Teaching Listening
Listening is the language modality that is used most frequently. It
has been estimated that adults spend almost half their communication time
listening, and students may receive as much as 90% of their in-school
information through listening to instructors and to one another. Often,
however, language learners do not recognize the level of effort that goes into
developing listening ability.
Far from passively receiving and recording aural input, listeners
actively involve themselves in the interpretation of what they hear, bringing
their own background knowledge and linguistic knowledge to bear on the
information contained in the aural text. Not all listening is the same; casual
greetings, for example, require a different sort of listening capability than do
academic lectures. Language learning requires intentional listening that
employs strategies for identifying sounds and making meaning from them.
Listening involves a sender (a person, radio, television), a
message, and a receiver (the listener). Listeners often must process messages
as they come, even if they are still processing what they have just heard,
without backtracking or looking ahead. In addition, listeners must cope with
the sender's choice of vocabulary, structure, and rate of delivery. The complexity
of the listening process is magnified in second language contexts, where the
receiver also has incomplete control of the language.
Given the importance of listening in language learning and teaching,
it is essential for language teachers to help their students become effective
listeners. In the communicative approach to language teaching, this means
modeling listening strategies and providing listening practice in authentic
situations: those that learners are likely to encounter when they use the language
outside the classroom.
Section Contents
Goals and Techniques for Teaching
Listening
Strategies for Developing Listening Skills
Developing Listening Activities
Using Textbook Listening Activities
Assessing Listening Proficiency
Resources
Strategies for Developing Listening Skills
Developing Listening Activities
Using Textbook Listening Activities
Assessing Listening Proficiency
Resources
Material for this section was drawn from “Listening in a foreign
language” by Ana Maria Schwartz, inModules for the
professional preparation of teaching assistants in foreign languages (Grace Stovall Burkart, ed.; Washington, DC: Center for Applied
Linguistics, 1998)
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