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PKB 3053 ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING

METHODOLOGY

TOPIC
2

LISTENING SKILLS

1 HR

Synopsis
This is the second topic in the pro forma. There are four sub-topics. The
discussion covers the definition and concept of listening comprehension
and the problems faced when listening. Also discussed here is how
listening comprehension is assessed and taught.
Learning Outcomes
i.

Understanding the definition and concept of listening.

ii.

Identifying factors affecting listening problems

iii.

Describing how to assess listening comprehension

iv.

Using the different techniques of teaching listening comprehension


in different communicational contexts

Topic Framework

Listening Skills

2.1 Definition and concepts of


listening comprehension
T

2.3 Assessing Listening Comprehension


2.3.1 Nouns
2.3.2 Adjectives
2.3.3 Verbs
2.3.4 Preposition
2.3.5 Tenses
2.3.6 Understanding direction
&instruction
2.3.7 Understand discourse

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2.2 Listening comprehension


problems
2.2.1 Factors affecting
listening problems
2,2,2 Listening
comprehension
problems

2.1

2.4 Techniques of Teaching Listening


Comprehension in Different
Comunicational Contexts
2.4.1 Understanding words and
concepts
2.4.2 Understanding sentences
2.4.3 Listening comprehension
2.4.4 Critical listening
2.4.5 Story reading

Listening Skills

Listening is among one of the important skills in learning a language. For


the acquisition of a language, listening plays a pivotal role. The process of
acquiring a language starts with listening and ends up in the production of
writing.
After birth, a child hears a variety of sounds and can distinguish
among them. Every language has a common and a natural sequence for
the development of the language skills. Similarly English language has the
natural sequence of listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Listening skill
is ranked first of all the four. This highlights the importance of listening skill
in the life of human beings.
Hirsch (1986) stated, Listening as an aspect of skills: involves
neurological response and interpretations of sounds to understand and to
give meaning by reacting, selecting meaning, remembering, attending,
analyzing and including previous experience.
Lundsteen (1979) stated, Listening is a highly complex, interactive
process that has been defined as the process by which spoken language

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is converted to meaning in the mind. As this definition suggests, listening
is more than just hearing.
Wolvin and Coakley (1991) stated, Listening was regarded crucial
for communication at work at any level for employment, job success, and
general career competence and for effective relationship between
supervisor and subordinates.
According to Morley (1991), Despite the recognition of the critical
role that listening skills play in communication and acquisition of language,
it remains one of the least understood skill in language learning.
Pearson (1983) stated that, Listening involves the simultaneous
organization and combination of skills in phonology, syntax, semantics, and
knowledge of the text structure, all of which seem to be controlled by the
cognitive process. Thus it can be said that though not fully realized,
listening skill is essential in acquiring language proficiency. The
importance of listening cannot be ignored as it is the first step towards
language learning.

2.1.1 Definition and concept of listening comprehension


Listening is the active process of receiving and responding to spoken (and
sometimes unspoken) messages. Listening does not mean simply
maintaining a polite silence while you are rehearsing in your mind the
speech you are going to make. Nor does listening mean waiting alertly for
the flaws in the other persons argument. Listening means trying to see the
problem the way the speaker sees it--which means not sympathy, which is
feeling for him, but empathy, which is experiencing with him. Listening
requires entering actively and imaginatively into the other person's
situation and trying to understand a frame of reference different from your
own. This is not always an easy task.
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A good listener does not merely remain silent. He asks questions.


However, these questions must avoid all implications (whether in tone of
voice or in wording) of skepticism or challenge or hostility. They must
clearly be motivated by curiosity about the speaker's views.
Steinberg 2007 said, Listening is more complex than merely hearing. It is
a process that consists of four stages: sensing and attending,
understanding and interpreting, remembering, and responding . . .. The
stages occur in sequence but we are generally unaware of them."
(Sheila Steinberg, An Introduction to Communication Studies. Juta and Company
Ltd., 2007)
There are four elements of good listening:
1. attention--the focused perception of both visual and verbal stimuli
2. hearing--the physiological act of 'opening the gates to your ears'
3. understanding--assigning meaning to the messages received
4. remembering--the storing of meaningful information

