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Teaching listening and speaking
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Published on Feb 03, 2016
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1.
Teaching listening and speaking
From Theory to Practice, Jack C. Richards Presented by Laura Trimble
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Knight Foundation
2.
Listening for comprehension = traditional
Listening for language acquisition = modern
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zeevveez
3.
spoken discourse ...
uses different rates of speech
is unplanned
is different from written language
includes hesitations, fillers, and shortened forms of words
has linear structure (one clause at a time)
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dalbera
4.
Bottom-up processing
Comprehension is a process of decoding (p. 4)
Basis for learning is lexical and grammatical competence
Chunking of information is used
Large vocabulary and knowledge of sentence structure is necessary
Examples: dictation, cloze listening, multiple choice comprehension questi
5.
top-down processing
goes from meaning to language
is based on previous knowledge, context, schemata
Students generate lists of questions and anticipate topic
Students hear a one-sided conversation and try to fill in the missing part
Students complete a story and compare
6.
Combine bottom-up and top-down processing in listening lessons. Include pre-listening, while-listening, and post-listening activities.
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Gwenaël Piaser
7.
listening strategies
Cognitive: Comprehend - store- retrieve
Metacognitive: assess situation - monitor - self-evaluate - self-test
Metacognitive yields positive results (Goh and Yusnita, p. 13)
Pre-listen, 1st listen, pair discussion, 2nd listen, class discussion
8.
"We won't learn anything from input we hear and understand unless we notice something about the input." (Schmidt, p. 15)
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mikecogh
9.
listening for acquisition
Students notice features of the input
Students try to incorporate new items in their own speech
Builds on listening for comprehension
Include noticing activities as well as restructuring activities
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Russell Watkins
10.
"In speaking and listening we tend to be getting something done, exploring ideas, working out some aspect of the world, or simply being together." -Jones, p. 15
11.
teaching speaking
Conversational routines (fixed expressions, functions of speech)
Styles of speaking (reflect roles, age, sex, status, politeness)
Functions of speaking (interaction, transaction, performance)
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CharlesFred
12.
talk as interaction
Primarily a social function
Teach a wide range of real-life topics
Provide examples of natural dialogs
Practice giving feedback to speaker
Teach how to express agreement
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AhmadHashim
13.
Talk as transaction
Focus is on understanding and accuracy
Practice giving and receiving information
Focus on obtaining goods or services
Group activities, info-gap, role plays
Review thematic vocabulary, model, practice and review
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abbilder
14.
talk as performance
Transmit information to audience
Meaning is important, as well as accuracy and form
Provide examples of speeches and presentations
Use video, audio, and written forms for models
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mariskar
15.
As with all lesson preparation, consider the needs of students along with the purpose and goals for student learning.
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kevin dooley
Laura Trimble
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