Teaching listening as an aim at primary school contents introduction chapter theoretical foundations of teaching listening


 Learning to listen on a communicative basis


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Teaching listening as an aim at primary school

1.3 Learning to listen on a communicative basis
Listening is the basis of communication, mastering oral communication begins with it. It consists of the ability to differentiate perceived sounds, integrate them into semantic complexes, keep them in memory while listening, carry out probabilistic forecasting and, based on the communication situation, understand the perceived sound chain.
Speaking and listening are two interrelated aspects of oral speech. Listening is not only the reception of a message, but also the preparation in inner speech of a response to what is heard.
Thus, listening plays an important role in the learning of English by students of the initial stage of education.
It is both a goal and a powerful learning tool. It makes it possible to master the sound side of the studied language, its phonemic composition and intonation: rhythm, stress, melody. Through listening in the first grade, the lexical side of the language and its grammatical structure are mastered. And at the same time, listening makes it easier to master speaking.
Listening to speech messages is associated with the activity of memory. Memory, along with sensations, perception, imagination, is referred to as sensitive knowledge of the world around by a person.
Imagination always has the form of an image, and memory can be not only figurative, but also logical (memory for thoughts), emotional (memory for sensations and feelings).
The concept of memory itself can be divided into the following components:
short-term - a special way of storing information for a short period of time;
operational, designed to store information for a certain, predetermined period;
long-term memory is a memory capable of storing information for an almost unlimited period of time. When used for recall, it often requires thinking and willpower (therefore, its functioning is not limited);
visual memory is associated with the preservation and reproduction of visual images; auditory memory is a good memorization and accurate reproduction of a variety of sounds, musical and speech. It is characterized by the fact that a person can quickly and accurately remember the meaning of the text presented to him, etc., which is very important in relation to listening, since children at first have to memorize the sound of sounds and words by ear;
emotional memory is the memory of experiences. The strength of memorization of the material is directly based on it: what causes emotional experiences in a person is remembered by him without much difficulty and for a longer period.
These types of memory play a fundamental role in learning to listen, without their sufficient development it is impossible to master the language in general, and even more so speech. It can be concluded that the main mental processes that are involved in listening are the following: memory, imagination, perception and thinking. Thus, by activating these features of the human psyche, we simultaneously develop them, which is a fundamental factor in the comprehensive development of the individual. And, therefore, listening can be considered an integral part of developmental learning.
In the process of teaching listening in the first grade, it is necessary to instill in students a culture of listening. They should understand from the first lessons that the ability to listen is the key to success in learning English. In the process of mastering listening comprehension in English, students encounter a number of linguistic difficulties: phonetic, lexical, grammatical. In the first grade, it is especially difficult, for example, to distinguish sounds by ear: [g - e], [o: - b], [e - i], [i: - i], etc.
Knowing this, the teacher uses exercises that remove such difficulties. He teaches children to distinguish sounds in isolation and in combinations, to hear the difference in the pronunciation of [s], [z], [i] and [p], to hear longitude and brevity, to recognize the quantitative and qualitative characteristics of sounds, rhythm, stress and their meaningful function.
Great demands are placed on the teacher's speech. The main ones are:
- normativity (correctness) of speech,
-- its usualness (that's what a native speaker would say in this situation),
- selection and repetition of language means,
- adequate to the ability of students to understand it,
- emotionality and artistry.
When selecting the material that the teacher himself will use in his oral speech in the lesson, one should take into account the goals that he pursues: firstly, the development of students' ability to listen and understand foreign speech; secondly, the well-known expansion of the passive vocabulary of students and the development of their guesses from the context in the process of listening. The hunch is known to be based on interference, which can be:
1) intralingual, that is, words and phrases located in the neighborhood facilitate the understanding of an unknown word;
2) interlingual, this can include tracing paper, international and borrowed words;
3) extralinguistic, certain facts and historical events associated with a given linguistic community contribute to the understanding of unknown words.
All these clues must be present in the listening material, as it, firstly: trains the language guess in students, which is necessary for the functioning and creation of a potential vocabulary of students; secondly: unknown words are semantized, which is very important for expanding the “vocabulary”; and, finally, thirdly: due to the fact that with the help of a developed linguistic guess, difficulties associated with the nature of the language material, with the language form of the message, with its semantic content are overcome - listening learning is becoming more and more effective and successful, which contributes to the overall intellectual student development.
So dialogue with the teacher is the leading form of introducing students to oral speech in a foreign language, and therefore one of the means of transition directly to listening.


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