In addition to the four elements, there are also four levels of listening,
namely acknowledging, sympathizing, paraphrasing, and empathizing. The
four levels of listening range from passive to interactive when considered
separately. However, the most effective listeners are able to project all four
levels at the same time. That is, they demonstrate that they are paying
attention and making an effort to understand and evaluate what it is they
are hearing, and they complete the process by demonstrating through their
responses their level of comprehension and interest in what the speaker is
saying.
Active listening involves six skills, that is, paying attention, holding
judgment, reflecting, clarifying, summarizing, and sharing. Each skill
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contributes to the active listening mind-set, and each skill includes various
techniques or behaviors. These skills are not mutually exclusive. For
example, paying attention isn't something you stop doing when you start
holding judgment. Nor are the skills consistently weighed in importance. In
one conversation, clarifying may take much effort and time; in another
conversation, gaining clarity and understanding may be quick and easy."

2.2

Listening comprehension problems

Before we begin, lets take a minute to discuss the term listening


comprehension. This skill can be observed when you read to the children.
Listening comprehension can be defined as the ability to recall
and understand information which is presented orally. This information
might be presented through a book, filmstrip, video, or felt board set.
Listening comprehension is a very important skill for a number of reasons.
Firstly, being able to recall and understand information is an
important prereading skill. In order to be a strong reader later on, a child
must be able to recall information when it is presented orally.
Secondly, children who have strong listening comprehension skills
also tend to be good listeners overall. As adults we often spend too much
of our time talking and not enough time listening. Listening is a skill that a
child will use throughout his/her entire life. Developing strong listening
comprehension skills early on will help each child become a better listener
for life.
And finally, strong listening comprehension skills also promote
thinking and problem-solving skills. When listening to a story, the children
begin to develop their own thoughts and ideas about the situations
presented in the story.
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2.2.1 Factors affecting listening problems


There are a number of factors that affect listening and the ability of
the speaker to speak and the listener to listen. In particular, in more
sensitive situations when attention and privacy are important, then external
elements that distract or interrupt become increasingly significant.
Sensory factors
Any factors which affect the senses can either support or hinder listening.
In particular, sudden changes in sensory factors create a contrasting effect
that can be very distracting.
Sights
What you can see can be very distracting or otherwise. Anything moving
and people in particular are distracting, even when we do not know them.
Sitting by a window can be both relaxing and also distracting when
interesting events are unfolding outside. Thus pupils who sit by the window
may be distracted enough not to listen to their teachers.
Sound
A noisy room provides much distraction, as sound is an important element
of listening. People interrupting and asking questions or even talking
nearby are a particular distraction and can put talkers off.
Smell
The human nose is a very sensitive instrument and smells can be very
evocative and distracting. For this reason, listening in a cafeteria or
restaurant may or may not be a good idea. A good chat over dinner can be
very helpful, but sitting in the school cafeteria whilst luncheon smells waft
past may be less desirable.
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Temperature and humidity
It is difficult to talk comfortably if it is too hot, too cold or too humid. If you
are sweating profusely it is not easy to talk or listen.
Decor
The decoration of a room can be relaxing, with pastel shades and subdued
lighting, or it can be fussy, loud and generally distracting.
Physical comfort
The comfort of seating, carpeting and other elements also helps with
encouraging talk. This is particularly so if you are going to be talking for a
while. Therefore in this case a comfortable environment can be important.

Physiological factors
Discomfort
If the listener is uncomfortable in any way then their discomfort acts as a
distraction and reduces their ability to talk or listen. Pain is an even more
extreme version of this, and if somebody is hurting they will not be able to
talk or listen for long.
Illness
Related to distraction is illness. Someone who is ill in some way may first
be more interested in getting better than talking or listening. Illness also
may affect the mind and the ability to focus.

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Fatigue
When somebody is tired, either after physical exercise or perhaps a hard
day's work, they will likely lack the ability to concentrate on listening or be
less ready to talk, particularly about important topics.
Stress
Any form of stress is likely to put the person into a state where they are
less comfortable and are unwilling or unable to talk or listen. Stress should
thus be treated either by an initial winding down to reduce it or by putting
off the discussion until a place and time can be found that is less stressful.

