TEACHING LISTENING - Užsienio kalbų mokymo · PDF filePenny Ur (1984), Teaching Listening...

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  • Teaching in the Digital Age: training adult learning providers to develop online blended learning modules. Project ID: AD-2010_1a-22838

    TEACHING LISTENING

    In real-life, our students will have to use a combination of the two types

    of listening processes, with more emphasis on top-down or bottom-up

    listening depending on their reasons for listening. However, the two types

    of listening can also be practised separately, as the skills involved are

    quite different.

    Top-down listening means you ask your students to predict the content

    of a listening activity beforehand, using information about the topic or

    situation, pictures, or key words. This activity encourages students to use

    their knowledge of the topic to help them understand the content. This is

    an essential skill given that, in a real-life listening situation, even

    advanced learners are often likely to come across some unknown

    vocabulary. Context and co-text should help to guess the meaning of the

    unknown word, or understand the general idea without getting distracted

    by it.

    Fig.1

  • Teaching in the Digital Age: training adult learning providers to develop online blended learning modules. Project ID: AD-2010_1a-22838

    Or listen and agree/disagree.

    Fig.2

    You can check your understanding with comprehension questions,

    Fig.3

  • Teaching in the Digital Age: training adult learning providers to develop online blended learning modules. Project ID: AD-2010_1a-22838

    or with True/False questions

    Fig.4

    However, if learners understand very few words from the incoming signal,

    even knowledge about the context may not be sufficient for them to

    understand what is happening, and they can easily get lost. For low-level

    learners this may simply mean the lack of vocabulary but higher-level

    students can easily fail to recognise known words in the stream of fast

    connected speech. Bottom-up listening activities that teach the

    language content first can help learners to understand enough linguistic

    elements of what they hear to then be able to use their top-down skills to

    fill in the gaps.

  • Teaching in the Digital Age: training adult learning providers to develop online blended learning modules. Project ID: AD-2010_1a-22838

    Fig. 5

    The post-listening task asks students to think and take notes on the topic

    for face-to-face meeting.

    Fig.6

    Now students proceed with some questions which they have to find

    answers to. Clicking on the check icon gives feedback if students have

    understood correctly.

  • Teaching in the Digital Age: training adult learning providers to develop online blended learning modules. Project ID: AD-2010_1a-22838

    Fig.7

    As the idea is to make students to see the big picture, i.e. to provide

    comprehension of the text, the ROUND IT OFF task gives an opportunity to listen to the video again and also read the script. This also enables to

    see the spelling of the words and look them up in the dictionary, if necessary.

    Fig.8

  • Teaching in the Digital Age: training adult learning providers to develop online blended learning modules. Project ID: AD-2010_1a-22838

    The round off task can be used for building and recycling vocabulary.

    Fig.9

    Adapted from: http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/articles/listening

    Further reading

    1. Anne Anderson and Tony Lynch (1988). Listening. Oxford University Press

    2. Jack Richards, Designing instructional materials for teaching listening comprehension, in The Language Teaching Matrix,

    Cambridge, 1990

    3. Mary Underwood (1989). Teaching Listening. Longman 4. Penny Ur (1984), Teaching Listening Comprehension, Cambridge. 5. Magnus Wilson. Discovery Listening improving perceptual

    processing. ELT Journal Volume 57/4 (October 2003).