Listening Background
Listening Background
Listening Background
PART 1
FOCUS ON
LISTENING
Contents
1. What is Listening Comprehension?.............................................3
7. Summary……………………………………………………………..11
8. References…………………………………………………………12
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Generally speaking, we tend to take listening for granted. Imagine talking to a
friend on the phone and listening to their replies; we accomplish this, without
any noticeable difficulty (Anderson& Lynch 1988).
In reality, all this happens, because listening is the activity of trying to get
meaning from something we hear. To listen successfully, we need to be able to
work out what speakers mean, when they use particular words, in particular
occasions, and not simply to understand the words themselves.
(Underwood1989). No one really knows how listening works; it develops
easily for mother –tongue listening, but, requires considerable effort in a
foreign language (: ibid).
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Perception Skills Analysis Skills Synthesis Skills
LISTENING ABILITY
b. Response
We need to give immediate response to what has been said, either verbal
or non-verbal in the forms of facial expressions, interruptions or note-
taking.
d. Environmental clues
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A real life listening situation is rich in environmental clues as to the
content and implications of what is said. Noises, smells or other sense-
stimuli can contribute valuable background information, such as visuals
and the general surroundings. The level of formality, the amount and
kind of emotional involvement of the speakers, the kind of relationships
existing between speakers and listeners, the prevailing mood –all of
which afford significant assistance in comprehending messages.
3.5 Shortness
Another characteristic of real life listening is shortness of chunks into which
heard discourse is usually broken down into smaller units by the physical
movement of the speaker, pause, audience reaction, changing environmental
clues.
3.7.Redundancy
Redundant utterances may take the form of repetitions, false starts, re-
phrasings, self-corrections, elaborations, tautologies and meaningless
additions, such as “I mean”, “you know”. It enables the speaker to work
out and express what he really means as he goes along, so it helps the
listener to follow him by providing an abundance of extra time and
information to think.
3.8.Noise
Noise occurs when information is not received by the listener because of
interference, or by the fact that a word / phrase were not understood,
because it was mispronounced, or because the listener simply did not
know it. What the listener has to do in an informal conversation is to
request clarification (“Sorry, I didn`t quite catch…”); for non-native
speakers it is often difficult to cope with it.
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3.9 Colloquial language
It is confined to informal conversation with expressions, such as “a lot”,
“get to”, “for ages”, “stuff”, “guy”, than their more formal equivalents
“much/many”, “reach”, “for a long time”, “material”, “man”, making
actual vocabulary and structures different from those of prepared texts.
The reader of transcripts of spontaneous conversations is struck.
4.2. Fatigue
Learning a foreign language is tiring to listen to and interpret unfamiliar
sounds, lexis and syntax for long stretches of time. In listening, the pace is set
by someone else, and the breaks may or may not occur where the listener needs
them. Many foreign-language learners work much harder than necessary aiming
for accurate perception and interpretation of every word they hear; in a long
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listening comprehension exercise, a learner’s grasp of the content is much
better at the beginning and gets progressively worse as he goes on. This is
partly due to psychological phenomenon but, it is also very largely because of
fatigue: the listener runs out of energy necessary to absorb and interpret the
strange sounds.
4.5. Predicting
Prediction is a key process in understanding spoken language, as many writers
(for example, Brown 1978:57-9) have shown. Native speakers use their
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perception of the key features of context (Hymes 1964) and their knowledge of
the world to predict what they are about to hear. This ability to predict, before
and during the auditory input, means they do not have to actively process, every
phoneme, syllable, word, phrase, or even tone group of the message (ELT
Journal Volume 41/2 April 1987). For the foreign language learner, intonation
and stress play an important part for supplying ground for certain kinds of
expectations.
Listeners are able to predict and interpret language by analogy with past
analogy similar experiences. In other words, they have a range of
stereotyped expectations of particular people, places, situations, and text-
types (cf. de Beaugrande and Dressler 1981:184) which they can call up and
use as points of comparison with what is currently being heard and
experienced (ELT Journal Volume 41/2 April 1987).
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5. Remedies in learning to listen to English
5.2.Fatigue
To remove some of the stress from listening,
a. teachers might act out five sounds and ask the students to identify what
they are
b. students, in groups, might construct a story which will include all the
sound effects
c. Students tell the story, including the sound effects (:ibid).
5.5.Predicting
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To predict what will happen next, the teacher should stop the listening transcript
every now and then, and ask from the learners to suggest what will happen
next.
5.6.“Colloquial” vocabulary
To identify particular words in the stream of speech, learners might use two
sections of a reader on a cassette; half the class listens to the half of the story
and decides on ten key words which help them retell the story to the other
group, using their list of key words and the other group listen for the words on
their list and decide on the order they hear them in and then, they compare their
lists and decide on grade of difficulty for each word (:ibid).
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These criteria assist teachers in deciding what steps they should take to
compensate for any deficiencies learners find in listening transcripts and
“how close to real speech” they are and the quality of the recording
(UnderWood, 1989).
7. Summary
Listening is an essential skill for useful communication. Effective
listeners utilize a wide range of information sources simultaneously. In
grading listening exercises we have to bear in mind the three principal
aspects of listening:
a) The type of input
b) The support provided by the listening context
c) The kind of task involved
It is important to provide foreign learners with training specifically directed at
listening skills (Anderson & Lynn).
References
ELT Journal Volume 41/2 April 1987 © Oxford University Press 1987
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