2.2.2 Listening comprehension problems


Why some learners find listening difficult
1.

They are trying to understand every word

Despite the fact that we can cope with missing whole chunks of speech
while having a conversation on a noisy street in our own language, many
people don't seem to be able to transfer that skill easily to a second
language. One method of tackling this is to show them how to identify the
important words that they need to listen out for. In English this is shown in
an easy-to-spot way by which words in the sentence are stressed (spoken
louder and longer). Another is to give them one very easy task that you
know they can do even if they do not get 90% of what is being said to build
up their confidence, such as identifying the name of a famous person or
spotting something that is mentioned many times.

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2.

They get left behind trying to work out what a previous word

meant
This is one aspect that all people speaking a foreign language have
experienced at one time or another. This often happens when you hear a
word you half remember and find you have completely lost the thread of
what was being said by the time you remember what it means. Sometimes
this can also happen with words you are trying to work out that sound
similar to something in your language, words you are trying to work out
from the context or words you have heard many times before and are
trying to guess the meaning of once and for all. In individual listening, you
can cut down on this problem with pre-teaching vocabulary and by getting
learners to talk about the same topic first to bring the relevant vocabulary
for that topic area nearer the front of their brain. You could also use a
listening that is in shorter segments or use the pause button to give their
brains a chance to catch up. But teaching them the skill of coping with the
multiple demands of listening and working out what words mean is not so
easy.
One training method is to get them to concentrate just on guessing
words from context. Another is to load up the tasks even more by adding a
logic puzzle or listening and writing task, so that just listening and trying to
remember words seems like an easier option. Finally, spend a lot of time
revising vocabulary and doing skills work where they come into contact
with it and use it. Show learners how to do the same in their own time, so
that the amount of half remembered vocabulary is much less.

3.

They just don't know the most important words


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Again, pre-teaching vocabulary before each listening as a short term
solution and working on the skill of guessing vocabulary from context can
help, but the teacher must make sure that the learner practice this with
words that can actually be guessed from context (a weakness of many
textbooks) and that you work on that with reading texts for a while to build
up to the much more difficult skill of guessing vocabulary and listening at
the same time. The other solution is simply to build up their vocabulary and
teach them how they can do the same in their own time with vocabulary
lists, graded readers, monolingual dictionary use and so on.

4.

They don't recognise the words that they know

If you have a well-graded textbook for your class, this is probably a more
common problem than not knowing the vocabulary at all. Apart from just
being too busy thinking about other things and missing a word, common
reasons why learners might not recognise a word include not
distinguishing between different sounds in English (e.g. /l/ and /r/ in "led"
and "red" for many Asians), or conversely trying to listen for differences
that do not exist. For example, not knowing words like "there", "their" and
"they're" are homophones. Other reasons are problems with word stress,
sentence stress, and sound changes when words are spoken together in
natural speech such as weak forms. What all this boils down to is that
sometimes pronunciation work is the most important part of listening
comprehension skills building.

5.

They have problems with different accents

In a modern textbook, students have to not only deal with a variety of


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British, American and Australian accents, but might also have Indian or
French thrown in. Whilst this is theoretically useful if or when they get a job
in a multinational company, it might not be the additional challenge they
need right now- especially if they studied English as a second language at
school. In such cases, it is better for teachers to record the conversation
before class, reading all or part of the tapescript out in your (hopefully
more familiar and therefore easier) accent, and giving them a listening task
where the written questions help out like gap fills.
6.

They lack listening stamina/ they get tired

This is a problem with a second or foreign language. You can listen for
sometime until your brain seems to reach saturation point and from then
on nothing goes in until you escape to the toilet for 10 minutes. The first
thing you'll need to bear in mind is to build up the length of the texts you
use (or the lengths between pauses) over the course in exactly the same
way as you build up the difficulty of the texts and tasks. You can make the
first time they listen to a longer text a success and therefore a confidence
booster by doing it in a part of the lesson and part of the day when they are
most alert. Teachers should not overload their brains with new language
beforehand. Instead teachers should give them a break or easy activity
before they start. You can build up their stamina by also making the
speaking tasks longer. They can practice the same thing outside class by
watching an English movie with subtitles and taking the subtitles off for
longer and longer periods each time.

