SÁNG KIẾN KINH NGHIỆMTÊN ĐỀ TÀI HELP GRADE 11 STUDENTS TO SUCCEED IN A LISTENING LESSON BY PRE-LISTENING ACTIVITIES Người thực hiện: Tạ Thị Nga Chức vụ: Giáo viên SKKN thuộc môn: T
Trang 1SÁNG KIẾN KINH NGHIỆM
TÊN ĐỀ TÀI HELP GRADE 11 STUDENTS TO SUCCEED IN A LISTENING LESSON BY PRE-LISTENING ACTIVITIES
Người thực hiện: Tạ Thị Nga
Chức vụ: Giáo viên
SKKN thuộc môn: Tiếng Anh
THANH HÓA, NĂM 2017
Trang 2TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
PART I: INTRODUCTION……….3
1 Reasons for choosing the research……… 3
2 Aims of the research……….3
3 Object of the research……… 3
4 Research methods……… 3
PART II CONTENTS……… 4
1 Rationale……… 4
2 Practical basis……… 4
3 Pre-listening activities help grade 11 students to succeed in a listening Lesson ……….4
3.1 Set up the context……… 4
3.2 Activate existing knowledge……… 6
3.3 Build knowledge……… 9
3.4 Pe-teach vocabulary and structures……… 10
3.5 Make predictions……… 11
4 Research achievement……… 13
PART III : CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION ……… 15
1 Conclusion……… 15
2 Recommendation……… 15
By Tạ Thị Nga - Nga Son high school Page 2
Trang 3PART I INTRODUCTION
1 Reasons for choosing the research.
Listening is vital not only in language learning but also in daily communication Because, If you can not hear well you will find it hard to communicate However, listening skill seems to be ignored by most students “Many students are fearful of listening, and can be disheartened when they listen to something but feel they
understand very little” (Gareth Rees 2003) It is also harder to concentrate on
listening if you have little interest in a topic or situation The challenges of listening
in another language are great Our students have to deal with unfamiliar sounds, new vocabulary, and complex sentences They may not be familiar with the setting, know nothing about the speakers, and have little knowledge of the topic being discussed And they’re expected to listen and understand a text in real time, with no control of the discourse, in a classroom setting Being a teacher, I thought a lot of this problem and I applied some strategies that help students in my school to improve their listening skill Among strategies I used, pre-listening activities help
me achieve good result in listening lessons It is true that pre-listening plays a very important role in helping students to learn how to listen in the foreign language Thanks to pre-listening activities, my students are more active, more confident and
more excited in listening lessons I hope that “Help grade 11 students to succeed
in a listening lesson by pre-listening activities” can help students to upgrade the
listening skill and take more interested in listening
2 Aims of the research.
This research aims to prepare grade 11 students for listening, to ensure students success, and to get them excited about listening by pre-listening activities, which help teachers find out about what students already know about the topic, prepare them for the vocabulary and language structures in the listening text, mitigate the anxiety which comes from listening in a foreign language and offer opportunities for class discussion and more interaction among students
3 Object of the research.
This research focuses on pre-listening activities for grade 11 students in a listening lesson in order to help them to deal with the listening text more easily
4 Research methods.
- Find out difficulties students have in listening process
- Read reference books
- Discuss with my colleagues
- Apply pre-listening activities in teaching
- Observe and draw out experience
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Trang 4PART II CONTENTS
1 Rationale.
“It would not be fair towards students to draw them straight into the listening without introducing the topic or the type of activity they are going to work on, since in the real life there are not many situations when people are supposed to listen with having no idea what they are going to hear so that is why students should be given a substantial pre-listening support This pre-listening support will help them to become more confident and successful.” Eva Macháčková (2009) Pre-listening can be recognized as a stage of preparation and warming up of the whole process of listening A good pre-listening activities enable the learners to deal with the following listening text smoothly and strategically, such as to generate interest, build up confidence and facilitate comprehension About 170 students from different classes at Nga Son high school participated in this research, which shows that pre-listening activities are indispensable in listening process
