Ministry of Education and Science of Kazakhstan
Kazakh University of International Relations and World Languages named
after Abylai Khan
Pedagogical Faculty of Foreign Languages
The Department of Linguistics Teaching Methods
Course paper
Discipline: Methods of teaching foreign languages
Theme: Listening comprehension in English language teaching
Specialty: 5В011900
Written by: Shonmurynova A.O 318 group
Almaty, 2013
Plan:
Bibliography
Introduction
The purpose of research –
is a scientific and theoretical basis
and practical development of the methods
of teaching in a professionally-oriented listening
comprehension as a
means of communication in
a non-linguistic pedagogical
institute.
Object of research
– is a process of learning professionally-oriented listening
comprehension on a practical training in
a foreign language in the
non-linguistic pedagogical university.
Subject of research
– is a method of teaching students
of psycho-pedagogic university to
professionally-oriented listening comprehension
which based on correction, development
and improvement of psychological mechanisms of
speech by purposefully chosen
strategies.
Methods of research were chosen for the
specific subject, object, and
purpose of work:
- Analysis of
the scientific literature on psycholinguistics,
linguistics, psychology and methods of teaching
foreign languages;
- Experiential
learning of students of
psycho-pedagogical profile to
test the rationality of
the developed technique training of professionally-oriented listening as
an important component of professional business
and intercultural communication
competence;
Scientific novelty of the research paper lies in the fact that:
-
developed learning strategies
of students in
psycho-pedagogical profile of listening
and understanding the message on
professional topics.
-
Offered professionally-oriented listening
comprehension by taking into account the
interaction of its mechanisms
providing professional skills in listening
that will successfully carry
out professional activities in the future.
Structure of the research paper – is a content of work, which set
out for pages
of main text, and includes an
introduction, two chapters, a
conclusion, a bibliographic list of 14
names.
Objectives of the research paper - teaching
listening as an
indirect form of communication in non-linguistic institution is
interconnected with other kinds of
speech activity. The purpose of
this training is to improve the skills
and abilities to perceive, remember, anticipate, and
comprehend professionally relevant
information.
Foreign languages have been taught formally for centuries and records of language teaching materials have been around
for over 500 years. [8,p.139]. However, teaching listening comprehension
as a part of teaching a foreign or second language is a relatively recent
development whose history lies mostly in the last thirty years. In the
earliest of teaching methods known, the grammar-translation method,
learners focused exclusively on the analysis of written texts. Listening
was used solely to accompany these texts and to provide models for oral
reading. It was not until the late 1800s that listening was used in
language instruction as a means of developing oral communication[8,p.139].
It was assumed that students would simply acquire the ability to understand
the spoken form of the language if they occasionally heard their teacher
speak it or listened to a tape of it being spoken. It was quickly demonstrated
that this approach was simply not working.
This led to the development of the direct method in which oral presentations and aural comprehension
were emphasized. The target language was exclusively used in the classroom
and translation was proscribed. Second language learning was intended
to proceed largely as first languages were learned - moving from tangible
situations to more abstract ones. Initially, only everyday, concrete
vocabulary and sentences were taught. Oral communication was initiated
by the teacher through question-answer exchanges with the learners.
All new language was taught through demonstrations, objects and pictures,
much the way that a child is immersed in visual contexts and oral language.
The direct method, which was initially designed for small group
teaching, was eventually adapted for use with larger groups and for
teaching the four skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing).
This new style of teaching, which emanated from England, was later dubbed
the oral approach because all lessons started with oral presentations
[8,p.140]. Dialogues in which new grammar patterns and vocabulary were
introduced were modeled by the teacher. The learners repeated chorally,
trying to imitate the teacher’s pronunciation. Oral drills, based
on the dialogues, were devised to reinforce these new language points,
initially through a listening mode. Eventually, learners were given
reading and writing assignments using the structures and words they
had practiced.
At about the same time that the oral approach was being developed
in Europe, American linguists began to propagate a somewhat more extreme
approach called the audio-lingual method[8,p.140]. In this approach also, the emphasis
was on oral presentation and oral drills. The purpose of this method
was to retain learners to think in the new language by helping them
to form new habits, a view that was obviously driven by the behavioral
psychology that was popular at the time.
Although these oral-aural methods helped many pupils learn second
languages, there has been a gradual decline in their popularity.
