Module 1 Modified 150108
Module 1 Modified 150108
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ORELT
Open Resources for English Language Teaching
CC BY-SA
2012 by the Commonwealth of Learning. Open Resources for English Language Teaching: Module
1 Better Listening is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Licence
(international): http://creativecommons.org/licences/by-sa/3.0
For the avoidance of doubt, by applying this licence the Commonwealth of Learning does not waive
any privileges or immunities from claims that it may be entitled to assert, nor does the Commonwealth
of Learning submit itself to the jurisdiction, courts, legal processes or laws of any jurisdiction.
All of this document may be reproduced without permission but with attribution to the Commonwealth
of Learning and the author.
Open Resources for English Language Teaching: Module 1 Better Listening
ISBN: 978-1-894975-44-5
Published by:
Commonwealth of Learning
1055 West Hastings, Suite 1200
Vancouver, British Columbia
Canada V6E 2E9
Telephone: +1 604 775 8200
Fax: +1 604 775 8210
Web: www.col.org
E-mail: info@col.org
Acknowledgements
The Commonwealth of Learning (COL) acknowledges the contributions of the following in the
development of the Open Resources for English Language Teaching (ORELT) at Junior Secondary
School (JSS) Level modules:
Professor Thomas K. Adeyanju, Ahmadu Bello University, Nigeria (Module 1); Dr Musa Maisamari,
University of Abuja, Nigeria (Module 2); Dr Speranza M. Ndege, Institute of Open, Distance & eLearning, Kenyatta University, Kenya (Module 3); Dr Mukti Sanyal, Bharati College, University of
Delhi, India (Module 3); Dr Cornelia Muganda, Institute of Continuing Education, The Open
University of Tanzania (Module 4); Professor Isaac Olaofe, Faculty of Education, Ahmadu Bello
University, Nigeria (Module 5); and Dr Padmini Boruah, Department of English Language Teaching
(ELT), Gauhati University, India (Module 6).
We also wish to acknowledge the following people for reviewing/critiquing the modules:
Dr Padmini Boruah, Department of ELT, Gauhati University; Dr Mukti Sanyal, Bharati College,
University of Delhi; Dr Ravinarayan Chakrakodi, Regional Institute of English, South India; Dr Kishor
G. Bhide, Department of English, SNDT Arts and Commerce College for Women, India; Dr V.
Rajagopalan, SSKV College of Arts and Science for Women, India; Mr Rajesh Nimesh, Video
Production Division, Central Institute of Educational Technology, National Council of Educational
Research & Training, India; and Professor Vasudha Kamat, Central Institute of Educational
Technology, National Council of Educational Research & Training, India.
Dr Padmini Boruah, Department of ELT, Gauhati University, edited and substantially revised all the
six modules. Messrs Nicholas Kimolo and Maurice Mulinge of Futuristic Ltd. developed the
multimedia content materials and Dr. Abdurrahman Umar, Education Specialist, Teacher Education,
the Commonwealth of Learning, conceptualised, designed and co-ordinated the ORELT project.