2 Practical basis.
According to Ene Peterson (2015), “listening comprehension still remains one of the least understood processes and learners often regard listening as the most difficult language skill to acquire and evaluate” In fact, students are quite passive
in listening lessons Because listening activities often create high levels of anxiety and stress among learners that can interfere with comprehension They even listening and can’t concentrate on the listening text Therefore, low scores in listening are unavoidable This is also the teachers’ biggest difficulty Since addressing listening in the language classroom poses some challenges It is these problems that urge me to find out the solutions to hepl students get over the challenges and succeed in listening
3 Pre-listening activities help grade 11 students to succeed in a listening lesson
3.1 Set up the context.
The teacher can help provide the background information to activate learners'
schema, so they will be better prepared to understand what they hear Whether the teacher can effectively set up the scene depends on what he or she knows about the topic in question, what he or she has in hand, and also how well he or she knows about the language level of the students he or she is teaching Setting up the context
is what your textbooks often does for you A good direction line may be just a line
or two, but it can give key information – the speakers, their relationship, their location, and the topic The direction line contains the basics As a teacher, be sure
to draw their students’s attention to this, but feel free to elaborate and to add further information to help orient students to what they’ll hear
Examples:
Example 1 Part C-Listening English 11: Unit 2 PERSONAL EXPERIENCES
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- The teacher asks students to look at the picture in the book and ask them some questions
+ What do you see in the picture?
+ What is happening?
+ What are people doing?
- After looking at the picture, students give the answers
Expected answer: In the picture, we see:
+ A house is on fire.
+ The fire brigade is fighting to put out the fire:
+ And people are running away with the firemen’s help.
-> By setting up the context, Teacher provide the background information- an
experience in a fire to encourage students to listen attentively, so they will be
better prepared to make sense of what they hear
Example 2 Part C-Listening English 11: Unit 7 WORLD POPULATION
-The teacher ask students to look at the part: before you listen and the guidance in while you listen And then, teacher catches their attention to the key words in this
part
Before you listen
Work in pairs Discuss the following questions
1 Do you think that our world is overpopulated?
2: What continent has the largest population?
While you listen
You will hear Dr Brown, a world population expert, talk about the world
population Listen to the interview and do the tasks that follow.
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Trang 6-> Thanks to the keys words underlined: a world population, overpopulated,
continent, expert students easily realize that they will hear an expert talk about
the world population in which, he might compare the population among continents
as well as the population explosion Thus, these suggestions remind students of knowledge they acquired in geography and fell more confident in while listening
3.2 Activate existing knowledge.
After setting up the context, if you go straight in to the listening, the students have had no time to transfer or activate their knowledge (which may have been learnt in their first language) in the second language And students have difficulty
in finding informations in while-listening part It is known that “each student brings something different to the class – his or her own knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, and, biases It’s up to the teacher to activate their prior knowledge, or schema” (Pearson 2014) What do the students already know about the topic? Ask questions, Give a short quiz, Find out, Keep in mind, however, that background knowledge is not limited to content schemata It also includes rhetorical schemata – the learners’ understanding of the structure and organization of the discourse Here are some examples about activating current knowledge of grade 11 students in listening part:
Examples:
Example 1 Part C-Listening English 11: Unit 6.COMPETITION
After looking at these pictures, students understand that the will hear some information about Boston marathon Then teacher should ask students some questions such as:
By Tạ Thị Nga - Nga Son high school Page 6
Trang 71 What is the Boston Marathon?
2 When did it begin?
3 Where do you think the Boston Marathon might take place?
4 How often is it held?
5 Who do you think can take part in the Boston race?
These questions help students activate their existing knowledge about Boston Marathon
Expected answer
-> The important information related to Boston marathon students provide helps not only raise their interest but also easily catch the details mentioned in while-listening
Example 2 Part C-Listening English 11: Unit 16 THE WONDERS OF
THE WORLD
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amateur and professional runners
runners can take part in
In 1897
in the USA
BOSTON MARATHON
one of the
world's
best-known
road racing
events.
