Saturday, May 12, 2012

Listening Strategies for Beginner Proficiency Level of EFL Students


EXTENSIVE LISTENING FOR THE BEGINNER PROFICIENCY LEVEL OF EFL STUDENTS

Introduction
            Listening is simply to give attention by means of hearing or attend closely for the purpose of hearing.  According to Yagang (1993), listening is the ability to identify and understand what others are saying. This involves understanding a speaker’s accent or pronunciation, his grammar and his vocabulary, and grasping his meaning.   Discerning listening is the mainly fundamental type of listening, through which the distinction between differentt sounds is recognized. If you can’t perceive different sound, then you can’t make sense of the meaning that is uttered by such differences. However, how do we manage the problems in listening? Expressing a particular idea or thought is the outcome in understanding English. The fast rate of speech and new vocabulary are just one of the few problems that students are face in listening. Yet, why do listening matter in English language learning?
            Yagang (1993) mentions that listening is one of English major concerns. This means that the importance of listening plays an important role in students. People frequently focus on their speaking skill, supposing that excellent speaking equals good communication. The capability to speak well is a compulsory element to successful communication for students nevertheless the ability to listen is equally as important.
             In order to attain complete understanding in English Yangang (1993) suggests learners should complete the basic listening process, which is at the first stage. By simply pay attention to make sure you have heard the message. For instance, if your mum says, “Haris, I need the car washed before 4pm tomorrow!" and you are able to imitate the sentence, then you have heard her.
            The second stage is interpretation. Failure to interpret the speaker's words accurately usually leads to misunderstanding. Different people interpret words differently because of varied experience, knowledge, vocabulary, culture, background, and attitudes.
            According to Field(1998), the essential sources of listening problems include, speaking rate, distraction, not capable recognizing words that the student’s have known, new vocabulary, missing subsequent input, nervousness, sentence complexity, background knowledge, anxiety and frustration and unfamiliar pronunciation.
Realizing the problems in listening, the listening strategies, and the other incorporated listening requirements will facilitate beginner proficiency students expand their listening skills. Adding to this, the main purpose is to help students in the EFL classes to comprehend the nature of listening approaches and understanding on how to process spoken language with simplicity and automaticity.
            Firstly, we are going to find out and elaborate what are the problems in listening are. Secondly, we are going to discuss and examine about the strategies in order to attain complete understanding in English which is to altercate extensive listening strategies and knowledge on how to process spoken language with simplicity and automaticity. Lastly, using extensive listening in daily routine from teachers can help students reach the comprehension needed.

Listening in Beginner Proficiency Level
            Now let’s start with discussing listening in beginner proficiency level. Listening in beginner proficiency level includes students in the first semester of the English department. They study English from the Basic English programme of study and meets listening as one of the major subjects in their course. In the class itself, Renandya (2008) stated that students learn listening by short conversation fill in the blanks listening course, song lyrics fill in blanks and simple listening comprehension. Short conversation fill in the blanks contains a short passage of story and missing words which the students have to fill in.
Other materials are song lyrics fill in the blanks. The songs are usually songs from the 80s-90s which the students aren’t familiar with. Both of the fill in the blanks are usually one missing caption in each line. This enables them to not only fill in the captions, but also understand the story. This course enables them to understand and recognize Basic English listening course. Students in this level are introduced to listening as a medium to attain fundamental English listening skills.
According to Renandya (2011), the problems to listening in English Language teaching, the sources of listening in English Language teaching includes speaking rate, distraction, unable to recognize words they knew, new vocabulary, missing subsequent input, nervousness, sentence complexity, background knowledge, anxiety and frustration, unfamiliar pronunciation. These problems appear due to the student’s condition and disabilities to their listening skills.
Each and every student reported that the mainly imperative source of their listening comprehension problem is the fast rate of speech. While the second most important source of their listening problem is distraction. If the speech rate is too fast and the students cannot catch the words, they unsurprisingly get distracted and will be unable to continue to process the information.
The last most complex problem gives further evidence that the fast speech rate, down with the other features of speech discussed above, made it hard for the students to identify the words that they actually knew. As a result, they were not able to comprehend the text.
Yagang (1993) points out that  in ordinary conversation or even in much extempore speech-making or lecturing we actually say a good deal more than would appear to be necessary in order to convey our message. Redundant utterances may take the form of repetitions, false starts, re-phrasings, self-corrections, elaborations, tautologies, and apparently meaningless additions such as I mean or you know. This redundancy is a normal feature of speech and may be either aid or an obstacle, depending on the students’ level. It may make it more difficult for beginners to understand what the speaker is saying; on the other hand, it may present students more time to tune in to the speaker’s voice and speech style.  Learners tend to be used to their teacher’s accent or to the standard variety of British or American English. They find it hard to understand speakers with other accents.