Starting in the 1970s, there was a worldwide rethinking of the principles
involved in second language teaching. The result of this came to be
known as communicative language teaching, a movement that emphasized not just the importance
of oral language in language acquisition, but the use of realistic and
authentic social language[8,p.140]. The communicative language teaching
movement gave rise to the use of audio and later video material which
reflected authentic language in use. Learners were no longer exposed
to ideal grammar and vocabulary samples of oral language. Instead, they
were given a steady exposure to situational dialogues and language fictions.
Simultaneous to the development of communicative language teaching,
the study of second language acquisition became an accepted and increasingly
respected discipline within linguistics and social science. [1; 2; 8;].
I. The principles of teaching listening comprehension
1. Reasons for teaching listening comprehension
One of the main reasons for getting students to listen to spoken English
is to let them hear different varieties and accents - rather then just
the voice of their teacher with its own idiosyncrasies. In today’s
world, they need to be exposed not only to one variety of English
(British English, for example) but also to varieties such as American
English, Australian English, Caribbean English, Indian English or West
African English.
There are, of course, problems associated with the issue of
language variety. Within British English, for example, there are many
different dialects and accents. The differences are not only in the
pronunciation of sounds (‘bath’ like ‘laugh’ vs. ‘bath’ like ‘cat’) but also in grammar (the use of ‘shall’ in northern
varieties compared with its use in ‘Standard English’ - the southern,
BBC-type variety). The same is of course true American, Indian or West
African English.
Despite the desirability of exposing students to many varieties of
English, however, common sense is called for. The number of different
varieties (and the degree to which they are different from the one students
are learning) will be a matter for the teacher to judge. But even if
they only hear occasional varieties of English, which are different
from the teacher’s, it will give them a better idea of the world language,
which English has become.
The second major reason for teaching listening is because it helps
students to acquire language subconsciously even if teachers do not
draw attention to its special features. Exposure to language
is a fundamental requirement for anyone wanting to learn it. Listening
to appropriate tapes provides such exposure and students get vital information
not only about grammar and vocabulary but also about pronunciation,
rhythm, intonation, pitch and stress.
Lastly, students get better at listening the more they do it. Listening
is a skill and any help we can give students in performing that skill
will help them to be better listeners. [5,p.97-98].
2. What is listening?
In order to define listening, we must outline the main component skills
in listening. In terms of the necessary components, we can list the
following:
discrimination between sounds
recognizing words
identifying grammatical groupings of words
identifying ‘pragmatic units’ - expressions and sets of
utterance which function as whole units to create meaning
connecting linguistic cues to paralinguistic cues (intonation and
stress) and to nonlinguistic cues (gestures and relevant objects in
the situation) in order to construct meaning
using background knowledge (what we already know about the content
and the form) and context (what has already been said) to predict and
then to confirm meaning
recalling important words and ideas
Successful listening involves an integration of these component
skills. In this sense, listening is a coordination of the component
skills, not the individual skills themselves. This integration of these
perception skills, analysis skills, and synthesis skills is what we
call a person’s listening ability. [9,p.4].
Even though a person may have good listening ability, he or she may
not always be able to understand what is being said. In order to understand
messages, some conscious action is necessary to use this ability effectively,
so it is not possible to view it directly, but we can see the
effects of this action. The underlying action for successful listening
is decision making. The listener must make these kinds of decisions:
What kind of situation is this?
What is my plan for listening?
What are the important words and units of meaning?
Does the message make sense?
Successful listening requires making effective ‘real time’ decisions
about these questions. In this sense, listening is primarily a thinking
process - thinking about meaning. Effective listeners develop a useful
way of thinking about meaning as they listen. The way in which listener
makes these decisions is what we will call a listening strategy[9,p.4].
3. Principles for developing listening ability
Using general knowledge about language skill development, we
can draw up some guidelines for developing listening ability:
Listening ability develops through face-to-face interaction.
By interacting in English, learners have the chance for new language
input and the chance to check their own listening ability. Face-to-face
interaction provides stimulation for development of listening for meaning.
Listening develops through focusing on meaning and trying to learn
new and important content in the target language.
By focusing on meaning and real reasons for listening in English, learners can mobile both their linguistic
and non-linguistic abilities to understand.
Listening ability develops through work on comprehension activities.
