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Teachers' Tip![]()
Here are some helpful tips we've compliled about teaching. We hope they prove useful. If you have any other suggestions of comments, please contact us.
Making listening tasks easier, part 1There are several ways to alter a listening task to make it easier. First you have to decide what the problem is, and then come up with a workable solution.
Problem It's too long; students can't keep up the level of concentration needed to complete the task Solution 1. Don't use all the listening passage. Read through the teacher's copy and decide what would be a good place to stop. You may of course have to alter the task set as well, but that's better than getting all the students depressed because they can't do what's asked of them. 2. Make it a split listening, where the students get to listen to part of the text in groups, and then put the various parts together to recreate the entire text. This approach also introduces speaking skills and group work to add to the effectiveness of the listening text. 3. Give students information about the listening passage, so that they don't go into it 'blind'. Knowing that a listening passage is about X and is an argument between A and B will make students aware unconsciously and they will expect two sides of an argument and have some idea about the lines along which the speakers will speak. Making listening tasks easier, part 2There are several ways to alter a listening task to make it easier. First you have to decide what the problem is, and then come up with a workable solution. Problem It's too difficult; students find it difficult to understand what the speakers are saying.
Solution 1. Give students the tapescript. They will then be able to understand the speakers and follow the words as they listen. Their listening skills will still be tested, but they will have a crutch to help them. Make sure you don't give them time to read the whole passage before they listen to it, otherwise you will partly defeat the object of the listening exercise. If you feel uncomfortable giving them the tapescript with the listening passage, you can adapt this by giving them the tapescript for three minutes, or the tapescript with every second line missing, or part of the tapescript etc. 2. Adapt the exercise. You can still make it a worthwhile exercise by, for example, asking the students to identify numbers or words, asking them how the speakers feel, from a list of adjectives written up on the board, or even, when there are more than two speakers, by asking them how many people are speaking. The other thing that you can do is split the exercise up, by giving one question to each student, rather than getting each student to answer each question. Making listening tasks easier, part 3Problem The listening task is too easy. Solution
Radio news
A very useful source of authentic listening material is radio news. Most countries have an English-language news service that can be recorded, otherwise the BBC World Service or Voice of America can be picked up with the right equipment. One way of exploiting this material is to right a summary of the news with eight factual errors. Students listen to the report and have to identify the errors. Of course, the errors can be grammatical as well, focusing on a structure that you have been working on in class, but the laws of nature dictate that the structure you are presenting doesn't come up in the broadcast, or that the examples directly contradict what you have taught your students about the structure in class. "C'est la langue."
Television newsAt the start of a news broadcast, there is usually a preview of what is to come, along with pictures of the first few news stories. Video this, and prepare the following worksheet:
News Item What? Where? When? Who? Why? How?
1
2
3
4
Now give the sheets out to the students. Give each student one of the question words. They must watch the opening preview pictures with the sound turned down, and just write a few words to say what they think is happening. They can write in their own language if necessary. So student one will answer the question 'what' four times, for the four different stories, student two will answer the question 'where' four times, student three 'when' and so on. Sometimes it may clear what's happening on the screen. So much the better! They must use their imaginations. Play the preview as many times as they want to hear it, and ignore their protests about "It's too hard!" When they have finished writing their brief notes, you put them together in groups of six and ask them to share their knowledge and come up with the news story in less than 50 words. This is the fun part. They will probably have written about events completely different from each other. They must use use their imaginations, along with a healthy dose of arguing and persuading, to write out the news stories. What you have as a result is usually very funny and very different from what the story really is about. After the groups have finished and read out the full previews, error correct and play the real previews, with the sound up, to see how close each group is to each story. |
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