Listening Subskills 2

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LISTENING STAGES AND SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES

PRE-LISTENING
What are Pre-Listening Tasks?
The pre-listening stage help our students to prepare for what they are going to hear, and
this gives them a greater chance of success in any given task. Pre-Listening Tasks can:
1. Help teachers find out about what students already know about the topic.
2. Prepare students for the vocabulary and language structures in the text.
3. Help mitigate the anxiety which comes from listening in a foreign language, by
providing a clear context.
4. Offer opportunities for class discussion and more interaction among students.

What Types of Pre-Listening Tasks are there?


Here are some pre-listening activities which can be adapted easily for different classes and
levels, as well as for general English and EAP listening lessons:
1. What’s your guess? Show eye-catching images, maps, or diagrams to help students
guess the theme(s) of the listening text. Students can write pre-listening comprehension
questions, then listen to see if their questions are answered.

2. Brainstorming & Word webs: Give students the topic of the listening and elicit words
from them. With students’ help draw semantic webs on the board with the words, focusing
on the relationships between the words, the topic, and sub-topics that might come up in the
listening.

3. Teach me: Give each student a couple of words and/or expressions. Ask them to explain
the words/expressions to one another in pairs. They may refer to the dictionary if they need
to. Quickly check with the whole group, and students then predict if the words/phrases will
occur in the listening itself. Students can listen and tick the ones they hear.

4. Chinese whispers: Arrange students in two lines, whisper a word/expression to the first
in the line, who whispers it on to the next in line, and so on until the last student in the line
shouts out the word/expression they hear or writes the word/expression on the board. Score
points for correct words. Use a sentence or expression related to the theme of the listening.

5. Sing along: Teach students a short song, a rhyme, or a jazz chant on a topic related to
the text they are going to listen to.

6. Graphic organizers: Give students a blank graphic organizer which summarizes the
information in the text under headings. Students listen and fill-in key words that they hear
in the correct places.

7. Have your say: If the listening involves a controversial issue or question – such as ‘What
should be the minimum driving age?’ – have students give their opinions first. Students
then listen to the text and see what opinions are voiced. You can also have a quick
‘anonymous’ poll, whose results can be revealed at the end of the lesson.

8. Let me read it first: Give students the first lines of the transcript of the text they are
going to listen to. You could even give them the whole transcript and very little time to
read it (just for them to get the gist of the text). Then work on listening for specific
information without students reading the transcript. This is an effective activity for
complex texts with many details.

9. Mime it: If there is a dialog in the listening, mime part of it, to arouse students’ interest.

10. What do I need to do, teacher? Write instructions in point form for the listening in
the wrong order. Ask students to order them. This activity may help relax students for the
listening, as they know exactly what is going to happen next.

11. Note-taking: Discuss the topic with students and have them brainstorm headings to
take notes under. Then brainstorm the sort of transition words they might hear.

12. Who’s who? If students are going to listen to a dialog (or text) with several characters
(and of course if identifying the characters is not going to be one of the tasks in the
listening!) give them an overview of who’s who in the listening.

WHILE-LISTENING
During-Listening tasks are a series of activities that a learner does while listening to a
passage in order to show their understanding of what was heard of.
Well-designed activities can help students to:
1. Identify what’s important in a passage.
2. Perceive the text structure.
3. Keep themselves concentrated throughout the passage.
4. Show their understanding or non-understanding of the passage.
Most While-listening activities focus on these subskills:
 Listening for the gist
 Listening for specific information
 Listening for the speaker’s attitude or opinion

There are many While-Listening activities that you can do, some of the best ones are the
following:
1. Listen and Describe: The teacher tells a story but stops regularly and asks the students
to write or give a description.

2. True or False: The teachers tell a story and the students has to determine if the sentences
that he has are true or false statements
3. Hidden Picture: The teachers give a picture to the students about any particular subject
and one of the students describes a picture and another student has to note down some of
the things that her or his classmate says.

4. Dictation of short passages: This is an activity which has been discontinued but it
helps students to practice skills, they have to listen to the sentences, they have to write them
down, they have to read and say their sentences to their teacher to make sure they got their
sentences right.

5.Dictogloss is a language teaching technique in which students form small groups and
summarize a target-language text. First, the teacher prepares a text that contains examples
of the grammatical form to be studied. The teacher reads the text to the students at normal
speed while they take notes. Students then work in small groups group to prepare a
summary of their work using the correct grammatical structures, and finally each group
presents their work to the rest of the class.

6: Picture Dictation: The teacher describes a picture without showing to the students and
they have to draw it.

7. False Facts Dictation: The teachers read some statements which are false facts and
students has to correct them silently and then they have to discuss them with a partner.

8. Running Dictation: Running dictation involves a text stuck out of view of the students.
In pairs, the students decide who will be the runner and who the scribe. The runner goes
to the wall, memorizes a chunk of text, runs back to the scribe and dictates it. After a minute
or two, the scribe and the runner change roles. The activity is extremely lively, with
students running to and from

9. Listen and Do Activities: There are many listen and do activities such as Simon
Says, stand up if and change chairs if

10. Twelve Questions: Prepare a diagram or something similar with 12 questions that
students need to answer while they listen to an extended passage.

11: Gap Fill: Give students a transcript and ask students to fill in the blanks as they listen
to the passage.

12: Multiple Choice: Ask students to read questions before they listen to the passage and
then they have to select the correct answer out of 3 or 4 options.
POST-LISTENING

Post-Listening Activities consist of tasks which main aim is to help students reflect on the
listening experience. these activities are carried out after teacher have carried out pre-
listening and while listening activities successfully.
What are Pre-Listening and While-Listening Activities?
Pre-Listening Activities prepare the students by getting them interested in the topic and
after that they move on to the next stage in which students are given a while-listening
task which consists of a series of activities that a learner does while listening to a passage
in order to show their understanding of what was heard of.
Some of the most common Post-Listening Activities are the following:
1. Check and Summarizing: One of the activities that a teacher can do to check
understanding is to ask student to summarize the information they heard, this can be done
orally or in writing.

2. Discussions: You can ask students to have a short discussion about the topic, the topic
for the discussion must be taken from the listening task that they previously did and should
be interesting enough to inspire comments and debates.

3. Information Exchange: In this activity, you ask students to listen to a passage and ask
another to listen to a different passage, when they finish, they share they information with
each other and make sure that they understand the message the passage was intended to
give.

4. Problem Solving: Students listen to a passage with the intention of solving a problems
Some problem-solving task types such as solving moral dilemmas and solving mysteries
will motivate students to listen carefully to a passage.

5: Deconstructing a Listening Passage: Most books have transcripts at the back of the
books, those transcripts are often unused but you can use them to exploit features such as
pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar and discourse markers.

6: Disappearing Dialogues: Another activity students can do to promote critical thinking


skills is erasing parts of the dialogue and then asking students to fill in the blanks with
phrases they remember or other phrases that might fit perfectly into the dialogue.

7: Test your Classmates: You can ask students to prepare a set of questions that another
student will have to respond, they can prepare a multiple-choice quiz, short answer
questions or true and false statements.

8: Writing a short composition: After students have listened to a passage, they can write
a short essay based on the information given in the listening passage.
9: Time to Act: After listening to a passage, students can identify a theme and create a skit
and perform it in front of their classmates.

10: Synonyms and Antonyms: Another activity that students can do is identifying
vocabulary and then find synonyms and antonyms for some words in the transcript.

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