Module 1
Contents
About this module manual
Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 7
Unit outcomes ................................................................................................................... 7
Terminology...................................................................................................................... 8
Teacher support information ............................................................................................. 8
Case study ......................................................................................................................... 8
Activities ........................................................................................................................... 9
Activity 1: Distinguishing sound differences .......................................................... 9
Activity 2: Recognising differences in word stress ............................................... 10
Activity 3: Recognising the use of weak forms .................................................... 11
Unit summary.................................................................................................................. 12
Reflections ...................................................................................................................... 12
Resources ........................................................................................................................ 13
Resource 1: Pat and The Sheep on Noahs Ship .................................................... 13
Resource 2a: Allens announcement (transcript) .................................................. 13
Resource 2b: Allens announcement (worksheet) ................................................. 14
Resource 3a: Practising weak forms (transcript) ................................................... 15
Resource 3b: Practising weak forms (worksheet) ................................................. 15
Teacher question and answer .......................................................................................... 16
ii
Contents
17
Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 17
Unit outcomes ................................................................................................................. 17
Case study ....................................................................................................................... 17
Activities ......................................................................................................................... 18
Activity 1: Responding to greetings ...................................................................... 18
Activity 2: Understanding instructions .................................................................. 19
Activity 3: Understanding a speakers attitude ..................................................... 20
Unit summary.................................................................................................................. 21
Reflections ...................................................................................................................... 21
Resources ........................................................................................................................ 21
Resource 1a: At the Christmas party (transcript) .................................................. 21
Resource 1b: At the Christmas party (worksheet)................................................. 22
Resource 2a: Exchanging greetings in a meeting (transcript) ............................... 24
Resource 2b: Exchanging greetings (worksheet) .................................................. 25
Resource 3a: Listening to instructions: Recipe (transcript) .................................. 25
Resource 3b: Listening to instructions: Recipe (worksheet) ................................. 26
Resource 4a: Listening for attitude (transcript) ..................................................... 27
Resource 4b: Listening for attitude (worksheet) ................................................... 28
Teacher question and answer .......................................................................................... 28
Unit 3: Active Listening: Communicating in Public Situations
29
Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 29
Unit outcomes ................................................................................................................. 29
Case studies ..................................................................................................................... 30
Case study 1........................................................................................................... 30
Case study 2........................................................................................................... 30
Activities ......................................................................................................................... 31
Activity 1: Following a lecture .............................................................................. 31
Activity 2: Following a debate .............................................................................. 32
Activity 3: Understanding public announcements: At a railway station ............... 33
Unit summary.................................................................................................................. 34
Reflections ...................................................................................................................... 34
Resources ........................................................................................................................ 35
Resource 1a: Travelling fast (transcript) ............................................................... 35
Resource 1b: Travelling fast (exercises) ............................................................... 36
Resource 2a: Graduation Day speech (transcript) ................................................. 36
Resource 2b: Graduation Day speech (worksheet) ............................................... 37
Resource 3a: Debate: Teachers are more important than doctors (transcript) ...... 38
Resource 3b: Debate: Teachers are more important than doctors (worksheet) ..... 42
Resource 3c: Debate: Preparing a debate (worksheet) .......................................... 42
Resource 4a: Public announcements (transcript) .................................................. 43
Resource 4b: Public announcements: Predicting information (transcript) ............ 44
Resource 4c: Public announcements (worksheet) ................................................. 44
Teacher question and answer .......................................................................................... 46
Module 1
47
Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 47
Unit outcomes ................................................................................................................. 47
Case study ....................................................................................................................... 47
Activities ......................................................................................................................... 48
Activity 1: Listening to directions ......................................................................... 48
Activity 2: Distinguishing between facts and opinions ......................................... 49
Activity 3: Understanding invitations ................................................................... 50
Unit summary.................................................................................................................. 51
Reflections ...................................................................................................................... 52
Resources ........................................................................................................................ 52
Resource 1: Understanding directions: Following directions ............................... 52
Resource 2a: Distinguishing facts and opinions (worksheet) ............................... 53
Resource 2b: Distinguishing facts and opinions (transcript) ................................. 53
Resource 3a: Understanding invitations (worksheet) ............................................ 55
Resource 3b: Understanding invitations (transcripts) ........................................... 56
Resource 3c: Understanding invitations (worksheet) ............................................ 60
Teacher question and answer .......................................................................................... 61
Unit 5: Listening across the Curriculum
63
Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 63
Unit outcomes ................................................................................................................. 63
Case study ....................................................................................................................... 63
Activities ......................................................................................................................... 64
Activity 1: Listening for specific information ....................................................... 64
Activity 2: Listening for gist ................................................................................. 65
Activity 3: Listening for detail .............................................................................. 66
Unit summary.................................................................................................................. 67
Reflections ...................................................................................................................... 67
Resources ........................................................................................................................ 67
Resource 1a: Listening for specific information (transcript) ................................ 67
Resource 1b: Listening for specific information (worksheets) ............................. 69
Resource 2a: Listening for gist: Travelling to India (worksheet) ......................... 70
Resource 2b: Listening for gist (transcripts) ......................................................... 72
Resource 3a: Listening for detail (transcript) ........................................................ 74
Resource 3b: Listening for detail (worksheet) ...................................................... 74
Resource 3c: How to make oxygen gas in the laboratory (transcript) .................. 75
Resource 3d: How to make oxygen gas in a laboratory (worksheet) .................... 76
Teacher question and answer .......................................................................................... 77
Module 1
new terminology,
core content of the unit with a variety of learning activities,
a unit summary,
assignments and/or assessments, as applicable, and
answers to assignments and/or assessments, as applicable.