Every year
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Students know that It is The Great Wall of China So teacher should ask some questions to guide students to the main content they are going to hear
Questions
1 Where do you think it is?
2 When do you think it was built?
3 How long did it take to complete it?
4 How many provinces does the wall cover ?
5 How many kilometres does the wall stretch ?
6 When was it listed as World Heritage by UNESCO?
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In China
The Great Wall of China
in 1368 200 years
5 provinces 6,000km
In 1987
Trang 9Information sharing among students makes them be familiar with the listening task, which will bring them into the topic, and make them more willing to listen
3.3 Build knowledge.
When you activate existing knowledge, you may find that students may have limited general knowledge about a topic Learners can build knowledge through the listening itself, but you may choose to build upon that knowledge before they listen This then acts as a bridge to new concepts There are many ways to do this For example, you can have students read a short text, look at a photo or graph, or expose them to experiences they have never had before
Here is an examples to build up knowledge for grade 11students
Example : Part C-Listening English 11: Unit 15: SPACE CONQUEST
Many students don’t know much about the subject – first moon conquest So, in
this lesson, the teacher can have students watch a Video which shows the first steps
of humain beings in conquering the Moon Thanks to this video, students can understand the important details in that historic moment and they will pay more attention to “while-listening”
Here are some photos from the Video I provide my students with
->The video created a positive atmosphere to listen the passage and help students imagine the contents of the listening text
3 4 Pre-teach vocabulary and structures.
Included in building knowledge is exposing learners to the basic
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Trang 10vocabulary and structures needed for comprehension while listening, as well as cultural information An overly demanding vocabulary load can be demotivating and cause listeners to shut down You may choose to elicit or remind learners of vocabulary or structures they already know, or explicitly teach the key words and phrases needed for comprehension There are, of course, valid reasons for not pre-teaching, such as when focusing on listening for the meaning of vocabulary in context, or when teaching listeners to tolerate unknown words It’s therefore up to the teacher to decide what (and whether) to pre-teach In general, the new words are mentioned in “listen and repeat” However, some words are unnecessary while some keys words or important structures are ignored Make sure that your students can understand what they will hear, you have to provide them with these key words Here are some examples
Examples:
Example 1 Part C-Listening English 11: Unit 1 FRIENDSHIP
In the text book
Listen and repeat.
apartment building guitarist motobike
sense of humour favourite around
some words such as guitarist, motobike, favourite are very familiar with students
while some difficult words and important structures are not mentioned So the vocabulary should be:
Vocabulary
1 Apartment building
2 Sense of humour
3 Have a lot of things in common
4 Help somebody through hard time
5 Give somebody a ring
These words and structures help students can understand the questions in task 1
of “while listening” (They have a lot of things in common or Minh always helped Long out of difficulties) and catch the information in the passage easily
Example 2 Part C-Listening English 11: Unit 13 HOBBIES
In This unit, the vocabulary in “listen and repeat” is quite enough But the
words “magazines” or “available” are mentioned in Unit 9 and Unit 11 Therefore, the teacher can add some important structures to the vocabulary such as : get fed
up with, enable , cope with to help average and below average students can
understand the lesson The vocabulary of listening part in unit 11 may be:
Vocabulary
1 get fed up with
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Trang 112 continually (n)
3 enable somebody to do something
4 bygone (adj)
5 gigantic (adj)
6 cope with
7 otherwise
8 ignorantly(adv)
-> The structure “get fed up with” will help students to give the answer to the
question 2 in Task 1 “his parents were interested in reading fairy tails and other
stories to him” The structure “enable somebody to do something” is also a
suggestion for students to the statement “reading helps the writer to know many things” Other words and structures play an important role in guiding students to
the passage
By having the time to think about the language needs of a situation, students will be excellently prepared to cope with the listening
3 5 Make predictions.
Predicting is one of the most effective pre-listening tasks because it creates a real, focused purpose for listening It is very motivating for students to see whether their predictions were correct There are a lot of things that can be predicted and checked With the teacher’s help, students can predict what words will be in the script, what topics the speakers might discuss, the order of events, or the answers to general content questions These are usually done at the beginning, before listening, and then checked during the initial, gist listening Then while listening you can stop from time to time to check their predictions This works especially well with stories or reports such as unit 2, unit 3, unit 12, unit 13, unit 15
If there is a picture with the listening passage, the students can be asked to predict what the passage will contain before they listen
Example 1 Part C-Listening English 11: Unit 12- THE ASIAN GAMES
Teacher asks students to look at the pictures in the text book and predict what sports will be mentioned in the passage Students can easily guess that there are
four sports in the report: high jump, long jump, swimming and gymnastics
So students can predict the answer to the question 5 in task 1
Question 5 Which of the following sports events was NOT mentioned in the report?
A swimming C long and high jumps
B gymnastics D weightlifting
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