By focusing on specific goals for listening, learners can evaluate their efforts
and abilities. By having well-defined comprehension activities, learners
have opportunities for assessing what they have achieved and for revision.
Listening develops through attention to accuracy and an analysis of
form.
By learning to perceive sounds and words accurately as they work on meaning-oriented activities, our
learners can make steady progress. By learning to hear sounds and words
more accurately, learners gain confidence in listening for meaning [9,p.7].
4. The purpose and nature of the listening comprehension programme
The following main goals are suggested for the listening comprehension
programme:
To give the learners experience of listening to a wide variety of
samples of spoken language. The purpose here, then, is exposure
to:
Different varieties of language (standard/regional, formal/informal
etc.);
Different text types (conversational, narrative, informative etc.).
The motivation for the learner should be pleasure, interest, and a
growing confidence at being able to understand the spoken language
without reference to the written form.
To train the learners to listen flexibly
e. g. for specific information, for the main idea or ideas, or to react
to instructions (i. e. by doing something). The motivation for this
type of listening will come from tasks, which are interesting in their
own right, and which will focus the learners’ attention on the material
in an appropriate way.
To provide, through listening, a stimulus for other activities e.
g. discussion, reading and writing.
To give the learners opportunities to interact
while listening. In the classroom this must be done largely through
discussion-type activities and games, where listening forms a natural
part of the activity. This type of activity will be done mostly in small
groups, but there are occasions when the teacher can profitably interact
with the whole class [1,p.15].
II. The structure of listening comprehension and types of activities
1.Organisation of listening comprehension
Listening comprehension is divided into four main sections:
Section I. Attentive listening
Section II. Intensive listening
Section III. Selective listening
Section IV. Interactive listening
Each section helps students develop a range of skills and strategies.
Section I: Attentive listening is designed to give students practice with
listening and with supplying short responses to the speaker, either
verbally or non-verbally (through actions). Because this kind of ‘responsive’
listening involves immediate processing of information and quick decisions
about how to respond, the activities in Section I provide a great deal
of support to help the learners ‘process’ the information they hear.
The support is of three types: linguistic, in the form of cue words and previewed utterances, non-linguistic, in the form of visual aids, photographs, tangible
objects and music used in the activity, and interactional, in the form of repetitions, paraphrases and
confirmation checks by the speaker. By providing this support, the activities
allow the teacher to introduce real-time listening practice to students
at all levels, including beginners. Because the support in each activity
can be varied, teachers can utilize these activities with more proficient
students as well, to help them increase their attention span for spoken
English.
Section II: Intensive listening will focus the students’ attention on
language form. The aim of this section is to raise the learners’ awareness
of how differences in sound, structure, and lexical choice can affect
meaning. Because this kind of listening involves an appreciation of
how form affects meaning, all of the activities in this section are
contextualized - placed in a real or easily imagined situation [9,p.10].
In this way, all students - even beginners - can practice intensive
listening in a context of language use, from which it is most likely
to transfer to ‘real life’ listening situation. Because the activities
in this section require attention to specific contrasts of form - grammatical, lexical, or phonological -
the teacher can easily adapt the activities to more proficient students
by increasing the complexity of the language forms.
Section III: Selective listening will help enable students to identify a
purpose for listening. By providing focused information-based tasks,
the activities in Section III help direct the students’ attention
on key words, discourse sequence cues, or ‘information structures’
(exchanges in which factual information is given). By learning to attend
to words, cues, and facts selectively, students at all levels come to handle short naturalistic
text (such as announcements) as well as longer and more complex texts
(such as authentic video programmes). Because the task support in these
activities can b adjusted, Section III is useful for students at all
proficiency levels.
Section IV: Interactive listening is designed to help learners assume active
roles in shaping and controlling an interaction, even when they are
in the ‘listener’s role’. Because it is important for learners
to take an active role as listeners, each activity in this section has
a built-in need for information or classification questions by the listener.
In order to work toward the goal of active participation by the listener,
the students themselves - rather than the teacher or an audio or video
tape - become the focus of the activity. To this end, in Section IV,
listening skills are developed in the context of interaction - mainly
through information gap pair work, jigsaw groups, and student presentations
and reports [9,p.10].
2. Activities and procedures
1. ‘Exposure’ listening
The material for this will consist mainly of:
Stories, anecdotes, jokes, talks, commentaries (i. e. with one speaker
only)
Most learners need practice in listening to material with a single
speaker only, so that they do not have the added difficulty of trying
to identify the speakers when they cannot see them. The material may
be recorded or improvised by the teacher.