Resources
For those interested in learning more on this subject, please see the list of
additional resources at the end of each unit in this module. These may be
books, articles, websites or audio/video files that can assist in the
teaching of the unit and so on.
Your comments
After you have completed Module 1 Better Listening , we would
appreciate your taking a few moments to give us your feedback on any
aspect of this module. Your feedback might include comments on:
Module content and structure.
Module reading materials and resources.
Module assignments.
Module assessments.
Module duration.
Teacher support (assigned tutors, technical help, etc.).
Your constructive feedback will help us to improve and enhance this
module.
Module 1
Module overview
Welcome to Module 1 Better
Listening
This module is made up of five units and aims to show the teacher how
effective listening can be taught in Junior Secondary School (JSS) classes
in meaningful contexts, so that students learn how to understand and
respond to real-life uses of English. Teaching listening does not mean
teaching sounds, words or sentences in isolation; it refers to giving the
students exposure to natural language in communicative situations. In this
module, teachers will learn ways of engaging their JSS students in
meaningful communicative tasks that will train them to perform various
language functions in real-life contexts outside the classroom, such as
asking for clarifications, responding to a request, an invitation or a
greeting and so on.
Module objectives
The objectives of this module are to:
help teachers devise and use meaningful activities to develop
listening skills in the classroom, and
Objectives
Module overview
Module outcomes
Upon completion of Module 1 Better Listening you will be able to:
teach listening skills in meaningful contexts,
engage your students in real-life communicative tasks to practise their
listening comprehension,
Outcomes
Time frame
You will need approximately 15 weeks to finish this module eight
weeks for formal study and seven weeks for self-directed study to
complete all the recommended activities.
How long?
This is a distance learning programme, thus the time frame is flexible and
largely self-directed.
Study skills
Study skills
Module 1
Your most significant considerations will be time and space; that is, the
time you dedicate to your learning and the environment in which you
engage in that learning.
We recommend that you take time now before starting your selfdirected study to familiarise yourself with these issues. There are a
number of excellent resources on the Web. For example:
http://www.how-to-study.com/
The How to Study website is dedicated to study skills resources.
You will find links for tips on study preparation (a list of nine
essentials for a good study place), taking notes, strategies for reading
textbooks, using reference sources and coping with test anxiety.
http://www.ucc.vt.edu/stdysk/stdyhlp.html
This is the website of Virginia Techs Division of Student Affairs.
You will find links to tips on time scheduling (including one called
Where Does Time Go?), a study skill checklist, basic concentration
techniques, how to take control of your study environment, note
taking, how to read essays for analysis and tips on developing memory
skills (Remembering).
http://www.howtostudy.org/resources.php
Another How to Study website with useful links to learning about
time management, efficient reading, questioning/listening/observing
skills, getting the most out of putting your knowledge into practice,
memory building, staying motivated and developing a learning plan.
The above links are our suggestions to start you on your way. At the time
of writing these Web links were active. If you want to look for more go to
www.google.com and type self-study basics, self-study tips, selfstudy skills or a similar combination.
Need help?
Get help through your Google Group support email, SMS number or
tutor.
Help
Reading
Adeyanju, T.K. (2009). Teaching English . (Unpublished manuscript.)
Reading
Activity
Assessment
Assignment
Case study
Outcomes
Summary
Objectives
Feedback
Terminology
Reading
Reflection
Study skills
Help
Time
Audio
Video
Module 1
Unit outcomes
Upon completion of this unit you will be able to:
help your students recognise differences in English pronunciation
stemming from vowel length (i.e., between long and short vowel
sounds),
Outcomes
Terminology
Terminology
L1 (First language):
The language
informally.
