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Teaching Listening & Speaking

Teaching Listening & Speaking. Prepared by Dr Sabariah Md Rashid. Is listening a component of speaking?. Key Questions about Listening. What are listeners doing when they listen? What factors affect good listening? What are characteristics of “real life” listening?

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Teaching Listening & Speaking

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  1. Teaching Listening & Speaking Prepared by Dr Sabariah Md Rashid

  2. Is listening a component of speaking?

  3. Key Questions about Listening • What are listeners doing when they listen? • What factors affect good listening? • What are characteristics of “real life” listening? • What are the many things listeners listen for? • What are some principles for designing listening techniques? • How can listening techniques be interactive? • What are some common techniques for teaching listening?

  4. What makes listening difficult? • Clustering • Redundancy • Reduced forms • Performance variables • Colloquial language • Rate of delivery • Stress, rhythm, and intonation • Interaction

  5. What types of listening skills are developed? • Microskills - attending to smaller bits of language; involving bottom-up approach to listening comprehension - is achieved by dividing and decoding the sound signal bit by bit.; the ability to separate the stream of speech into individual words

  6. What types of listening skills are developed? (cont’d) • Macroskills - focusing on larger elements; involving top- down approach to listening (listening for general idea; use of background knowledge)

  7. What kinds of listening skills are taught? • Reactive (listen and repeat) • Intensive (listen on a focused sound) • Responsive (listen and respond – briefly) • Selective (listen for particular items in a longer passage) • Extensive (listen for interactive/responsive purposes) • Interactive (listen to discuss, respond, debate)

  8. Principles for teaching listening • Integrate listening into the course • Appeal to students’ personal goals • Use authentic language and contexts • Consider how students will respond • Teach listening strategies • Include both bottom-up & top-down listening

  9. Common listening strategies • Looking for key words • Looking for nonverbal cues to meaning • Predicting a speaker’s purpose by the context • Activating background knowledge • Guessing at meanings • Seeking clarification • Listening for the gist • Developing test-taking strategies for listening

  10. Activity(Take a break!) • With a partner/group, consider some listening strategies. Briefly plan how you might teach these strategies to students. • Report back to the whole group on at least two of the activities.

  11. Current issues in teaching oral skills • Conversational discourse • Teaching pronunciation • Accuracy and fluency • Affective factors • Interaction effect • Questions about intelligibility • Questions about what is “correct” speech

  12. What makes speaking difficult? The same things that make listening difficult: • Clustering • Redundancy • Reduced forms • Performance variables • Colloquial language • Rate of delivery • Stress, rhythm, and intonation • Interaction

  13. Types of classroom performance • Imitative (this should be limited)–repetition drill • Intensive – practise a grammatical/ phonological feature • Responsive – to respond to a question • Transactional (dialogue) – to convey information • Interpersonal (dialogue) – to interact socially • Extensive – monologue (intermediate/advanced)

  14. Do drills have a place? • Yes, BUT….

  15. Guidelines for Drills • Keep them short • Keep them simple • Keep them snappy • Ensure that students know WHY they are doing the drill • Limit the drill to phonological/grammatical points • Ensure that they lead to a communicative goal • DON’T OVERUSE THEM (Excessive use becomes poisonous)

  16. Principles for Teaching Speaking • Focus on fluency and accuracy (depending on objective) • Use intrinsically motivating techniques • Use authentic language in meaningful contexts • Provide appropriate feedback and correction • Optimize the natural link between listening and speaking (and other skills) • Give students the opportunity to initiate oral communication. • Develop speaking strategies.

  17. Sample activities for teaching conversation • Interviews • Guessing games • Jigsaw tasks • Ranking exercises • Discussions • Values clarification • Problem-solving activities • Role plays • Simulations

  18. Should we teach pronunciation? • According to Wong (1987), “sounds are less crucial for understanding than the way they are organized” (as cited in Brown, 2008, p. 339). • Native speakers rely more on stress and intonation than accurate articulation of a particular sound.

  19. Factors that affect pronunciation • Native language • Age • Exposure • Innate phonetic ability • Identity and language ego • Motivation/concern for good pronunciation

  20. When and how should I correct errors? • Global errors - affect meaning; hinder communication - prevent listeners to comprehend some/all aspects of the conveyed message • Local errors - do not prevent message from being understood - minor violation of a segment of a sentence • Performance slip or competence error - e.g. slip of the tongue, spoonerisms

  21. Question to ponder on! • What is your attitude towards errors/mistakes (in speech/writing)? • To what extent has your teaching or learning been characterised by a progression of noticing and repairing? • How does your approach affect your pupils?

  22. Common speaking strategies • Asking for clarification (what?) • Asking someone to repeat something • Using fillers • Using conversation maintenance cues (uh-huh, right, yeah, okay, hm) • Getting someone’s attention • Using paraphrases for structures one cannot produce • Appealing for assistance from the interlocutor • Using formulaic expressions • Using mime and nonverbal expressions

  23. References • Brown, H.D. (2007). Teaching by principles: An interactive approach to language pedagogy (3rd ed). White Plains, NY: Pearson Education. • Richard-Amato, P.A. (2003). Making it happen: From interactive to participatory language teaching theory and practice (3rd ed.). White Plains, NY: Pearson Education.

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