Le, V. C. (2016) - Teaching Listening in Mixed-Ability Classes
Le, V. C. (2016) - Teaching Listening in Mixed-Ability Classes
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INTRODUCTION STRATEGIES 3-4
Thanh Tam Trung Kien
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STRATEGIES 1-2 STRATEGIES 5-6 – Conclusion
Truong Sang Do Dat
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1
Introduction
Teaching and
Learning L2 Listening
Listening is a crucial skill as “it enables language learners to receive and interact with language input
and facilitates the emergence of other language skills” (Vandergrift & Goh, 2012, p. 4)
Listening is a challenging skill to acquire because learners cannot take control of what they hear, the
speed and accent of the speakers, the familiarity of topics as well as the listener’s relevant
vocabulary and content schema.
Bottom-up listening
● A basic aspect of task design and a way to arouse interest. (Ur, 2012)
● Give students an opportunity to “personalise” their understanding.
For example: ask questions as a post-listening activity
● To encourage students to raise their problems.
● Most problems related to phonological awareness and not knowing the meaning => replay a
specific part of the text.
STRATEGY 6. LISTENING
ASSESSMENT
● Students competing in grades => increase anxiety and lower self-esteem (Vandergrift & Goh,
2012).
● A connection between listening practice that focuses on process and formative assessment =>
Formative assessment over summative assessment.
● Formative assessment provides students’ progress and areas for improvement.
● Useful formative instrument: learner checklists; questionnaires; listening diaries
● Teachers can respond periodically or during teacher-student conferences.
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CONCLUSION
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DISCUSSION
➜ Suggested design