Phonetic symbols:
Phonological:
Weak forms:
acquired
at
birth,
normally
Case study
Case study
Module 1
Mr Audu, who was not confident about his own speaking skills, decided
to practise his oral skills at home and tried to ensure that:
his reading speed was at a normal conversational pace,
his pronunciation was accurate, and
his voice level and tone were modulated to make his speech
intelligible.
He also selected some recorded material from the Teachers Resources
Centre. However, first he had to:
1 Adjust the seating arrangement so that each student could hear the
recording clearly.
2 Adjust the volume of the audio system to a comfortable listening
volume.
3 Minimise the effect of background noise that might interfere with the
sounds while the tape played.
After ensuring that these problems were taken care of, he made exercises
for his students to complete while and after listening to the recordings. The
students found this new learning resource interesting, and after a month
or so of practice, their teacher found them spending more time listening
to radio and TV broadcasts and entertainment programmes in English.
Points to ponder
Activities
Activity 1: Distinguishing sound differences
Activity 1
For example, the first word they will hear is sleep , and the second one
slipped .
1 a) sleep
b) slipped
2 a) sleep
b) slipped
3 a) bit
b) beat
4 a) bit
b) beat
5 a) lip
b) leaped
6 a) lip
b) leaped
7 a) sheep
b) ship
8 a) sheep
b) ship
9 a) peel
b) pill
10 a) peel
b) pill
Activity 2
Like other languages, English has a fixed stress pattern for words
containing more than one syllable. This means that a particular syllable in
a word is said with more force than the others. For example, the word
example is always pronounced with stress on the second syllable (igZAM-pl), while the word pronunciation has the stress on the fourth
syllable (pro-nunt-si-EI-shun). Sometimes, the same word has a different
pronunciation according to whether it is used as a noun, adjective or verb.
For example, the word present is pronounced with the stress on the first
syllable when used as a noun (PRE-zent), and on the second syllable
when used as a verb (pri-ZENT).
This activity should help students notice these differences in stress when
the words are used in a specific context. Before you begin the activity,
take the students through the list of words below by putting them up on
the board and pronouncing them with the correct stress each time. For the
activity, have the students listen to the passage in Resource 2 (you can
say them aloud or use the audiotape), and underline the part of each
highlighted word (i.e., the syllable) that is stressed. Here are the words
for the board.
10
PRE-sent (Noun)
pre-SENT (Verb)
RE-cord (Noun)
re-CORD (Verb)
Module 1
OB-ject (Noun)
ob-JECT (Verb)
PRO-duce (Noun)
pro-DUCE (Verb)
AB-sent (Adjective)
ab-SENT (Verb)
R-sum (Noun)
re-SUME (Verb)
CON-duct (Noun)
con-DUCT (Verb)
Activity 3
Ill
Im
Havent
Dont
Shell
11
Weve
Youll
Id
Youre
Hes
Have a class discussion on how these contracted forms are the written
versions of the weak forms of the verbs, and how people use these weak
forms in informal conversations. If the students are to easily understand
what people say in conversations, they must become familiar with this
special feature of spoken English.
For the activity, tell your students that they will listen to a conversation
(Resource 3a) twice. The first time they will just have to listen with
attention. The second time, they will have to fill in the blanks in the
passage (Resource 3b ) with the full forms of the words that they hear.
To give your students more practice, you can put them in groups of four
(i.e., to make two pairs). The first pair will prepare a dialogue similar to
the one in Resource 3a , and have a conversation. The other pair will have
to write down the words that are said in their weak forms. The pairs then
repeat the activity; the second pair writes their dialogue, and the first pair
completes the task.
Unit summary
Summary
Reflections
Which activity was relatively easy for you to use in class?
Which activity was easier for the students to do?
Reflection
12
Module 1
Resources
Resource 1: Pat and The Sheep on Noahs Ship
Resource 1
Resource 2a
Allen:
Amina:
Allen:
13
Allen:
Amina:
Allen:
Resource file
If you have trouble playing the video, you can have your students listen to
the audio recording (below) of the same conversation:
Audio
Scripts\Module1\Unit1\Activity2\Resource2\Audio\Allens Announcement.mp3
1 Ab-sent
2 Ab-sent
3 Pre-sent
4 Pre-sent
5 Re-cord
6 Re-cord
7 Re-sume
8 Re-sume
9 Ob-ject
10 Ob-ject
11 Con-duct
12 Con-duct
13 Pro-duce
14 Pro-duce
14
Module 1
Resource 3a
Teacher:
Kenny:
Teacher:
Well, Ill have to mark you absent for the whole period.
