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Teaching Listening to Young Learners Gita Rahmi

Teaching listening to young learners

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Page 1: Teaching listening to young learners

Teaching Listening to Young

Learners

Gita Rahmi

Page 2: Teaching listening to young learners

Materials for Presentation

A. Introduction

B. Teaching Listening to Young Learners

1. Concept of Teaching Listening to Young Learners

2. Difficulty of Listening

3. Materials for Listening Activity

4. Techniques and Strategies of Teaching Listening to Young Learners

C. Synthesis and Comments

D. Conclusion

Page 3: Teaching listening to young learners

Three people were on a train in England.

As they approached what appeared to be

Wemberly Station, one of the travelers

said, ”Is this Wemberly?” “No,” Replied

a second passenger,” it’s Thursday.”

Whereupon the third person remarked,

‘Oh, I am too; let’s have a drink!”

(Brown, 2001: 247)

Page 4: Teaching listening to young learners

Introduction

• Teaching listening is very important because

listening is considered as the foundation skill

for other skills (Linse, 2005: 22)

“You need to hear a word before you can say it

You need to say a word before you can read it

You need to read a word before you can write it”

Page 5: Teaching listening to young learners

Teaching Listening to Young Learners

Concept of Teaching Listening to Young Learners

• Listening and speaking are both active uses of language. Listening is said as active uses of language to access and get other people’s meaning. Speaking is said as active use of language to express meaning.

• Listening is also said as receptive skill and as input.

(Cameron, 2001: 40, Linse, 2005: 24, Harmer, 2007: 266)

Page 6: Teaching listening to young learners

• Listening is the first stage in human development of communication.

• Listening is the main channel to let children interact with other languages and cultures.

• Listening can be developed both at school and at home through tapes, videos, computer software, and online materials.

• Listening is the foundation for development of other skills. Listening helps children get ready to read as in table below.

(Curtain&Pesola, 1988: 125, Paul, 2003:71 and Linse, 2005:25)

Page 7: Teaching listening to young learners

Skill How it Prepares for Reading

Listens to and follows instructions

such as take out your pencil and your

green activity book.

Prepares children for a variety of

academic tasks

Can follow an oral sequence of events

such as Lucy went to the refrigerator

and took out some milk.

Prepares children to comprehend stories

Can listen attentively to stories. Prepares children to comprehend stories

Can comprehend a story that has been

read and/or told.

Prepares children to comprehend stories

Can discriminate between sound such

as /b/ and /p/

Prepares children to decode words/ helps

to prepare children for phonics instruction

Can identify rhyming sounds. Prepares children to decode words/ helps

to prepare children for phonics instruction

Can segment (or separate) words into

syllables such as ap-ple or din-ner.

Prepares children to decode words/ Helps

to prepare children for phonics instruction

Page 8: Teaching listening to young learners

Language learning process

The process of language learning depends

on the situation or condition of children.

It can be:

• Children listen, notice the patterns, and

try to use the patterns.

• Children read the words and sentences,

sound them out, and may (not) hear them

afterwards.

Paul, 2003:72

Page 9: Teaching listening to young learners

Difficulties of Listening

Brown (2001: 252-254) declares the factors are:

• Clustering

• Redundancy

• Reduced forms

• Performance variables

• Colloquial language

• Rate of delivery

• Stress, rhythm, and intonation

• Interaction

Pinter (2009: 45-46) states:

• The type and the length of the text the children listen to.

• The familiarity of the person they are listening to.

Page 10: Teaching listening to young learners

Solution

• Bottom –up processing

• Top-down processing

(Pinter, 2009)

Page 11: Teaching listening to young learners

Materials for Listening Activity • Extensive Listening Materials.

Materials from outside classroom, like materials in children’s home, MP3 Players on the car, audio version, cassette, CD, copies of course book CDs or tapes, recordings, podcast, broadcast online and video on YouTube.

• Intensive Listening Materials.

Materials used in the classroom, like audio material on tape, CD or hard disk.

(Harmer, 2007)

Page 12: Teaching listening to young learners

Techniques and Strategies of Teaching Listening

to Young Learners • Total Physical Response (TPR)

TPR is a systematized approach to the use of commands and an effective means for teaching foreign language to children and adult. E.g.,

1.Commands involving the entire body, large motor skills. For example, point to your ear, clap your hands and shake the teacher’s hand.

2.Commands involving interaction with concrete materials and manipulative, beginning with classroom objects, like pick up your green crayon and lay it under your chair.

3.Commands relating to pictures, maps, numbers, and other indirect materials, like go to the wall chart and point to a food from the fruit and vegetables group.

Page 13: Teaching listening to young learners

Positive Aspects of TPR • It uses the auditory, visual and tactile learning

channels. Learners can listen and watch the commands given and then they can do the commands by themselves.

• It helps to teach children to follow direction and listen attentively.

• Children can start speaking when they feel ready.

• This method can easily be adapted in many different ways for young learners.

• It can be done through songs, finger plays, and story telling (check the examples in video)

Page 14: Teaching listening to young learners

• Gouin Series

• Audio –Motor Unit

• The Natural Approach

• Descriptions

• Demonstrations

• Telling or Reading a Story

• Dictation

• Bottom-up exercise

• Top-Down Exercise

Page 15: Teaching listening to young learners

Some activities related to story that can be done:

• The children draw characters or scenes from the story.

• Teacher tells story with puppets using direct speech and the children retell the story with their own puppets.

• The children arrange the pictures of scenes in the story and put it in the correct order.

• Each child has their own word cards and they must do something when their words are mentioned.

• If the children know the story in their own native language, teacher can ask them to say what English word appear in the story.

• Teacher can stop the story and ask the children to guess what is going to happen next.

Page 16: Teaching listening to young learners

Other activities in Listening Class:

1. Listening and Doing

• Listen and identify

• Bingo

• Listen and take away

• Find the odd one out

• Listen and put

2. Listening and saying

• Listen and choose

• Listen and short

• Tennis game

• Guess my animal –actions (Cameron, 2001: 62-66)

Page 17: Teaching listening to young learners

Conclusion

• Listening is very significant and necessary

skill.

• Listening is basic skill for learning other skills

• Teaching listening to young learners can be

done through several techniques and strategies.

Page 18: Teaching listening to young learners

Bibliography Brown, H.D. 2001. Teaching by Principles: An Interactive

Approach to Language Pedagogy (2nd ed). New York: Pearson Education.

Cameron, L. 2001. Teaching Languages to Young Learners. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press.

Curtain, H.A., & Pesola, C.A. 1988. Languages and Children Making the Match. Foreign Language Instruction in the Elementary School. United States: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company.

Harmer, J. 2007. The practice of English Language Teaching (4th ed). Malaysia: Pearson Education.

Linse, C. T. 2005. Practical English language Teaching : Young Learners. New York: McGraw-Hill ESL/ELT.

Paul, D. 2003. Teaching English to Children in Asia. Hongkong: Longman asia ELT.

Pinter, A. 2009. Teaching Young Language Learners. China: Oxford University Press.

Page 19: Teaching listening to young learners

Thank You