RECEPTIVE SKILLS: Listening & Reading
Basic Principles
- CONTENT
A.Interest
B.Usefulness
II.PURPOSE & EXPECTATIONS
A.Purpose
B.Expectations
III.RECEPTIVE SKILLS
A.Predictive Skills
B.Extracting Specific Information
- Redundancy
- Scanning
C.Getting the General Picture
D.Extracting Detailed Information
E.Recognising Function & Discourse Patterns
F. Deducing Meaning From Context
The Listener/Reader as Active Model Builders
- Systemic knowledge is our linguistic knowledge (knowledge of phonological, syntactic & semantic components of the lang system).
- Schematic knowledge which is non-linguistic info. It’s a mental structure made up of our knowledge, memory & experience which allows us to put what we learn into what we know.
Background knowledge schematic
-factual knowledge
-sociocultural
Procedural knowledge
-how language is used in discourse
Knowledge of situation
-physical setting, participants, etc.
Knowledge of co-text context
-what has been/will be said (written)
Knowledge of the language system
-semantic
-syntactic systemic
-phonological knowledge
Figure: Information sources in comprehension
Anderson, A. & Lynch, T., 1988, Listening, Oxford, Oxford University Press, page 13.
A Basic Methodological Model for the Teaching of Receptive Skills
5 Basic Stages:
- Lead-in
- Teacher directs comprehension task
- Students listen/read for task
- Teacher directs feedback
- Teacher text-related task
TEACHING LISTENING
- BACKGROUND PROBLEMS
What causes the comprehension problems FL have & native speakers don’t?
LANGUAGE
2 assumptions:
- what FL learners are doing is learning a language and no more
- native speakers don’t experience comprehension problems compared to FL learners.
- LEARNER PROBLEMS
- trouble w/sounds
2. trying to understand every word.
3. can’t understand fast, natural native speech.
4. find it difficult to keep up
5. Get tired
- METHODOLOGICAL MODEL FOR LISTENING
STEP 1: PRE-LISTENING ACTIVITIES
- Vocabulary
- Background Information
- Interest
- Motivation
- Interest
- Purpose
- Specific Task
STEP 2: WHILE-LISTENING ACTIVITIES
TYPES OF WHILE READING ACTIVITIES
- Short Responses
- Obeying instructions
- Ticking off items
- True/False
- Detecting mistakes
- Cloze
- Guessing definitions
- Skimming & scanning
- Longer Responses
- Answering questions
- Note-taking
- Paraphrasing
- Summarising
- Long gap-filling
- Extended Responses
- Problem-solving
- Interpretation
STEP 3: POST-LISTENING ACTIVITIES
- THE EQUIPMENT
V. LISTENING WITH VIDEO
- Types of Video
Authentic / Made for Language Teaching
Bought, or recorded from television.
- Feature films (fiction)
- Cartoons
- Documentaries
- News/ Weather
- Interviews
- Game shows (often based on words)
- Ads/ Commercials
- General courses
- Listening practice
- How to (eg presentations)
Strong Points
- realistic
- interesting
- up-to-date
- original
- inexpensive
- adapted to level
- practise specific structure/ vocabulary
- come w/ workbooks
- cued w/ minutes/ seconds
Weak Points
- mainly for higher levels
- no prepared workbook/ exercises
- rather unrealistic
- can be boring
- expensive
- date easily
- Video-Specific Techniques:
- Silent viewing
- Freeze frame
- Sound only
- Methods of Exploiting Language
Grammar
- tenses:What’s he doing/ going to do/ just done?
- retell the sequence
- prepositions:Where’s his hand?
Vocabulary
- description (scenes/ people/ objects)
Listening
- general comprehension
- specific information (names, dates, numbers)
Speaking
- discussion (before/ during/ after: opinion, body language, acting, filming, etc.)
- prediction (guess the end/ create interest)
Writing
- summary