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Applicationoflisteningstrategiestolisteningteachinginmiddleschool.doc

1、Application of listening strategies to listening teaching in middle school 1. Introduction Among the four basic language skills, listening has long been said to be a passive or receptive skill, which does not need too much effort. However, Vandergrift, a Canadian scholar, says that “listening isn’

2、t a passive activity to the full extent but a quite complex active process.” (Vandergrift, 1999:44) In this process, learners have to tell from speech sounds, apprehend connotations of stresses and tones, comprehend vocabulary and grammar and so on. John Morley defines listening as “everything that

3、impinges on the human processing which medicates between sound and the construction.” (John Morley,1991:88) Many arguments made by scholars have confirmed that listening is an active process rather than a straightforward process of sound to meaning as it is assumed by most people(Michael Rost,1992:3

4、4; Anderson&Lynch,1988:37; Brown,1990:10) It is not until recently that teachers in middle school have gradually realized the importance of listening teaching. For quite a long time, in teaching listening, many English teachers only play tapes, giving no clues to the students. In most cases, they e

5、xpose listening materials to the students, and then conduct tests to examine how much the students have understood in terms of a lot of comprehension exercises (usually in the form of multiple choice) instead of teaching students how to listen and how to deal with their listening problems, let alone

6、 imparting listening strategies to them to develop their listening ability. As a result, listening class is only used as a means of testing students’ listening comprehension rather than a means of enabling them to master listening skills. The students have not been given enough opportunities to prac

7、tice listening or listening strategies. In order to help students improve their listening, a growing number of educators are doing researches in this field. They have found that listening strategies play a positive role in facilitating students’ language learning process (Wen Qiufang, 2002; Field,

8、1998:112). Almost all listeners use listening strategies in language classroom, either consciously or unconsciously. Researches or studies have indicated or shown that the appropriate use of listening strategies can promote language acquisition. So, it is necessary for English teachers to study list

9、ening strategies, to make the students aware of their importance, and to help them learn to use those strategies effectively so that they can learn the target language more efficiently. What the effect of the strategies on English listening has long bothered English teachers. During my two-month te

10、aching practice in English, I showed great interest in this topic. I conducted a six-week experiment in DangGangXinQu middle school in ZhenJiang, with the purpose to explore the effect of listening strategies on listening teaching. Six weeks later, I had a talk with my subjects, from which I got pos

11、itive information. Most students favored my experiment and showed that their listening ability has been improved. 2. Listening teaching in middle school in China 2.1Current situation of listening teaching in middle school in China Krashen (1982:24) once pointed out that in the learning and use o

12、f the languages, listening is the most important part among listening, speaking, reading and writing. 【1】 No matter who the language learners are, children or grown-ups, they will have confidence in language learning only when their listening abilities are fully developed. Thus we can conclude that

13、listening is significant in facilitating a good command of a foreign language as well as in stimulating learners’ motivation and arousing learners’ positive affection to the learning of foreign languages. However, listening teaching in middle schools still lags behind. According to my observation,

14、the classroom of teaching listening in middle schools is only a place where teachers provide students with large amount of listening materials. Professor Wang Zongyan once said, “In listening class, it is not unusual that teachers just play recorders without giving any hints.” 【2】As a matter of fact

15、 in listening class, all that students have to do is to listen to the tape-recorder and then answer the questions, while the teachers simply play the tape-recorder and check the students’ answers. Students play a rather passive role in listening class since they are given few chances to practice En

16、glish. Teachers seldom teach students how to employ proper strategies in listening. This phenomenon results from many causes and the following part will analyze the main causes from aspects of teachers, students and listening materials. 2.2Main causes for current teaching situation 2.2.1 Teachers

17、 Teachers in the listening class are traditionally looked on as guides, or even worse, tape-players. 【3】Most students think they can get little help from their teachers in listening class and teachers think there is little they can do to help the students. Typically, teachers pay too much attention

18、to the teaching of language knowledge rather than to the training of students’ listening ability and strategy-applying ability. While proposing the student-centered teaching methodology, the important role of teachers in the listening class should not be overlooked, a teacher should treat himself/he

19、rself as a guide to impart some techniques to his/her students to help them improve their listening ability【4】. 2.2.2 Factors influencing students’ listening comprehension Generally speaking, successful listening largely depends on students’ themselves. They will do quite a good job if they show g

20、reat interest in listening and they will definitely make great progress if they choose proper listening strategies. Many factors exert an impact on listening activity. From the perspective of the nature of listening ability, we find the factors influencing listening comprehension are mainly linguist

21、ic knowledge, background information and psychological factors. ⅠLinguistic knowledge Linguistic knowledge includes pronunciation, tone, vocabulary, grammar and sentence structure. On the whole, students’ essential techniques in English are not very sound, especially in pronunciation, tone and som

22、e colloquial expressions. Middle school students are insensitive to pronunciation and incapable of distinguishing words’ pronunciation, forms and meanings. 【5】They prefer to spend more time reading than listening and speaking in middle school. There is no doubt that they usually ended up with the we

23、akness of their sensibility to pronunciations and tones, which influencing reception and dealing with input information and preventing the improvement of listening comprehension skills. 【6】 Vocabulary is also one of the main difficulties. There are inevitably some colloquial expressions and some Ja

24、rgons in the listening materials, which students seldom encounter in their daily life. ⅡBackground information Background information refers to other knowledge learners should have in order to comprehend meanings of speeches apart from linguistic knowledge, such as social/cultural knowledge, prof

25、essional knowledge, related schemata and so on. 【7】In listening materials, some information about daily life has an intimate relation with cultural background of English-speaking countries. Sometimes students cannot catch what they have heard not because of their language proficiency but because of