7.

They have a mental block

Sometimes a learner has to struggle with badly graded listening texts in


school, examinations or self-study materials. This experience make them
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feel that they are not able and will not be able to learn the language.
Whatever the reason, before you can build up their skills they need their
confidence back. The easiest solution is just to use much easier texts,
perhaps using them mainly as a prompt for discussion or grammar
presentations to stop them feeling patronized. You can disguise other easy
listening comprehension tasks as pronunciation work on linked speech and
so on.

8.

They are distracted by background noise

Being able to cope with background noise is another skill that does not
easily transfer from the first language. This has to be built up along with
learners' listening and general language skills. Plan listenings for when you
know it will be quiet outside, not during recess time or when the class next
door is also doing a listening session. Cut down on noise inside the
classroom by doing the first task with books closed and pens down. Boost
their confidence by letting them do the same listening on headphones and
showing them how much easier it is. Finally, when they start to get used to
it, give them an additional challenge by using a recording with background
noise such as a conversation during a party.

9.

They can't cope with not having images

Learners find it difficult to cope without multimedia. Therefore teachers


have to set the scene with some photos of the people speaking. This can
help, especially with tasks where they put the pictures in order as they
listen. Using video also makes a nice change and is a good way of making
skills such as guessing vocabulary from context easier and more natural.
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10. They have hearing problems


You might also have learners who have problems hearing particular
frequencies or who have particular problems with background noise. In this
case teachers could try setting most listening tasks as homework and/ or
letting one or more learners read from the tapescript as they listen.

11. They can't tell the difference between the different voices
Voices that are clearly distinct to a native speaker can be completely
confusing for a non-native speaker. Teachers can avoid these problems by
using texts with one woman and one man, or you can practice them with
tasks where the students only have to count how many times the speaker
changes.