Why dont you get a certificate from your doctor?
Kenny:
Teacher:
Kenny:
Teacher:
Kenny:
Thank you, Sir. Ill bring my father along. Hes been wanting
to meet you to discuss this.
Resource file
Scripts\Module1\Unit1\Activity3\Resource3a\Audio\Practicing Weak
Forms.mp3
Resource 3b
Teacher:
Kenny:
Teacher:
Well, I ______ have to mark you absent for the whole period.
Why ________ you _______ get a certificate from your
doctor?
Kenny:
Teacher:
Kenny:
Teacher:
15
Kenny:
Feedback
16
Question:
Answer:
Module 1
Unit outcomes
Upon completion of this unit you will:
recognise and understand various greetings in English,
understand instructions given in English,
Outcomes
Case study
Case study
17
Activities
Activity 1: Responding to greetings
Activity 1
One of the first things students are taught to do in the English class is
greet teachers with expressions such as Good morning, Maam/Sir, and
respond to greetings like How are you today? with Im fine, Maam.
Such greetings are, however, limited to the English class, and students are
rarely exposed to other forms of greetings. This leaves them unprepared
when they interact with people in real-life situations, and unable to
respond appropriately. In this activity, students will have an opportunity
to listen to several forms of expressions used for greetings, and to learn
appropriate ways of responding. To prepare your students for this
activity, show them the video in Resource 1a , but with the audio muted,
and ask them to guess what the people in the video are doing. You can
also ask them to guess what the speakers might be saying. Then have a
class discussion on greeting people. Have the students suggest
expressions that we use to greet one another in English. You might get
responses such as Good morning/afternoon. How are you? and so on.
Encourage them to think of how they greet people in their own language,
and discuss how they would translate these expressions into English.
Now announce that they will watch the video recording again, but this
time with the sound on. As they watch, they will have to tick off on their
worksheet (Resource 1b ) the utterances that they hear people use to greet
each other. During discussion of the activity, make students aware of the
specific expressions related to greeting. These may be different from
invitations or small talk.
18
Module 1
For further practice, divide the students into groups of four, and have
them listen to an audio recording of a conversation (Resource 2a ) then fill
in the blanks on a worksheet (Resource 2b ) with the greetings they hear
on the audio. Then, in their groups, have them design their own
conversations in a dialogue format, and put in appropriate responses to
greetings from the examples they heard on the video or audio. You could
also read out the transcripts yourself if your classroom does not support
the multimedia files.
Activity 2
19
After the activity, you can have a class discussion on other kinds of
instructions that people have to listen to in English. You can follow up
this activity with a more complex one in which students complete a series
of actions while listening to your instructions. Some such actions can
relate to making a drawing while listening to the steps in sequence,
following a route on a map, creating a paper boat and so on.
Activity 3
One of the interesting things about language is how our words and
sentences are accompanied by tones that give listeners information about
our mood and attitude. In fact, the same utterance, when said in different
ways, can produce very different meanings and show the speakers
attitude. For example, the short utterance below can mean:
1 Surprise: A birthday cake! (= I didnt expect this gift!)
2 Confusion: A birthday cake? (= Why should anyone give me a cake
its not my birthday!)
3 Pleasure: A birthday cake! (= What a pleasant surprise!)
4 Annoyance: A birthday cake? (= Dont people have better sense than to
give me a cake?)
To prepare students to listen and respond appropriately to English in reallife contexts, it is important to train them to recognise and understand
peoples attitudes when they speak. In this activity, you will be able to
expose students to several English utterances spoken in different ways
that show a speakers positive or negative attitudes.
Before you begin this activity, demonstrate different attitudes or moods
such as anger, surprise, calm or humour by saying a sentence in different
ways as shown in the example above. For example, you could take a
sentence like I didnt eat the ice cream in the fridge! and say it angrily,
apologetically, humorously or calmly.
