Teaching English as a Foreign Language

(Chris Devlin) #1

Chapter 14


Chapter 14: In One Ear, Out the Other: Learning To Listen


Learning To Listen


In This Chapter


▶ Listening twice for good measure


▶ Finding a format


▶ Getting students ready to listen


▶ Playing it again, Sam


▶ Assigning follow-up activities


W


hen students are able to listen to texts in English and get the sense
of them, they feel a real sense of achievement. But how can you train
your students to listen without them feeling overwhelmed? In this chapter
you find out what to have students listen for and which activities make for an
engaging listening lesson.

Structuring Your Lesson

When you teach listening skills, it pays to remember that it takes most people
a little time to tune in before they listen well. Students need to pay full atten-
tion and have had some practice time before they can cope with detailed
information in a foreign language. So, to help your students feel relaxed
and prepared you can begin with a warmer activity lasting a few minutes. It
doesn’t have to be related to the listening activities but is a short game or
puzzle that focuses the mind.

Then you need two activities based on the same listening text but the first
should be easier than the second. With the first activity you set the task and
let students, read, discuss or work on it. Then you play the recording for
them to listen to. After that there’s a feedback session in which the students
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