Listening Strategies
            Listening engages not just accurately interpreting received speech but also responding correctly to the speaker. According to Field (1993), several listening strategies can be teacher-directed dictations, read-aloud and self-directed listening, discrimination, segmentation, identifying unrecognized words, anticipation, referencing, monitoring and relevant materials that are needed in listening.
Considerably, exercises for practicing listening skills are crucial in the process of language learning. As Field (1998) mentioned, many of the exercises involve dictation, a much wider-used technique in improving listening.  Exercise types are discrimination which includes distinguishing minimally different words. For instance, ear training in minimal pairs and teacher dictates minimal pairs.
            Next is segmentation, which contains identifying words in continuous speech. With teacher dictates sentences which include contractions, weak forms, elision, assimilation, and criticized items (e.g. 'drinka pinta milk').  Learners should write down a section of an authentic passage, as well as listen with a text, paying attention to weakly stressed items.
            Another strategy is on working out the spelling of unrecognized words. These includes, the teacher dictates words in spelling groups (laugh, cough, enough).  On the other hand, learners guess the spellings of difficult-to-recognize words. A further strategy is anticipation. Through working out what comes next with the teacher plays half a sentence, learners complete, or answer multiple-choice questions.
            A different strategy that should be used is reference. This includes relating pronouns and what the items they refer to. This method is process with the teacher pauses cassette after unclear referring expressions and learners say what they refer to. Teacher lists referring expressions/general nouns; learners listen for them and write down what they refer to. Adding to this, Yagang (1993) added that by practicing in liaisons and elisions in order to help students get used to the acoustic forms of rapid natural speech. It is useful to find rapidly uttered colloquial collocations and ask students to imitate native speakers’ pronunciation.
            Students should be aware of different native-speaker accents. Of course, strong regional accents are not suitable for training in listening, but in spontaneous conversation native speakers do have certain accents. Moreover, the American accent is quite different from the British and Australian. Therefore, it is necessary to let students deal with different accents, especially in extensive listening.
            The last approach to Yagang (1993) is through simple listening texts with little redundancy for lower-level students and complicated authentic materials with more redundancy for advanced learners. It has been reported that elementary-level students are not capable of interpreting extra information in the redundant messages, whereas advanced listeners may benefit from messages being expanded and paraphrase. Therefore, by applying these strategies students are closely able to perceive and understand the listening material.

The applications of Extensive Listening Strategies for the Beginner Proficiency Level of EFL Students
            The main job as an educator of foreign language listening is to help our students develop routine information, about how to recept spoken language. In Extensive listening, listening itself is to hear something with thoughtful attention or give consideration. The skill to perceive sound by detecting vibrations through an organ called ear. Suarcaya(2006) states that discriminating listening is the mostly primary type of listening, during which the difference between different sounds is recognized. In order to perceive different sound, uttering the difference in the sound is notable.  
            Listening in beginner proficiency level incorporates with students in the first semester of the English department. These students study Basic English programme of study and assemble listening as one of the major subjects in their course. During the class, they learn listening by short conversation fill in the blanks listening course, song lyrics fill in blanks and simple listening comprehension.
According to Field (1998), under the present comprehension approach, success in listening is measured by correct responses to questions or tasks. Teachers focus upon the outcomes of listening, rather than upon listening itself, upon product rather than process. When a learner supplies a correct answer, there is no warning as to how that answer has been arrived at. Whether the meaning has been constructed by correctly identifying all the words in a particular piece of text, or by identifying one word and making an inspired guess?            
Through employing listening strategies such as teacher-directed dictations, read-aloud and self-directed listening, discrimination, segmentation, identifying unrecognized words, anticipating, referencing, monitoring and relevant materials; students are able to understand meanings from the listening message. The way of approaching listening difficulties reflects current practice in the teaching of reading.
           
