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Now try this one!
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Well, you know, I've had it since I was a child so I'm used to it now. It's strange because I don't have any problems with the animals themselves, I just can't wear anything made from it. Blankets can set me off too. What happens is a terrible itchy rash breaks out all over. Of course, nowadays, synthetics are much more popular but sometimes there might be a mix and so I still have to check labels before I buy anything.
What is the speaker's problem?
Allergic to wool (or another suitable natural clothing fabric)
I couldn't believe it when I woke up on Friday morning with a painful dry throat. There was less than 48 hours to go. Could I possibly cure it by then ? I inhaled hot steam laden with herbs. I sucked soothing sweets. Above all, I resisted the temptation to talk to anyone, let alone practising a few notes and I kept warm. It would be such a disappointment for me to have to cancel and such a nuisance for them to have to find someone to take my place.
Who is the speaker?
A singer
The evening began to draw in. The snow was falling steadily. The visibility was becoming very poor indeed. I slowed down almost to a crawl. I kept having to change gear. We could scarcely see the vehicle in front. Then we began to slip and slide erratically. I switched on the radio to see if I could get a weather forecast. I felt a rising sense of panic as I thought about my responsibility as the only adult in charge of so many youngsters.
Who is speaking and what is s/he doing?
A driver (or a teacher) driving a minibus
January 13, 2006
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Short Listening Exercises for you
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It was the best final I've ever watched and the weather was glorious. Both girls were on top form and every seat in the stadium was full. The crowd cheered every time an ace was served or a rally ended in a dramatic volley or smash. At match point, there was a moment of silence before the champion flung her arms into the air and everyone rose to applaud.
What type of event was this?
A (championship) tennis match
I was absorbed in my book in the departure lounge when I realised that the announcement might be of relevance to me. It was hard to hear at first what they were saying but eventually I managed to make it out. Yes, that was my gate and yet another delay to take off was announced. Now I would miss the connection and arrive after midnight.
Where is the speaker?
In an airport
The man in the shop was very helpful. He let Jimmy ride them all round the block one by one. The first one was a lovely bright red, with a bell and a bag for carrying things. The second one was bigger, with wide handlebars. And the last one was black and silver, with an adjustable saddle. Jimmy liked it best, so that's what we settled on.
What is the speaker buying?
A bicycle
We'd arrived at 5 o'clock in the morning and there were already about 60 people waiting. We were truly amazed. We hadn't expected that but soon after we got there about another 20 arrived and by the time the office opened at 9.30, there were about 250 people altogether. We were so glad we had made the effort. At least we were guaranteed the best seats.
What were these people doing?
They were queuing for tickets for an entertainments event
No, I'm sorry but it just isn't good enough. The first course was cold; the second wasn't what we'd ordered and now, every time we try to choose something, you say there's nothing left. Now, I don't usually complain or ask to see the manager but the boy who served us was really rude so now I'd like to know what you're going to do about it.
Where is this?
In a restaurant
January 13, 2006
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Guessing Games
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Guessing Games are a fun way for beginners to review vocabulary words, practice forming structures, and listen for meaning.
Form & Meaning Activity: "Animal Habits" (from Grammar Practice Activities, p.256) Grammar: simple present to describe habitual action.
Procedure: For this activity students work in pairs or small groups to prepare a description of an animal. (For a longer activity have each group prepare 3-5 separate animal descriptions. Note that if you allow students to write out their descriptions, this becomes more like a focused practice activity.) Once students have prepared their descriptions, each group takes turns telling a description to the rest of the class, who then guess the name of the animal.
Example: A possible description of a rabbit could include, "It lives in a hole. It eats plants and vegetables. It has a lot of babies. It runs very fast."
Source: http://www.eslpartyland.com/teachers/grammar/Simplepresandprog.htm#Guessing%20Games
January 19, 2005
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Listening in the ESL classroom
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What can be done at different stages of a listening activity to help our students?