Then ask a few students to say a sentence to practise listening for attitude.
Have a short discussion on how and why it is important for them to
understand the speakers attitude when they listen to people speak
English in situations outside the classroom. Follow up the discussion with
the activity.
For the activity, tell the students that they will listen to a conversation
between two people called Nicholas and Ravi (see Resource 4a ).
Nicholas is the first speaker, and Ravi is the second speaker. As they
listen, they should tick () in their worksheets the correct attitude or tone
of the speaker. After they finish, they should exchange answers with the
friend sitting next to them, and find out if they agree on the speakers
attitude. As a follow-up task, ask the students, working in groups of four,
to prepare a similar conversation on a situation and then do a role play on
it. When a group is doing their role play, the other students should say
what the attitude of the speakers is.
Wind up the activity by asking the students to note down (as a homework
assignment) at least three different examples of speakers attitudes that
20
Module 1
they hear on their way home from school that day, and on their way there
the next day.
Unit summary
Summary
This unit included some activities that you can use in your classroom to
help your students understand English expressions in personal
communication. JSS students need to learn to listen and respond
appropriately to communicative exchanges in situations outside the
classroom to improve their proficiency. You could involve them in role
plays in the class on different life situations that would require them to
listen and respond to people in English. You could even organise class
trips to local places where they would need to converse in English. These
real-life activities will greatly improve their listening comprehension.
Reflections
Did all the students participate actively in the activities?
Reflection
Did any students not show much interest in the activities or not cope
with them?
As a teacher, how would you address this?
Which activity took longer to perform, and why?
Resources
Resource 1a: At the Christmas party (transcript)
Resource 1a
Butler:
Diane:
Halle:
Musa:
Diane:
Musa:
Oh, that sounds like a great idea! By the way, I havent seen
Nelson anywhere around. Where is he?
21
Nelson:
Halle:
Nelson:
Musa:
Diane:
Nelson:
Diane:
Resource files
Scripts\Module1\Unit2\Activity1\Resource1a\Video\At
Party.mp4
the
Christmas
If you have trouble playing the video, you can have your students listen
to the audio recording (below) of the same conversation:
Scripts\Module1\Unit2\Activity1\Resource1a\Audio\At the Christmas
Party.mp3
Audio
Resource 1b
The table below contains the utterances used by the people in the video.
Which ones are used as greetings? In the Check Box, tick () the
expressions that you think are used for greeting one another, and as
responses to greetings. Cross (X) the box if the expression is not a
greeting.
NO.
22
Expression
Check Box
1.
My dear friends!
Module 1
10
11
12
Hey, Musa!
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
Samuel:
Rodney:
Samuel:
Nikita:
Samuel, Rodney:
Sheila:
Nikita:
Edward:
Sheila:
Samuel:
Sheila:
Samuel:
Everyone:
Resource 2a
Resource file
24
Scripts\Module1\Unit2\Activity1\Resource2\Audio\Exchanging_Greetings_I
n_A_Meeting.mp3
Module 1
Samuel:
Rodney:
Samuel:
Nikita:
Resource 2b
Nikita:
Edward:
Sheila:
Samuel:
Girls, __________?
Sheila:
Samuel:
Everyone:
Asha: Oh! This is a very common Indian dish. Its called aloo paratha,
which is like a bread stuffed with mashed potatoes in spices.
Kama: Tell me what goes into it.
25
Asha: You mean the ingredients? Well, for the stuffing, youll need two
or three boiled potatoes. Mash them well, and add a teaspoonful
of chili-ginger paste to it. Spice it up with a few sprigs of
coriander leaves, finely chopped. Add salt to taste and a
tablespoonful of oil.
Kama: What about the bread?
Asha: To make the dough for the bread, which we call chapatti, take
two cups of wheat flour, add salt to taste and a little oil. Knead
the dough with water until it becomes soft.
Kama: That sounds easy! What next?
Asha: Make small balls of the dough and stuff them with a bit of the
boiled potatoes. Then dust the balls of dough on wheat flour so
that they are easy to roll, and dont become messy. Now carefully
roll out each ball of dough with a rolling-pin until it becomes the
size of a quarter plate.
Kama: Is that all?
