Cambridge First Certificate with native speakers and found that they did less well
than my students. The explanation was that I had trained
the students in the spe-
cific task of storing information from the text; the natives were untrained.
A further incidental problem comes back to the power struggle in con-
versational discourse. An interview is
a very specific type of speech; the inter-
viewer is allowed to play the leader and to ask all the questions,
but must remain
neutral; the interviewee has to respond to whatever happens. I remember once
seeing the film star Danny Kaye being interviewed on television after he had
arrived
at a London airport; he asked the interviewer why she had come to the air-
port and about her life and opinions. The effect was hilarious because it broke the
usual conventions of the interview. While all of us
are passively familiar with
interviews from the media, we are seldom called on to take part in them ourselves.
Listening materials should not stress interviews too much as they are a rather
untypical
and unequal encounter, as described in Chapter 9. It would be better to
use examples of genuine monologues, whether
lectures or stand-up comedians, or
real-life two-person encounters in more everyday settings – the supermarket, the
library, and so on. And it is vital to give the students situations involving success-
ful L2 users, so that they can see models to aim at that
are not just monolingual
native speakers.
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