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Listening in language learning PDF

297 Pages·1990·9.864 MB·English
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Listening in Language Learning This page intentionally lefi blank Listening in Language Learning Michael Rost First published 1990 by Pearson Education Limited Sixth impression 1999 Published 2013 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 100l7, USA Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa Copyright ,tJ 1990, Taylor & Francis, All Tights reserved. No part ofthi5 book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic. mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter Invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, \vithout pt:rmission in writing from the publishers. Notices Knowledge and best practice in this field are constantly changing. As new re search and experience broaden our understanding, changes in research mdh ods, professional practices, or medical treatment may become necessary. Practitioners and researchers must always rely on their own experience and knowledge in evaluating and using any information, methods, compounds, or experiments described herein. Tn using such information or methods they should be mindful of their own safety and the safety of others, including par ties for whom they have a professional responsibility. 1"0 the fullest extent of the law, neither the Publisher nor the authors, contrib utors, or editors, assume any liability for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a matter of products liability, negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any methods, products, instructions, or ideas contained in the material herein ISBN 13: 978-0-582-01650-7 (pbk) British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Rost, Michael Listening in language learning,-(Applied linguistics and language study). I, Applied linguistics 1. Title ll. Series 418 Library of Congress Cataloguing-in-Publication Data Ros!, Michael Listening in language learning/Michael Ros!' p, em. (Applied linguistics and language study) Includes bibliographical references, L Language and languages - Study and teaching, 2, Listening I, Title II, Series, P53,R64 1990 4l8',007-dc20 89-38727 CIP Contents Acknowledgements x Series list xiii General Editor's Preface xv CHAPTER 1 Introduction: Listening in verbal communication 1 1.0 Comprehension or interpretation? 1 1.1 Information-processing versus inferencing-based approaches 1 1.2 Frameworks for defining listening 6 1.3 Characterizations of listening 8 1. 3.1 Reading education 8 1.3.1.1 Reading and listening 9 1.3.2 First-language speech education 10 1.3.3 First-language acquisition research 12 1.3.4 Second-language acquisition research 16 1.3.5 Cognitive science 17 1.3.6 Language pathology 20 1.3.7 Artificial intelligence 23 1.4 Teaching listening 27 1.4.1 Oral approaches to language teaching 27 1.4.2 Listening-based language learning 27 1.4.3 Communicative language teaching 28 1.5 Conclusion: Orientations towards listening 29 1.6 Discussion questions for readers 30 Notes 32 CHAPTER 2 Auditory perception and linguistic processing 33 2.0 Auditory perception in verbal communication: use of decoding concepts 33 2.1 Time in auditory perception 35 vi Contents 2.2 Decoding concepts: linear ordering of phonemic segments 37 2.2.1 Phonological context 39 2.3 Decoding concepts: hierarchical ordering 41 2.3.1 Functions of stress: attentional signals 43 2.4 Decoding concepts: pitch direction 45 2.5 Cognitive effects in auditory perception 47 2.5.1 Lexical effects 48 2.5.2 Syntactic effects 49 2.5.3 Schematic effects 50 2.6 Parallel analysis 51 2.7 Mishearings 51 2.8 Speaker variation 54 2.9 Conclusion: auditory perception and listening 56 2.10 Discussion questions for readers 57 Notes 60 CHAPTER 3 Listener inference 62 3.0 Introduction: understanding and misunderstanding 62 3. 1 Editing strategy: estimate the sense of references 63 3.2 Editing strategy: supply case-relational links within propositions 67 3.3 Editing strategy: construct a base meaning 69 3.3.1 Editing strategy: employ cultural schemata 70 3.3.2 Editing strategy: fill in schematic slots 71 3.3.3 Editing strategy: fill in supporting data for claims 71 3.3.4 Editing strategy: use genres to generate expectations 73 3.4 Editing strategy: supply plausible intention for speaker 74 3.4.1 Editing principle: assume speaker is being cooperative 76 3.4.2 Editing strategy: use visual and vocal cues to infer speaker intention 78 3.5 Listener triangulation of speaker intention 79 3.6 A model of language understanding 81 3.7 Conclusion: salience as a starting point in analysis of understanding 83 3.8 Discussion questions for readers 84 Notes 89 Contents vii CHAPTER 4 Listener performance 91 4.0 Introduction: Displays of understanding 91 4.1 Listening in collaborative discourse 92 . 