2.3 Assessing Listening Comprehension


There are two kinds of listening tests : tests that assess specific
aspects of listening, like sound discrimination and task based tests
which test skills in accomplishing different types of listening tasks
considered important for the learners being tested. When testing, text
selection has to be carried out carefully. Certain aspects need to be
considered. Choose the kinds of listening tasks that learners normally
have to do. In primary schools listening to classroom instruction and
listening to stories, for example, may be considered authentic tasks.
The numner of speakers in a listening test needs to be considered.
Usually, listening to one speaker is easier than to several speakers.
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A talk or story which is read aloud is easier to understand than a
conversation or story that is told. This is because of the false starts and
irrelevant materials or interruptions that occur in conversations and
stories that are told.
The test can be presented live that is the test administrators could
either read it aloud in front of the class or it can be taped. For greater
reliability, taping is recommended. This is particularly important if the
same test is to be administered several times to different classes.
Different people may read the text differently and even the same
person may not read the text in exactly the same way each time the
test is administered. This reduces test reliability. The best would be to
use a clear tape in a room with good acoustics. Video tapes are better
at the early stages than audio tapes. They are more like a live
presentation. They allow the listener to use facial expressions as clues
to meaning. Tapes also have the advantage in that they make it
possible for the pupils to hear a variety of voices and ways of speaking.
Ideally, a teacher should use real language, real conversations, tapes
or stories and so on. In practice, this is not always suitable. Real
conversations often take place in noisy surroundings. This makes clear
taping very difficult. Sometimes it is difficult to get the right length of
tape for a test. And most commercially produced tapes , except story
tapes, are unsuitable for small children. This often means that a teacher
should make his orf her own tapes. Usually, a teacher does this by
reading aloud a written text. This is not a very good practice. Written
language is very different in the way it works. It has to be edited to
make it more like a spoken text.
Some listening comprehension tests are quitely easy to carry ou. As a
teacher you can hold these tests to determine what your pupils
listening problem is thus enabling you to plan your teaching objectives
and strategies accordingly.
2.3.1 Nouns
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To determine if the pupil knows the meaning of the word used
to label things. The easiest way to do this is for the teacher to
say the word and have the pupil point to a picture or object in
question. As an example, to assess if a pupil has understood
the names of local fruits, teacher place a few pictures of the
fruits, then say mango. Have the pupil point to the correct
picture. The teacher can substitute pictures of fruits with
pictures of furniture, vehicles, buildings, parts of the body and
so on. It will be good if the teacher can ask the pupils to point
to real objects.
2.3.2 Adjectives
To test for listening comprehension of adjectives, the teacher
can show a picture of two similar objects but with different
characteristics, and ask the pupil to point to the object with
the named characteristics. For example, to find out whether
the pupil has understood the word thick, the teacher can
show a picture of two or more books, one of which is thicker
than the other. The teacher then says, Point to the thick
book. If the pupil understands, he will point to the correct
picture.
2.3.3 Verbs
To test a pupils comprehension of action words, the teacher
can ask the pupil to either perform the action named, or to
point to a picture showing the action.
For example, the teacher can sayJump and ask the pupil to
show the jumping action.
2.3.4 Preposition
To test the students understanding of words used to indicate
position, the teacher can show pictures of similar objects in
different positions. For example, the teacher can show three
pictures, one of a book under the desk, another of a book on
the desk and the third of a book beside the desk. The teacher
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then says, Point to the book which is under the desk. And if
the pupil can do so, it shows he/she has understood the
preposition used.
2.3.5 Tenses
To test whether the pupil understands present action,
completed action and future action, the teacher can again
use pictures. For example, the teacher can show three
pictures, one of a boy kicking a ball, another of a boy walking
towards the ball and the third of a boy about to kick the ball.
The teacher then says, Show me The picture of a boy who
has kicked the ball..If the pupil point to the correct picture, it
shows he/she has understood the tense used.
2.3.6 Understanding direction and instruction
To test whether a pupil can understand instructions given by
the teacher, the teacher concerned gives the instructions for
the pupil to perform the task given to carry out the
instructions. For instance, the teacher can say, Wipe your
mouth. .If the pupil can carry out as instructed it shows
he/she has understood the instruction.
2.3.7 Understanding discourse
To test whether the pupil can understand connected text, the
teacher can read from a text and then ask questions based
on the text.
2.4 Techniques of Teaching Listening Comprehension in Different
Communicational Contexts
Listening is a difficult skill. You need to make sure that pupils are
always motivated and one of the best ways of maintaining
motivation is to ensure a high degree of success. Build up your
pupils skills and self confidence by making sure pupils understand
clearly what they are expected to do before they start on any
activity. You should provide a context for listening. Tell them what
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kind of text they are going to listen to, either a talk or a story and
where it takes place, for example, in a small town in Sabah. Your
pupils can listen to the same listening input many times, each time
for a different purpose. Make sure that pupils know what they are
listening each time. When pupils listen to the input for the first
time,set them some straightforward questions which will help them
get a grasp of the overall text. You can ask questions about the
main information content, for example, who the speakers are, what
they are talking about and so on.
Prepare your pupils for the main listening task by doing
plenty of pre-listening tasks which will help them succeed in
whatever kind of listening task they are required to do. Ask
questions or set tasks that are appropriate for the level of
proficiency of the student and type of test. Listening and writing at
the same time is difficult. Use formats that require minimun writing,
for example, filling in gaps, completing statements, MCQ,
true/false, circle the best answers and so on.Arrange the questions
in the order in which the answer appear on the tape.Do not ask
questions in the order in which the answers appear on the
tape.Give pupils a chance to read through the questions before
they listen to the tape. This will give them a purpose for listening
and cue them on what to look out for. It also saves them from
having to read the questions and listen to the tape at the same
time.
Listening is a difficult skill and grading input and activities to
the ability level of pupils is very important. Generally we can grade
the inputs to match three groups of pipils namely, the beginners,
imtermediate and advanced learners.
Beginning learners cannot distinguish an English speech
sound from the noises in the environment or the sounds of other
languages they do not know. They have no idea where a word or

