The Strategies of English Listening Skills1.doc
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1、The Strategies of English Listening SkillsContentsAbstract.1Key words.1I. Introduction1II. Literature Review2. Listening Comprehension Problems4.Principles and Goals for Teaching Listening54.1 Principles for Teaching Listening54.2 Goals for Teaching Listening64.2.1 Focus: The Listening Process.64.2.
2、2 Integrating Met cognitive Strategies74.2.3 Using Authentic Materials and Situations.7.The Strategies of Listening Skills 85.1 Listening for Meaning95.2 Listening Strategies95.2.1 Categories of Strategies95.2.2 Important Strategies for Listening.105.2.3 Other Strategies for English Listening.11.Tea
3、ching and Learning Listening 126.1 Pre-listening Activities136.1.1 Predicting.136.1.2 Setting the Scene.136.1.3 Listening for the Gist.136.1.4 Listening for Specific Information.136.2 While-listening Activities146.3 Post-listening Activities 146.4 The Solutions of the Listening Problems14VII.Conclus
4、ion15References16摘要:听在语言学习中确实担任一个主角, 但这仍然是学生感到的有最多挫折和无助的区域。听力策略对听力理解起积极的作用,这就意味着正式的听力策略的训练应该在外语听力教学中占有一席之地。本文讨论了听力过程中存在的普遍问题,根据对听力本质理解的新发现和优势,我试图阐述了当前的完善的英语教学练习以及听力教学的策略和技巧。他们能帮助学生发展一些听力的策略和适合各种听力场合的听力技巧。关键词: 听力理解;学习策略;听力教学Abstract: Listening has rightly assumed a central role in language learning,
5、but it is still an area where students feel most frustrated and helpless. It was found that the listening strategies contributed positively to listening comprehension, which led to the implication that formal strategy training should have a role in the foreign language listening classroom. This pape
6、r addresses problems common in the listening. In light of many new discoveries and advances in understanding the nature of listening, I also try to address current inadequate practices of teaching listening and the strategies and skills for teaching and learning listening. They help students develop
7、 a set of listening strategies and match appropriate strategies to each listening situation.Key words: listening comprehension; learning strategies; teaching listening I.IntroductionListening, quite possibly, is the most important of the language skills, since people spend approximately 60% of their
8、 time to listen. The most important first step in learning a foreign language is to make an effort to listen. If you dont learn to listen effectively, you will not be able to participate in conversations in the foreign language. (Thompson & Rubin, 2004: 85). Anderson and Lynch (1988:60) point out “l
9、istening is an essential skill for communication.” Listening is the most common communicative activity in daily life: we can expect to listen twice as much as we speak, four times more than we read, and five times more than we write. (Morley, 1991:85).Listening is the central role in language learni
10、ng and greatly affects the communication with others, and it has been emphasized in Chinas College English curriculum and examinations since the mid-1980s, but this skill remains poor and difficult for many learners even after they have had six to ten years of experience in learning English and it i
11、s still let the students feel most frustrated and helpless. so it is important to improve the listening strategies for teachers and learners. In this paper, I will analyze the problems of listening and point out different views about teaching English listening, at the mean time, I will say the strat
12、egies of English listening skills.II .Literature reviewThe listening process is often described from an information processing perspective as an active process in which listeners select and interpret information that comes from auditory and visual clues in order to define what is going on and what t
13、he speakers are trying to express (Thompson & Rubin, 1996: 331). Anderson and Lynch (1988) distinguish between reciprocal listening and non-reciprocal listening. Reciprocal refers to those listening tasks where there is the opportunity for the listener to interact with the speaker, and to negotiate
14、the content of the interaction. Thompson & Rubin (2004: 85) points out in interactive listening, one can intervene by asking additional questions and seeking clarification, repetition, or rephrasing. Non-reciprocal listening refers to tasks where the transfer information is in one direction only fro
15、m the speaker to the listener, such as listening to the radio or listening to a formal lecture. ( Anderson & Lynch, 1988). Richards (1987a) divided listening comprehension into conversational listening (listening to casual speech) and academic listening (listening to lectures and other academic pres
16、entations). Rost (2002) defines listening as having a receptive, constructive, collaborative and Tran formative orientation. The listener, in this view, not only receives what the speaker say, but goes through a process of constructing a meaning, negotiates this with the speaker and through personal
17、 involvement transforms what is heard. Hegelsen (2003) describes listening as “very active. As people listen, they process not only what they hear but also connect it to other information they already know. Since listeners combine what they hear with their own ideas and experiences, in a very real s
18、ense they are creating the meaning-in their own minds.”Generally speaking, listening in real life has the following characteristics(Ur, 1996:106).Spontaneity. While some of the things that we listen to are rehearsed.Context. The context of listening is usually known in real life. In other words, we
19、know the relationship between the listener and the speaker.Visual clues. Most of the time we can see the person we are listening to. This means we can see their facial expressions, gestures and other body language as well as the surrounding environment, which is relevant when, for example, people po
20、int at objects or in certain directions.Listeners response. Most of the listening in daily life allows the listener to respond to the speaker, such as in a conversation.Speakers adjustment. In most cases, the speaker is talking directly to the listener, so he or she can adjust the way of speaking ac
21、cording to the listeners reactions.In Methodology in Language Teaching (Jack & Willy, 2002:235) the two major methods of listening are identified as: the “bottom-up” processing view and “top-down” processing interpretation view. The bottom-up processing holds that listening is a liner, data-driven p
22、rocess. Comprehension occurs to the extent that the listener is successful in decoding the spoken text. The top-down model of listening, by contrast, involves the listener in actively constructing meaning based on expectation, inferences, intentions, and other relevant prior knowledge. Richards (199
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