Conversations, discussions, plays (
i. e. with more than one speaker)
The students will need to be given some background e. g. about
the speakers. For plays they may actually need to follow the written
text.
Songs (both traditional and pop)
These provide a good form of listening because the students are generally
very much concerned to make out the words[12,p.28].
Videos and films
Clearly there is great advantage in using wherever possible recorded
material where the students can see what is happening (even if it is
only two people talking) as well as listen [1,p.16].
2. Task listening
The number of possible activities here is virtually limitless, although
it is intended that the list below cover key areas.
Ear-training
In distinguishing between key sounds, stress and intonation patterns.
Most learners need, enjoy and will benefit from activities, which
will help to improve their receptive ability in these areas, especially
if they are presented in a game-like way.
Game-like activities
‘Simon says” and variations on the game of ‘Bingo’ are effective
ways of getting learners to respond to instructions, listen out
for specific items and so on. Many language games depend for their success
on students listening [1, p.17].
Instructions
Activities such as picture dictation, where the students have to draw
a picture which the teacher (or another student) talks about
without showing them; completing a map or picture; following a route
on the map in order to arrive at a particular place; arranging objects
(e. g. pictures on an outline scene), involve careful listening without
requiring a verbal response (unless the listeners ask for clarification).
Completion-type activities
For these the students have an incomplete version of a story, a description
or a song (words, phrases or sentences omitted) which they have to complete
either while they listen or afterwards.
Identifying mistakes or contradictions
For example an object (thing, person or place - either real or in
pictorial form) is described and the students have to listen and note
down any mistakes. Similarly a text (a story or description)
containing internal contradictions can be used for the same purpose.
Finding differences
The students hear, for example, two versions of a story or two accounts
of an event and have to identify the points of difference.
Problem-solving
For example, the students are shown pictures of 3-4 people,
places, events and listen to one of these being described. Their task
is to decide which item is being talked about. Students may also be
asked to categorize on a worksheet items mentioned in a conversation
or discussion.
Extracting information
This is one of the commonest types of listening tasks. For this the
students will probably need a chart of some kind, which they have to
fill in according to specific instructions. For example, if they are
listening to a broadcast they may be asked to note down the main
topics or, on an easier level, decide in what order they occur in the
talk.
For tasks, which involve extracting information, it is often desirable
to define the role of the listener so that he has a clear purpose
for carrying out the task [1,p.17].
3. Listening as a
stimulus to other activities
The activities in this section are specially designed to lead on to
activities involving other skills.
Jigsaw listening
As its name implies, the basic mechanism underlying this activity
is that the information needed to complete a task (such as attending
a meeting) has been shared out between 3-4 groups in the class. Each
group listens to its own piece of recorded material and notes down on
a worksheet the information available. The groups then combine to pool
their information.
Ambiguous conversations
The students hear a short conversation (or an extract from a long
conversation), which provides very few clues as to what the speakers
are talking about. The students themselves have to decide who
the speakers are, where they are, what they are talking about, and,
possibly, what will happen next. This type of listening then, leads
on naturally to discussion (and, if desired, writing).
Decision-making
The students are given some information e. g. about a town
(places of interest, facilities etc.) in the form of a talk or conversation,
on the basis of which they have to plan a visit. The planning involves
discussion and note making. Decision-making activities can also involve,
for example, making choices between places, events, activities, for
which the background information is made available in recorded form.
Pre-writing activity
This can be in the form of a communication game. One student describes
a picture, which the others in the group are not allowed to see.
The students who are listening make notes (and can also ask questions
if they want more information). They then use these notes to write a
description of the picture [1,p.18]
4. Interactive listening
Most interactive listening situations are in the form of discussions
and games. Two important points need to be kept in mind.
First, these activities form the basis of oral work, where the emphasis
is on getting the learners to use language for self-expression. It should
not be forgotten, however, that listening is an important aspect
of these activities. The learners have to listen in order to participate.
Secondly, although these activities are normally done in groups, in
order to give the students themselves as many opportunities as
possible to use language, we should also look for suitable opportunities
to interact with the class as a whole, through conversation, discussion
and games. This must be regarded as a significant component of the listening
comprehension programme.