An Introduction to Applied Linguistics
particularly in speech, that virtually all communication involves elements of
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Norbert Schmitt (ed.) - An Introduction to Applied Linguistics (2010, Routledge) - libgen.li
particularly in speech, that virtually all communication involves elements of both, in most situations one of the two purposes is dominant. One-way Listening Popular opinion has traditionally linked listening to the transactional function of language and this has strongly influenced the teaching of listening to L2 learners. Until recently it also resulted in an almost exclusive use of monologue for listening practice. It is certainly true that one-way, transactional listening is important, first and foremost in academic settings such as lectures and school lessons. This could be termed ‘listening in order to learn’. Pedagogic discourse has certain well-defined characteristics: density of cognitive content; a tendency towards decontextualization; rather formal language (more like writing); and the need to do something with what has been heard, such as take notes on the content. Other common situations in which one-way listening takes place are watching a film or television or listening to the radio, where the purpose is rather different. Here, the language being listened to is likely to be of the ‘spoken’ variety, although there can be a range of styles from the more formal and prepared (such 183 Listening as a newsreader’s script) to the more informal and spontaneous (such as a sports commentary). Two-way listening Despite the fact that most of our everyday listening occurs in two-way interactions, research studies and pedagogic publications have tended to emphasize one-way, non-reciprocal listening. There is, however, a continuing strand of research into how listeners cope in interactive conversation – notably under the influence of work done at the University of Edinburgh ( Brown and Yule, 1983; Brown, 1995b; Lynch, 1995, 1997; Yule 1997). Two-way listening might be more accurately termed ‘listening-and-speaking’ (Oprandy, 1994) because it involves dialogue or discussion, where different features come into play. The listener’s involvement, or potential involvement, in a speaking role brings costs as well as benefits: the costs include the requirement to respond appropriately, the time pressure in processing what is being said, and the risk of misinterpreting the interlocutor; the communicative benefits include the opportunity to get doubts cleared up straight away and problems resolved. The question of whether the listener is ‘able’ to intervene to resolve problems as they occur raises the issue of whether in the particular communicative setting they feel ‘entitled’ to do so. In Bell’s (1984) framework there are four listener roles in discourse: • Participant – someone who is being spoken to and has the same speaking rights as others present. • Addressee – someone who is being spoken to but has limited rights to speak. • Auditor – someone who is being spoken to but is not expected to respond. • Overhearer – someone who is not being spoken to and has no right to speak. These roles vary both between cultures and within the same culture, and represent norms rather than rules. The use of mobile phones (at excessive volume) seems to be altering listener roles, particularly on public transport. Lynch (2009) reports an incident on a Scottish bus in which one passenger was speaking so loudly that an Overhearer felt ‘entitled’ to become a Participant in the conversation, with the apparent approval of the other Overhearers present. Processes of Listening As we listen, we engage in ‘bottom-up’ and ‘top-down’ processing. A competent listener uses both of these in order to achieve effective comprehension of spoken language, and a key factor in successful listening is the individual’s ability to integrate information gathered via the two. The balance of researchers’ interest in the two processes has shifted over time, as illustrated by special issues on comprehension brought out by two leading journals two decades apart. In 1986, a thematic issue of Applied Linguistics on comprehension contained five papers, of which four addressed issues of context and background knowledge (top-down); by contrast, a 2008 special issue of System on listening featured eight papers, five of them focusing on the ‘bottom’ level in the understanding of spoken language. Bottom-up processing Bottom-up processing involves piecing together the parts of what is being heard in a linear fashion, one by one, in sequence. This used to be seen as a complete 184 An Introduction to Applied Linguistics and accurate description of successful listening – ’listener as tape recorder’ (Anderson and Lynch, 1988: 9). Even if, as we will argue, top-down processing is important, bottom-up processing is indispensable; listeners always have to do some bottom-up processing of what they hear at the acoustic level – for example, discriminating between similar sounds (Byrnes, 1984; Brown, 1990) – in order to facilitate subsequent top-down processing. Listeners vary in terms of how they integrate cues at bottom and top levels. Field (2004) reported an experiment in which L2 learners of English were played a series of sentences whose final word was chosen to be unfamiliar and phonologically similar to a more common word. This was designed to provide a meaningful context for the unfamiliar word, but a contradictory one for the common word – for example, They’re lazy in that office; they like to shirk (instead of work). The results were striking. Of the students who offered an answer, just under half rejected the phonetic/acoustic (bottom) evidence and matched it roughly to a word they did know. The others – more than half of the group – identified the item as unfamiliar and attempted to transcribe its sound shape. Field called these two strategies ‘lexical’ and ‘phonological’, respectively. The fact that the ‘lexical’ listeners wrote down words that were not only semantically inappropriate but also grammatically incorrect underlines the risk of a strategy that is neither bottom-up nor top-down, but ‘potentially overrules contextual information and modifies perceptual’ (Field, 2004: 373). Top-down processing Top-down processing is in some ways the converse of bottom-up: holistic, going from whole to part, and focused on interpretation of meaning rather than recognition of sounds, words, and sentences. Listeners actively formulate hypotheses as to the speaker’s meaning, and confirm or modify them where necessary. Top-down processing has been said to involve the listener as ‘active model-builder’ (Anderson and Lynch, 1988: 11). In top-down processing we rely on what we already know to help make sense of what we hear. The term ‘schema’ (plural ‘schemata’) is used to refer to the prior knowledge and experience that we have in memory and can call on in the process of comprehension. Schemata are of two types: ‘content schemata’ and ‘rhetorical schemata’. Content schemata are networks of knowledge on different topics, for example, earthquakes, and comprise knowledge gained from personal and second-hand experience. When we hear someone talking about a topic that we are able to link to an existing content schema, we find comprehension very much easier. Rhetorical schemata (also known as formal or textual schemata) are based on our knowledge of the structure and organization of discourse genres, for example, an academic lecture or a sermon. An awareness of the genre we are listening to makes it easier to engage in top-down processing strategies, such as predicting and inferencing. Predicting is defined as guessing at the rest of a message based on only part of the information – the information might be only Download 1.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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