It is helpful to divide a listening activity into three distinct stages: the pre-listening, the while-listening and the after-listening.
The pre- stage is vitally important if we want our students to get as much as possible out of the listening. Choice of listening is the first thing. We ourselves would not sit down and listen to a radio documentary on a subject we had no interest in and we should not expect our students to be any different. Teachers thus shouldn't inflict on their students listenings they believe will be of little or no interest to their class as students are less likely to gain anything useful from it.
Once we have decided on a listening to use with our class, the next stage is to prepare them as much as possible. As in real life again, when we listen to something on TV, we are usually in the position where we know the subject area and can predict a lot of what is going to be said. In the class, we must try and prepare our students similarly. Students should be given a reason to listen, a chance to discuss and predict what they are going to hear. Any "holes" in their content schemata must be filled. What we mean is - if you are going to play a listening about British politics, it is important they not only know what the Boundary Commission is, but its political importance. You, as a teacher, know this and this information must be given to your students. They cannot be let do a listening, "blind" of information.
A student forewarned is a student far less likely to panic during a listening, one of the most common problems reported by teachers during listenings. If we were put in front of a tape recorder, played three minutes of speech in a random context and then asked questions about it, we too would struggle. The pre-teaching of some vocabulary which may be problematic can also be a useful part of this pre-listening stage.
We now move on to the while-listening stage. There are similarities between reading and listening but also large differences. Whilst reading is a static medium which can be and usually is re-drafted again and again to read well, listening is transient and sometimes a little jumbled and confusing. Students can read at their own speed whereas listening can pass them by somewhat. Listening therefore is difficult for students and there are other factors which make it even more so.
Most teachers use tape recorders for their classroom listening practice. The students are denied all the physical, visual clues that make face to face conversation easier. Students are left only with a disembodied voice on what may be a technically poor piece of equipment. Video can solve some, but not all of these problems. Teachers should be encouraged to offer visual clues to help students when using tape recorders. This can be in the form of flashcards or maps on the white-board or whatever is felt appropriate.
The tasks required of students should be set so as to aid and encourage effective listening, not to set traps for students to fall into which will only be detrimental for their motivation. As with reading skills work, different types of listening can be encouraged: gist for general meaning and listening for specific information for example. Students can be asked to convert information heard into a map, a picture or a form to be filled out.
Listenings can be divided up to make them more manageable or the tapescript can be used (perhaps in cut up form) to ease students into a task. If a teacher withholds this help and, for example, insists on only one playing of the cassette, then this will just increase the likelihood of students getting more panicked and discouraged by listening activities in general.
Finally, we move to the after-listening stage of the lesson. It is better if students first check answers to any comprehension tasks in pairs or groups which is less demotivating for the many students who find listening difficult. The feedback to a listening activity in general is important. It is good for the students to realise they have been doing something useful and interesting. If a teacher merely stops the cassette, checks the questions and moves on, it makes a mockery of all the pre-listening preparation that has been done. For this reason, it is a good idea to use listening as part of an integrated skills approach where the listening is used as a springboard onto other activities such as writing or role-plays that share the same topic.
Source: http://www.esl-lounge.com/thomas-woodgate-listening.shtml
January 17, 2005
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The "Tuning In" Listening Activity
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Learner English Level: All
Learner Maturity Level: All
Preparation Time: 10-20 minutes
Activity Time: 10 - 40 minutes
Introduction
Many times listening activities are just that - activities which focus on right or wrong, understood or not. The building and cultivation of listening skills may be lost in the quest to accomplish the task itself. The following activity is aimed at constructing solid bottom-up skills while developing student self-reliance and confidence. This listening activity is not an activity for accuracy, but an element for true practice and listening experimentation.
During the listening task students will be asked to listen for one specific element only. This can range from names, animals, colors, verbs, nouns and lexical sets. This runs on a sliding scale and should be adjusted as skills develop. One word can be extended to small expressions, questions and answers or words beginning with a specific letter, such as ŇpÓ.