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phrase begins and where it ends. They have no idea of the rules of
English pronunciation or grammar.
Intermediate learners have a fairly good grasp of the
phonemic system of English but as most of the listening they did
at the beginners level comprised fully scripted texts, they would
still have difficulty with authentic texts. They would not be able to
handle well such features as hesitations, false starts, background
noise, and so on. But they would be able to remember longer
phrases and sentences.
On the other hand, advanced pupils are very proficient in the
language. The pupil can process the language almost
automatically without paying conscious attention to it. His attention
can almost entirely be on the message content, the interpersonal
relations between the speakers,his own emotional and intellectual
response to what he hears and so on. When the text is incomplete
or there is a lot of background noise, the advanced learner is not
frustrated. He learns to use compensatory strategies. If he fails to
hear something, he tries to infer what it could have been, using
information in the rest of the talk that he manage to hear.
The following are aspects of listening which you can teach and
some suggested activities:
:
2.4.1 Understanding words and concepts
1. Names of objects As far as possible, use actual objects
to teach the names.
2. Verb meanings perform the actions
3. Pictures make use of pictures
4. Concepts of attributes use contrasting attributes, such as
rough-smooth, pretty-ugly, long-short, big-small
5. Development of concepts teach concepts beyond the
object itself. For example, when teaching the word chair,
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help pupils understand that there could be many different
types of chair.
6. Classes of objects The teacher should also think of ways
to teach superordinates or category words like vehicle,
animals and fruits. These words are easy to teach but not
as easy to understand.
2.4.2 Understanding sentences
1. Directions teachers should give simple directions in
sentences to provide the pupil with experience in
understanding sentences.
2. Identifying the correct picture teachers can line up
several pictures. Then the teacher say a sentence and ask
the pupil to point to the correct picture.
3. Function words function words are words like the, an,
behind, and, but and so forth. These words cannot be
taught in isolation but should be taught in the context of a
situation
2.4.3 Listening comprehension
1. Following directions As an example, teacher can read a
set of directions on making something. Have the materials
ready and ask the pupils to follow the directions step by step.
2. Sequence of events Provide the pupils with a series of
pictures that can be arranged in sequence to tell a story.
Read the story and ask the pupil to arrange the pictures
according to the story.
3. Listening to detail Read a story to the learner and ask
detailed questions about the story. Phrase your question as
true or false statements and questions. Use the who, what,
where and how questions.
4. Getting the main idea Read a short story to the student
and then ask him to make up a good title for the story. The

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teacher could also ask the learner to choose the main idea
from three choices.
5. Making inferences and drawing conclusions Read part of
a story that the learner does not know. Stop at an exciting
point and ask the pupil to guess what will happen next. The
teacher could also read a story and ask the learner to provide
different endings to the story.
2.4.4 Critical listening
1. Recognizing absurdities Tell a short story using a word
or phrase that does not fit the story. Ask the pupil to find out
what is funny or absurd about the story. An example of such
a sentence is, I could not lift the toy car because it was too
heavy.
2. Listening to advertisements Ask the pupil to listen to
advertisements and determine how the advertiser is trying to
persuade people to buy the products.
3. Correct me Deliberately make some errors when telling a
story. Let the pupil listen for the details and correct the
mistakes.

2.4.5 Story reading


Listening to stories read by the teachers will help pupils to
develop their understanding of language, improve their
grammar and learn the structure of stories. Teachers should
have frequent reading sessions with their pupils.
For these reading sessions, the teacher:
a. should involve all the children in the story by asking
appropriate questions
b. could make use of predictable books
c. should use well-illustrated books
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d. should reread favourite stories
e. should provide follow-up activities
Exercise 2.
1. Produce some tapes to teach listening for understanding words
and concepts,understanding sentences, listening comprehension,
critical listening and story reading.
2. Based on the information provided on the assessment of listening
skill, create at least three different types of tests. Make sure you have
clear instructions for administering the tests. Make sure the pictures
you use are appropriate.

Take a rest now so that you are fresh for the next topic.

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