Listening
What
and why?
In
common with the other skills of WRITING,
READING and SPEAKING,
there are two main roles for listening in language teaching. The
first is as a goal of learning. It is important for students
to develop the listening skill in order to understand spoken English,
whether on TV, on radio or in speaking to people. The second role,
however, is as a means of learning. Listening can provide
further sources of input and can help the students remember the
words, phrases, grammar, etc. that they are learning. By working
on listening tasks, students can become closely involved with the
language and, in doing so, develop their general language proficiency.
Handled well, listening can thus form a very important element in
the course.
Practical
ideas
-
In the early stages, the emphasis is probably best placed on listening
as a means of learning rather than as a goal of learning.
This means that rather than treating listening as 'comprehension'
exercises, students can listen to texts they have read and discussed
as a way of consolidating their learning. They can also look at
the text while they are listening.
- For
listening to work well, students have to be able to hear! If you
are in a noisy classroom, close doors, windows, turn off fans,
etc. while you are playing the cassette.
- With
larger classes, students can listen in smaller groups while the
other students are doing something else.
- Unless
you are conducting a test, you can allow the students to listen
again if they wish or to pause the tape to check the meaning.
Listening in this case will be useful for learning English generally.
- Control
of the cassette player can be passed to a student. Other students
may then feel freer to ask for things to be replayed or paused.
- Before
the end of a lesson, you can play the listening passage again
as a way of recapping what you have done.
- If
the students are doing a listening comprehension exercise, they
can work in pairs with one of the students listening for answers
to some of the questions and the other student listening for answers
to the other questions. They can then compare afterwards.

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