Techniques to improve macro skills of language Though Language Lab
Techniques to improve macro skills of language Though Language Lab
Among
the four macro skills of language learning, listening and reading are
receptive skills whereas speaking and writing are the productive skills.
These skills can be improved effectively, when the learner learns at
his own pace. With the help of the functional tool- Language Lab with
Teacher’s Console, language skills can be learnt, practiced and
evaluated through the techniques followed.
I) Techniques to improve listening
The
primary form of linguistic communication is speech and so listening is
the most important receptive (and learning) skill for foreign language
students. An ability to listen and interpret many shades of meaning from
what is heard, is a fundamental communicative ability.
Teaching
listening involves training in some ‘enabling skills’ — perception of
sounds, stress, intonation patterns, accents, attitudes and so on, as
well as ‘practice’ in various styles of listening comprehension.
a) Perception / Pronunciation
Accurate
perception of the sounds of the language is the first stage which leads
to interpretation and comprehension. When listening to a foreign
language, we need to know the sounds, rhythms, tunes and stress patterns
of that language. All the pronunciation work which we do will benefit
the students’ listening ability.
1) Phonetics: The
sounds of the English language can be written down using the
International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) which is used in all Longman
dictionaries. Use of minimal pair perception exercises (ship/sheep, ten
/then) helps students learn the sounds of English. It can be well
practiced on pronunciation exercises with the help of software or by
using CDs in language lab.
2) Interpretation: We
listen to interpret meaning. Most of the exercises which students will
do focus on listening comprehension, which is, interpreting meaning from
spoken language.
3) Listening to words: In
written language, there are convenient white spaces between words.
Whereas spoken language is a continuous stream of sound. The learner has
to pay attention to understand the meaning of words spoken.
b) Tools for Listening
1) Acoustics: Our
ability to hear is essential to our ability to listen. The first set of
ideas concerns the production, corruption, transmission and reception
of spoken language.
2) Usage of language laboratory: Earphones
and headphones deliver undistorted sound directly to the ears. It is
better practiced in a language laboratory with the help of head phones
and earphones; this provides ideal conditions for intensive listening.
c) Organizing listening comprehension activities
As
in reading comprehension, there should always be a ‘purpose’ in
listening. In most cases, this will be some form of comprehension. We
should establish regular ‘procedures’ for listening activities in which
students will develop from general (gist) to specific comprehension
through repeated listening and a specific activity at each stage.
1) Understanding the setting: After
the first listening, students should be able to understand the setting
of the recording — where the speakers are from, how many speakers there
are, the ages, roles, professions, moods of the speakers, etc., and what
they are talking about. This encourages students to think about the
setting so that they can go on to speculate about the content of what
the speakers will say. This first listening allows the students to get
accustomed to the voices.
2) Pre-teach difficult vocabulary: Teaching
isolated and meaningless lists of words and phrases is probably not a
good idea. Teachers may choose to introduce the setting before the
students listen. This provides an opportunity to elicit or introduce and
explain the sort of language we might hear in that setting. This
language is listed on the board and students listen and mark what they
actually heard.
3) Focused listening: Listening
tasks should give the students a reason for listening and focus their
attention. These listening tasks should be set before the students
listen. This intense listening requires intense concentration. Therefore
the listening task can be limited for ten to fifteen minutes.
4) Comprehending: In
large classes we will probably have different levels of competence.
There is no reason why all the students need to work on the same task.
Equally, if we have more than 6 questions, groups of students can be
given questions 1-5, questions 6-10 and so on. After listening students
share their answers.
5) Analysis: After
students have understood the gist and some important details of a
recording, it can be analyzed in more detail and investigate the way in
which the speakers have expressed the ideas. How much have they revealed
their mood, their opinions and so on? Analysis of the speed and style
of speech, the use of hesitation, repetition, false starts, paraphrasing
and so on can also be practiced.
6) Graded Listening tasks: We
teach listening by building up comprehension from general understanding
to identifying specific information. We can also grade the listening
tasks from easy to more difficult by the form of questions we use and it
can be evaluated based on the kind of out put by the learners in the
form of writing or speaking.
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