Asha: No, unless you plan to eat it raw! To cook the paratha, heat up a
frying pan and pour a teaspoonful of oil on it. Place the paratha
on the pan carefully, and turn it over a few times so that both
sides get cooked evenly. Your aloo paratha is now ready to eat!
Serve it with a green chutney or dip.
Resource file
Scripts\Module1\Unit2\Activity2\Resource3a\Video\Listening_to_Instruction
s_Recipe.mp4
26
Module 1
Nicholas (firmly ): Of course you are! You have been stopping wherever I
stopped, pretending to look at the shop windows!
Ravi (calmly ): My dear man, you are unnecessarily getting worked up. I
do not know you, and I have been looking inside shop windows
because I want to buy something special for my wifes birthday.
Ask any shopkeeper!
Nicholas (sceptically, not believing him ): Do you really expect me to
believe that? There are no shops in this street selling womens
gifts!
Ravi (gently, with a smile ): I think youve been watching too many
detective movies, my dear man! By the way, Im Ravi, and my
office is just over there.
Nicholas (apologetically ): Im sorry, Ravi! Maybe I WAS imagining
things. Perhaps its because Im very tense about something at
work. Sorry again. Oh, my manners! Im Nicholas, and my office
is a block away.
Ravi (pleasantly ): Dont apologise. Its all right. Nice meeting you,
Nicholas.
Resource file
Scripts\Module1\Unit2\Activity3\Resource4a\Video\Listening_for_Attitude.mp4
27
b) happy
c) polite
d) confused
b) angry
c) calm
d) surprised
b) firm
c) disrespectful d) respectful
b) sarcastic
c) scared
b) polite
replies
c) friendly
d) apologetic
to
Ravi
in
a/an
d) respectful
b) obedient
c) unpleasant
d) pleasant
b) happy
c) sad
d) friendly
b) negative
c) neutral
d) unpleasant
Feedback
28
Question:
Answer:
Module 1
Unit outcomes
Upon completion of this unit you will be able to teach effective listening
by:
having students interpret information from a public lecture,
helping students understand the main ideas of a debate, and
Outcomes
29
Case studies
Case study 1
Case study 1
Mrs Julie Obi is an English teacher in a JSS and is in charge of Clubs and
Societies. Mrs Obi was recently asked to prepare her students for an interschool debating competition. In the course of her preparation, she noted
that her students could not respond to the points raised by their
opponents. She observed that this inability was because of poor listening
skills.
Mrs Obi therefore decided to help her students develop their listening
comprehension skills. In her next few classes, she devised a few language
games that required her students to listen and respond to questions posed
by the other groups. She awarded marks to the group that responded
correctly, to make the activity more interesting. At the end of each game,
she organised a feedback session in which students were encouraged to
describe why they had won or lost a particular game. She prompted them
to say which parts they did not understand, and whether it was because
the teacher had used unfamiliar words or read very fast, or they could not
understand instructions easily. By discussing their problems in listening,
Mrs Obi managed to make them conscious and aware of the need to listen
more carefully and with focus. At the end of several rounds of such
classes, she realised that the students listening skills had improved
dramatically. This encouraged her to organise club activities such as
debates, which her students now participated in with greater enthusiasm.
Points to ponder
Case study 2
Case study 2
30
Module 1
say precisely what the speech was all about. Mr Amadu resolved to do
something to enable his family and students to get information from radio
and television broadcasts in English.
He also realised that in order to get his students to pay attention to what
they were listening to, he needed interesting resource materials. He
decided to design activities that would enable his students to identify
facts and opinions, to differentiate between them and determine speakers
attitudes.
Points to ponder
Activities
Activity 1: Following a lecture
Activity 1
31
the title, listening for main ideas, summarising the lecture for correct
comprehension and later recall.
For the main activity, you can have students listen to a speech actively by
practising some of the strategies used above. See Resource 2a for a
sample passage and Resource 2b for exercises on developing focused
listening skills. Remember to have the students listen to the speech twice,
making them do the activities the first time they listen, and reviewing
their work while they listen for a second time.