Preparation
First, find a listening sample which best suits your class size and level. Next, decide what language item will be focused upon and draw a word web of ideas, themes and other topics that can be free associated. For example a listening about a flight attendant would create a word web that included - airport, airplane, travel, flying, uniform, intelligent etc. This is important as it helps to focus the students mind, activating their schematic knowledge. For the teacher, preparing the word web helps elicitation and controls the direction of the task.
Procedure
Tell the students they are going to do a practice activity where there isnŐt an emphasis on right and wrong. They are simply practicing their L2 listening skills like they would practice a golf swing or musical instrument - through repetition, self-awareness and form.
First introduce the listening topic and write it on the board to begin the word web. Have students free associate while you elicit answers and fill in the web. Discuss the topic if wanted or needed.
Have students get out a piece of paper and prepare to write down the specific language item targeted. Play the listening two times (more or less depending on level, length of listening and item difficulty).
After listening have students compare what they heard with the word web. With new items they are added and discussed as needed. This is also the time for students to discuss problems they had, what worked and what didnŐt. Then listen once more to provide closure and wrap up all elements discussed.
Additional Comments
The ultimate goal of this activity is to hone and sharpen listening skills to pinpoint accuracy without the fear of getting it wrong. The student must be given the opportunity to see their progress and lessen the fear of listening activities. It is an activity to be practiced over many classes as a brief exercise or lengthy workout. ItŐs up to you and your class dynamics.
Activating studentsŐ background knowledge via the word webs is crucial as it helps students with learning about the prediction of language in many circumstances.
As students become used to this listening activity, gradually decrease the teacher- centered web exercise to a group, pair and individual activity. Eventually challenge students to authentic listening activities where they must predict language in their own minds. Hopefully this will become an automatic process for your students, so when they leave the classroom and enter an L2 environment they will be able to deftly enter a listening situation with confidence and self-reliance.
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The Internet TESL Journal, Vol. IV, No. 6, June 1998
http://www.aitech.ac.jp/~iteslj/
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Jeff Leinaweaver
gungadin [at] avisnet.or.jp
Shinshu University, Asahi-Mura Komi, Japan
January 17, 2005
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What are they saying?
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When we listen in real life, we rely on other factors as well as the words and voice being used, for example, facial expression and hand gestures. You can exploit this using a video conversation. Prepare a transcript of a two or three minute section of dialogue from a film. Remove the characters’ names and cut the dialogue into strips. Give the students time to check any tricky language, and perhaps pre-teach little about the context of the dialogue. For example, if it is from a film, perhaps get the students to read a short plot summary before the students watch. Then give each pair a set of strips, and watch the filmed section with the volume turned down. This should take several viewings, and I find that eventually you have to watch it a couple of times with the volume up again.
Sam Shepherd
April 11, 2003
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Magic Instructions
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For this, you need to know something simple you can demonstrate to your class. I use a simple card trick (look at www.kidzone.ws/magic) for some ideas). Show the trick, and hopefully they will all be impressed, or at least intrigued as to how to do it! You then play them a recording of yourself explaining how to do it (or simply tell them). The students then have to try and emulate the trick, based on what they have heard. If you have it on cassette, this means that the students will hear exactly the same each time, and that you can control proceedings better.
A personal note on listening – most ELT courses/books suggest that listening texts should only be played two or three times at most. In my experience, if the purpose of the activity is to understand as much as possible (intensive listening), students appreciate plenty of opportunities to complete the task.
Sam Shepherd
April 11, 2003
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I can’t hear it…
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This is an activity for using songs as an introduction. Before the lesson, copy and cut up the song lyrics line by line. You then play the song once, a little too quietly. The students have to put the lyrics in order. Of course, they will find it hard, so that when they complain, you can turn it up. Do it step by step, forcing the students to focus on the song. You can then use the song to introduce whatever language point you want.
April 11, 2003
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