Yagang (1993) also mentioned that practicing in connection  in order to assist students get used to the auditory forms of fast natural speech. It is constructive to locate rapidly uttered colloquial collocations and ask students to imitate native speakers’ pronunciation.
Make students aware of different native-speaker accents. Moreover, there are several English accenst that teacher’s use. Therefore, it is necessary to let students deal with different accents, especially in extensive listening.
Select short, simple listening texts with little redundancy for lower-level students and complicated authentic materials with more redundancy for advanced learners. It has been reported that elementary-level students are not capable of interpreting extra information in the redundant messages, whereas advanced listeners may benefit from messages being expanded and paraphrase.
 Field (2008) added that it has been obvious that more reading does not necessarily mean better listening. Typically, teachers of L2 reading seek to train learners in skimming, scanning, prediction, inferring unknown words, and a number of other techniques. It is curious that the same approach has not been applied systematically to listening, given that the sub skills of listening closely parallel those of reading. Moreover, these strategies are considered necessary in extensive listening.

Conclusion
            Listening is basically to provide awareness by a way of hearing or attend closely for the purpose of hearing. Listening is one of English main apprehensions. This indicates that the significance of listening in communication is highly needed. The crucial foundations of listening problems include, speaking rate, distraction, not capable to recognize words that the student’s knew, new vocabulary, missing subsequent input, nervousness, sentence complexity, background knowledge, anxiety and frustration and unfamiliar pronunciation.
            Students accounted that the commonly necessary source of their listening comprehension difficulty is the fast rate of speech. While the second most important source of their listening problem is distraction. The last most composite problem gives additional confirmation that the fast speech rate, down with the other features of speech discussed above, made it tricky for the students to categorize the words that they actually knew. Consequently, they were not able to comprehend the text.
            These causes of listening problems in English Language Teaching within the materials, such as sentence complexity, speaking rate, and unfamiliar pronunciation can be restore with dictations, read-aloud and self-directed listening.
In conclusion, students should be provided with background knowledge and linguistic knowledge, such as complex sentence structures and colloquial words and expressions, as needed.
Students should try to get as much feedback as possible. Throughout the course the teacher should bridge the gap between input and students’ response and between the teacher’s feedback and students’ reaction in order to keep activities purposeful. It is important for the listening-class teacher to give students immediate feedback on their performance. This not only promotes error correction but also provides encouragement. It can help students develop confidence in their ability to deal with listening problems. Student feedback can help the teacher judge where the class is going and how it should be guided.
            Teachers should help students develop the skills of listening with anticipation, listening for specific information, listening for gist, interpretation, and inference, listening for intended meaning, listening for attitude, etc., by providing varied tasks and exercises at different levels with different focuses.
            Through employing these strategies in extensive listening for the beginner proficiency level of EFL students, they should be able to achieve the targeted goal in Extensive listening.


References

Field J. (1998) Skills and strategies: towards a new methodology for listening. English Language Teaching Journal 52 (2) (Apr. 1998) Retrived from


Renandya and Farrell Thomas S.C.. (2008) Teacher, the tape is too fast!’. Extensive listening in ELT.  English Language Teaching Journal 65 (1) (Jan. 2011), page 52-59 . Retrieved from
http://lib.atmajaya.ac.id/Uploads/Fulltext/170442/artikel/2011.1.52.full.pdf


Suarcaya P. (2006) Web-Based Audio Materials For EFL


Yangang F. (1993) Listening: Problems and Solutions. English Teaching Forum (http://exchanges.state.gov/englishteaching/forum/archives.html) ELT Journal 31 (1) Retrieved from http://lib.atmajaya.ac.id/Uploads/Fulltext/104580/artikel/Listening%20Problems%20and%20Solutions.pdf

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