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he role of listening in language learning
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Teaching English Second Language
he role of listening in language learning
T he majority of Americans are monolingual. But you are now T students may speak two, three, or even four languages. tures. One, your students were expose ir daily lives. Two, at some point your meaningful m to get out of the way, the e of food. And though you y p context made the meaning perfectly clear. Exposure ou are working in a more formal environment, either Y p learning. The first feature to massive amounts of talk to stages of language learning is central the Natural Approach and Total Physical Response discussed in Chapter Two. In both these approaches, learners are allowed large blocks of time to listen before they are asked to speak. Learners' brains are allowed to assimilate, store and process aural information with the learners hardly being aware of what is going on. Think back to your first few days in country. If you didn't know the language which was being spoken all around you, you probably couldn't even tell where one word ended and another began. But after a week or so, while still not understanding most of what was being said, you had probably started to recognize units of sound as individual words. Your brain had been registering, sorting, and classifying thousands of impressions without your realizing it. When teaching English, provide our students with similar opportunities to absorb the sounds of English and to accumulate understanding. y Provide plenty to listen to hat this means is W y r class. Talk about yourself and your family; talk about the Peace Corps, its goals and its different grams; talk about the United States, its educational system, its demography, its diverse agricultural Obviously you will not want to abuse your position by sounding forth on topics which might barrass or offend your students. It would be almost unnatural not to have some compla not the place for you to want your feelings. L er stress Stress can and does block learning. By making sure that your lessons are motivating you can relieve your tudents of the stress and boredom that often blocks learning. A teacher can be very informed, meticulously s organized, and professionally conscientious, but much of this counts for nothing if her lessons are boring or are inappropriately difficult. Your energy and the pleasure you take in your job can transform a dull textbook and put life into a deadening syllabus, and at the same time lower your students' stress level. Your planning and awareness can ensure that your classes are pitched to promote progress and successful learning for your students. et your studen L Pla related to English language learning gives your students exposure to the language. For example, if you have a secondary project running the school's home economics club and your students are sewing or cooking, pla lea These ideas are discussed at greater length in an essay "Learning by Listening," by Eugene A. Nida, in the book I ed by Robert W. Blair. Mean Th to consider is meaningful messages. In the first step your students were exposed to the language, but were not necessarily expected to speak. In this sec reason for doing so. The cyclist wanted room to pass, the bus conductor wanted a fare, the vendor in the market gave a price. The speakers' purposes were clear. The responses expected of the listeners were eq correct fare, or pay for food. Unfortunately many listening exercises in the classroom do not possess the reality of meaningful messages. The give and tak or passage. In order to promote listening for meaningful messages you will need to include a number of real life features when developing your listening activities. Build in response time Many listening exercises are transformed into memory exercises because the listeners' responses come nly after long stretches of speech. You can avoid this by requiring short active responses occurring during ould develop an exercise alled "Detecting Mistakes," in which you tell a short story about the school in which you have included some info a m marked down the correct number of mistakes. Here is an example of a "Detecting Mistakes" story. Download 0.88 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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