-read text

  27. 3. Reconstruction At the conclusion of the dictation, learners pool notes and produce their version of the text . During this stage it is important that the teacher does not provide any language input.

  28. 4. Analysis and correction • There arc various ways of dealing with this stage. The small group versions can be reproduced on the board or overhead projector. The texts can be photocopied and distributed or the students can compare their version with the original sentence by sentence .

  29. Advantages of dictogloss • The dictogloss technique provides a useful bridge between bottom-up and top-down listening. In the first instance, learners are primarily concerned with identifying individual elements in the text - a bottom-up strategy. However, during the small group discussions, some or all of the following top-down strategies might be employed. In all of these the listener will integrate background. `inside the head' knowledge with the clues picked up during the dictation . • 1 . Listeners will make predictions. • 2. Listeners will make inferences about things not directly stated in the text • 3. Listeners will identify the topic of the text. • 4. Listeners will identify the text type (whether it is a narrative. description. anecdote etc. ). • 5. Listeners will identify various sorts of semantic relationships in the text

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