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Assessing Listening (Listening comprehension has not always drawn the attention of educators. Human beings have a natural tendency.

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Presentation on theme: "Assessing Listening (Listening comprehension has not always drawn the attention of educators. Human beings have a natural tendency."— Presentation transcript:

1 Assessing Listening (Listening comprehension has not always drawn the attention of educators. Human beings have a natural tendency to look at speaking.)

2 Listening Comprehension in Pedagogical Research
-Listening emergence: Listening emerged for language teaching in the late 1970s with James Asher’s work on TPR. - Natural approach: In Natural Approach, the language learners are in the security of listening without the anxiety of speaking. -Comprehensible input: The aural reception of language which is beyond the learner’s present ability was posed by Stephen Krashen(1985) -Researchers ’emphasis: Recent scholars like Rubin(1994)and Mendelsohn(1998) have emphasized on the importance of listening comprehension.

3 Interactive Models of Listening Comprehension (Clark & Clark 1977 & Richards 1983)
1-The hearer processes the constituents what we call raw speech 2- The hearer determines the type of speech event 3- The hearer infers the objectives of speaker through the type of speech event, the context and the content 4- The hearer uses schemata to perform cognitive association. 5- The hearer assigns a literal meaning to the utterance 6- The hearer assigns an intended meaning to the utterance 7- The hearer determines whether information should be retained in short-term memory or long-term memory. 8- The hearer deletes the form of the message but the content is retained.

4 Types of spoken language
Monologue: One speaker uses spoken language like presenting lecture, readings and reporting news Planned monologues: Like speeches and prewritten material/Little redundancy/Difficult for comprehension Unplanned monologues: Like impromptu lectures/More redundancy/Easy for comprehension Dialogues: It involves two speakers Interpersonal dialogues: Promoting social relationships(between people) Transactional dialogues: Factual information

5 What makes listening difficult?
1.Clustering: The division of utterances into parts or breaking down speech into groups and memory limitation (Contrast with written language). 2.Redundancy: Spoken language unlike written language, has a great deal of redundancy to comprehend like repetitions, rephrasing, elaborations and insertions like I mean or you know. 3.Reduced forms:Spoken language contains many reduced forms like phonology(Djeetyet? For Did you eat yet?),morphology(contractions like I’ll),syntax(elliptical forms like When will you be back? Tomorrow maybe)/----Difficulty for classroom learners 4.Performance variable: In spoken language(except for planned speeches) we have some variables like hesitations, false starts, pauses and corrections that make comprehension difficult. But, uh-I also-with this of course if you playing well- if you are playing well then you get uptight about your game. 5.Colloquial language: Using idioms, slang, reduced forms and cultural knowledge in colloquial language make comprehension difficult./ Learners with standard lg = Difficulty in colloquial lg 6.Rate of delivery: The speed at which a person speaks or the number and the length of pauses.(Unlike reading) 7.Stress,rhythm and intonation: The prosodic features are important for comprehension. 8.Interaction:Listening in conversation needs some rules of interaction like negotiation, clarification, signals, turn-taking and termination.

6 Types of classroom listening performance
1.Reactive: Listening should react and process meaning. 2.Intensive:Listening should be intensive and have bottom-up skills.(Here the focus is on some components like phonemes, words, Intonation and discourse that students single out or select some elements of the spoken language, for example, -The students listen for some cues -The teacher repeat a word or sentence several times for them to imprint in the mind -The teacher asks the students to listen to a sentence and notice a point 3.Responsive: Students should listen and be responsive. Using techniques to find their reaction. /Asking questions, Giving commands, Seeking clarification, Checking comprehension 4.Selective: Some techniques promoting selective listening skills are as follows: -people’s names -dates -certain facts or events -situation, context -main ideas/conclusions

7 5.Extensive: EL involves
(On top-down basis not bottom up basis) EL involves -listening to massive amounts of texts which learners can understand reasonably -high levels of comprehension listening without being constrained by pretest questions or tasks- -listening at or below one’s comfortable fluent listening ability 6. Interactive: It involves all five of previous mentioned activities like participating in discussions, debates, conversations, role-playing and so on. Listening should be integrated with speaking.

8 Principles for designing listening techniques
1. Use techniques that cause motivating 2.Utilize authentic language and contexts. 3.Consider the form of listeners’ responses. - the listener respond physically to a command - the listener select from alternatives such as pictures or objects - the listener draw a picture of what is heard - the listener take notes on a lecture 4.Encourage the development of listening strategies. -looking for key words -looking for non verbal clues to meaning -predicting a speakers purpose of spoken discourse -activating background knowledge -guessing meaning -seeking clarification 5.Use techniques that develop listening comprehension competence. 6.Include both bottom-up and top-down listening techniques


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