26、lack of the corresponding background information. ⅢPsychological factors Many psychological researches have indicated that people’s affections such as self-confidence, anxiety and so on will have a direct influence on the performance of their listening ability. Most students may become anxious a

27、nd can hardly concentrate their attention on the listening materials while encountering troubles. Under this situation, students’ psychological actions will be suppressed and their thoughts will become slow, which will exert a negative impact on their listening. 2.2.3 Listening materials As forei

28、gn language learners, Chinese middle school students have little access to authentic English speech, which prevents them from getting familiar with many features of spoken language. In listening teaching class, the contents of the listening materials often lose contact with the reality and some spec

29、ific situation; some are usually adapted by teachers instead of coming from the authentic and natural language in real life. They are unfavorable to listening teaching and students’ listening ability improvement. 3. Literature reviews 3.1 Research on learning strategies Since the 1970s, many l

30、inguists at home and abroad have given definitions to learning strategies from different aspects (Stern, 1983; Chamot, 1987; Oxford, 1989). Although there hasn’t been a universally admitted definition by SLA researchers and teachers by now, almost everyone agrees to the following definition: learnin

31、g strategies are means and methods adopted by learners to improve their second language or foreign language levels; they penetrate the whole process of language learning and application; they result from the problems appearing in language activities and serve to solve them; we can find they are flex

32、ible and various and influenced by many factors; they can be dominant external acts or recessive psychological acts that can be trained or learned. 【8】 Since the definition given above is quite abstract, to speak more explicitly, learning strategies are actions taken by learners to make their learn

33、ing easier, faster, more enjoyable, more self-directed, and more transferable to new situations (Oxford 1998:8) Though we often use listening strategies without realizing their value, they do help us a lot in language learning. Wen Qiufang(1999:112) once stated that any strategies applied appropri

34、ately are more likely to spur learners to achieve success. 3.2 Research on listening strategies Learning strategies can improve learners’ foreign language learning; similarly, listening strategies can be used to facilitate students’ listening learning and then to optimize their learning efficienc

35、y. Therefore, learning listening strategies is quite necessary and helpful. 3.2.1 Definition of listening strategies Listening strategies are considered as “any sets of operations, steps, plans, routines used by the learners to facilitate the obtaining, storage, retrieval and use of information” 【

36、9】(Wenden & Rubin,1978:19). In other words, they are specific measures taken by listeners to make their listening process easier and more successful. 3.2.2 Classification of listening strategies Since the study of second language listening strategies is based on the theory of language learning str

37、ategies, most people hold the opinion that second language listening strategies can also be classified by using O’Malley & Chamots’s (1990:99) three-way division of learning strategies. That is to say, listening strategies can be divided into metacognitive strategies, cognitive strategies and social

38、/affective strategies. 3.2.2.1 Metacognitive strategies Metacogintive strategies deal with pre-assessment and pre-planning, on-line planning, evaluation and post-evaluation of language learning activities and of language use events. According to O’Malley & Chamots (1990:101), metacognitive strate

39、gies involve establishing goals, working out a plan, choosing strategies, self-monitoring, self-evaluation and self-adjustment which are especially essential in listening process. In Vandergrift’s(1999:105) opinion, metacognitive strategies can make learners thoroughly know their listening processes

40、 be qualified for the capacity of foresight and error monitoring and finish reflection, evaluation, correcting mistake and find correct knowledge. 3.2.2.2 Cognitive strategies Cognitive strategies involve active manipulation of the listening task. Oxford (1990:56) gives the following examples of

41、cognitive strategies use. 【10】 1) Practicing (for example, using formulas and patterns); 2) Receiving and sending messages (for example, focusing on the main idea of a message); 3) Analyzing and reasoning (for example, analyzing expressions); 4) Creating structure for input and output (for examp

42、le, taking notes). 3.2.2.3 Social/affective strategies Learning a language is different in many ways from learning most other subjects mainly because of its social and communicative nature. Learning a language involves communicating with other people and therefore requires not only suitable cognit

43、ive skills but also certain social and communicative skills. Social/affective strategies entail cooperative learning, questioning for clarification, and affection control over listening experiences. They can help learners interact with other people and gain control over their emotions, attitudes an

44、d motivations. 3.3Importance of listening strategies Many scholars, through their studies, have found that listening strategies do play a positive role in language learning, especially during the listening process. Wen Qiufang (2002:91) thinks the difference of English listening strategies has a d

45、ecisive effect on listening results, if other qualifications are at the same level. Maclntyre &Noels(1996) believe listening strategies are helpful in understanding and mastering listening processes, as they can reduce learners’ confusion and worries in listening, keep their learning enthusiasm and

46、impetus and improve their learning attitudes and driving forces. Just as a saying goes “It is better to teach a man how to fish than to give him a fish.’’ What the students need to learn most is the skills that they can use to facilitate their language learning process. Only when they have mastered

47、 some strategies can they learn independently and autonomously for further studies. Teachers should be aware of the importance of listening strategies and help students master them. 4 Application of listening strategies to listening teaching in middle school 4.1 An experiment on listening strate

48、gy training in a middle school As mentioned in the previous section, the current English listening teaching problems stem from various reasons. It is commonly admitted that there is no single way for successful listening teaching. But with the vast complexity of listening, a great deal more than ju

49、st listening to tapes is necessary. What is required for such success is the persistent use of listening strategies, thus the application of listening strategies is extremely important in listening class. There are three stages in listening activities for language learners: pre-listening, while-list

50、ening and post-listening stages. During each stage, teachers can carry out strategy training for students and stimulate students to consciously adjust their listening strategies in listening. I took the hold of the chance of teaching practice in a middle school gave me a chance of teaching practic

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