4.1.1 Identifying transition points in discourse 92 4.1.2 Organizing turn-taking 96 4.1.3 Providing obligatory responses 98 4.1.4 Providing 'listenership cues' 100 4.2 Listener shaping of discourse: cooperation and conflict 102 4.2.1 Shifting to the role of topic-initiator 103 4.2.2 Setting rules for interpretation: reformulating a speaker's contribution 104 4.2.3 Responding to speaker intent 107 4.2.4 Listener and speaker coordination of purposes 108 4.3 Listener queries and listener repair 112 4.3.1 Checking understanding 114 4.4 Conclusion: traces of development in listening in collaborative discourse 115 4.5 Discussion questions and projects 117 Notes 119 CHAPTER 5 Listening in transactional discourse 121 5:0 Listener understanding in transactional discourse 121 5.1 Access to listener understanding in non-collaborative discourse 122 5.2 Types of tasks 124 5.3 On-line tasks 125 5.3.1 Open task: note-taking in lectures 125 5.3.2 Closed task: completing an information grid 127 5.4 Retrospective tasks 128 5.4.1 Strategies for updating representations 129 5.4.2 Open task: summarizing 129 5.4.3 Closed task: multiple-choice selection 132 5.5 Prospective tasks 134 5.6 Traces of development in listening in non-collaborative discourse 137 5.7 Discussion questions and projects 137 Appendix 5A: The social psychology lecture transcript 140 Appendix 5B: Sample notes 145 Appendix 5C: The story transcript 147 Notes 148 viii Contents CHAPTER 6 Development of listening ability 150 6.0 Introduction: listening and language learning 150 6.1 Characterizing listening ability: enabling skills and enacting skills 150 6.2 The problem of developing skill: quality of response and scope of interpretation 153 6.3 Developing the quality of response: listener strategies 156 6.4 Developing the scope of response: task support 156 6.5 Input as a task component 158 6.5.1 Authenticity 159 6.5.2 Use of pre-recorded texts 160 6.5.3 Speaker style 161 6.5.4 Simplification of texts 161 6.6 Setting and roles as task components 164 6.7 Procedure as a component of task design 165 6.7.1 Questions as the basis of inquiry: a typology 165 6.8 Outcome as an aspect of task design 168 6.9 Monitoring as an ongoing aspect of a task 169 6.10 Feedback in tasks 170 6.11 Conclusion: criteria for task validity 170 6.12 Discussion questions and projects 172 Notes 174 CHAPTER 7 Assessing listening ability 175 7.0 Assessment and sampling 175 7.1 Purposes of testing in education 175 7.2 Questions of reliability and validity 176 7.3 Sources of listening difficulty 180 7.4 Assessment of listening ability in standardized testing 181 7.4.1 Test specifications: listener role 181 7.4.2 Test specifications: skill inventories 181 7.4.3 Test specifications: item and response format 182 7.5 Criteria for assessment validity 185 7.6 Characterizing listening ability 186 7.7 Discussion questions and projects 187 Appendix 7A: Lancashire/Cheshire Listening Test 191 Appendix 7B: Harper Academic Listening Test 199 Appendix 7C: TOEFL Listening Test 202 Appendix 7D: Interagency Language Roundtable Language Skill Level Descriptions: Listening 216 Contents IX Appendix 7E: The ACTFL Proficiency Guidelines: Listening 219 Notes 221 CHAPTER 8 Listening in a language curriculum 222 8.0 Introduction: approaches to curriculum design 222 8.1 Syllabus type 222 8.2 Grading 224 8.3 'Procedure' as focal aspect of tasks 226 8.3.1 Learner strategies in information-gap tasks 227 8.3.2 Interactive listening: developing appropriate responses 230 8.4 Content as input for tasks 230 8.5 Specific instruction in listening skills 231 8.5.1 Selective listening: informational input to tasks 232 8.5.2 Global listening: thematic input to tasks 232 8.5.3 Intensive listening: 'formal' input to tasks 233 8.6 Self-instruction in listening 233 8.7 Listening to learners: a teaching skill 235 8.8 Discussion questions and projects 239 Appendix 8A: An information-gap task 242 Appendix 8B: A scheme for planning projects involving linked tasks 245 Appendix 8C: A sample project design 246 Appendix 8D: Selective listening practice 247 Appendix 8E: Intensive listening practice 248 References 249 Glossary and transcription conventions 267 Index 271

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