Have the students exchange their notebooks for peer correction. Round
up the activity with a class discussion on the strategies they should use
for focused listening , such as:
thinking about the topic before listening,
looking for the main idea/ideas,
noting subordinate points and supporting details,
looking out for illustrations and examples to understand the speakers
point, and
assessing the speakers attitude (using the strategies already practised
in Unit 2 above).
Activity 2
32
Module 1
After this, have a discussion to bring to the students notice how they had
to listen carefully to each side of the debate in order to rank the speaker.
Ask the students to recollect what they liked about the best speakers
presentation. As listeners, the class should have noticed the following
strategies used by the speakers:
A clear and audible voice and good pace of speaking neither too
fast nor too slow.
Point-by-point expression of ideas rather than long explanations.
Use of examples to substantiate each argument.
Use of short sentences to ensure that listeners can easily understand
the point being made.
Highlighting of each point through introductory expressions such as
The main point is..., What I feel is..., However, ..., In todays world..., My
last point is ...., For example,..., In conclusion, I would like to say that..., To
sum up...., etc.
Now tell the students that they will listen to a debate (see Resource 3a )
and judge the winner. As they listen, they will have to note down the
important points of the arguments on a worksheet (Resource 3b). You can
use the points listed in Resource 3c Preparing a Debate to introduce to
the students the concept of a debate.
Activity 3
Apart from academic uses of English such as lectures and debates, JSS
students also need exposure to the kind of English used for public
purposes, such as announcements. One example of a public situation is
the railway station. In a railway station, important announcements about
train arrivals and departures are usually made in more than one language.
In most provinces and countries, English is one of the languages used.
In this activity, you will be able to let your students listen to railway
announcements. This is intended to give them practice in listening for
specific information, which is an important sub-skill of listening. For the
activity, you will have to use examples of actual announcements and
give the students some tasks based on them.
Before the activity, have a general class discussion on whether students
have travelled by train, or have visited a railway station to collect visitors
or see people off. Let them brainstorm on the things they have seen in a
railway station, the noises they heard and the general feel of a railway
station. Steer the discussion to information noticeboards and the
important announcements made.
Now play (or read out) the examples of announcements given in
Resource 4a , and ask the students to guess which ones are from a railway
station, an airport, a bus terminus, a theatre and a museum. Have a short
discussion about which words in the announcements helped them decide.
33
Then give the students the worksheet in Resource 4c and ask them to
work in pairs to complete the given announcements by listening to the
recording in Resource 4b. Have each pair discuss their answers, and then
exchange their worksheets with another pair to find out whether they got
the information correct. Did they decide that all the announcements were
from the railway station? If they did, why?
The discussion after this activity should prompt the students to mention
the important types of information we hear at a railway station, such as
train names, timings, important words such as arrive, depart, passengers,
platform and so on.
To give the students more practice, you can use similar activities with
announcements or even ask them to make their own announcements and
read them out in the class for their classmates to predict the information
and understand the important points.
Unit summary
Summary
This unit tried to give your students exposure to English as spoken in the
public domain. The first two activities were designed to make them
practise listening to longer stretches of public speaking such as a lecture
and a debate, while the third one aimed at developing their skills of
understanding public announcements. The unit activities should help you
to use similar strategies to engage your students in authentic listening
tasks taken from the real world. This will prepare them to listen with
focus when they leave the classroom, and also aid their comprehension
skills.
Reflections
Which of the activities were easy for you as a teacher to use?
What made them easy to use?
Reflection
Do you think your students will enjoy activities from real life like the
public announcements?
How can you give them more practice?
34
Module 1
Resources
Resource 1a: Travelling fast (transcript)
Resource 1a
Have you ever travelled outside your province? What is your favourite
mode of transport? I have travelled to many cities both within the country
and outside, both by road and by air. I have had different experiences,
both good and bad. I have compared these two means of transport and
have concluded that air transport is better, faster and safer, but costlier.
I have travelled from Abuja to Lagos both by car and on an airplane and I
must tell you how long it takes by car. The fastest car I have ever
travelled by took us seven hours of non-stop driving. We left Abuja at six
oclock in the morning before it got warm, and reached Lagos at one
oclock in the afternoon. The journey was pleasant enough, but at the end
of it we were hot, tired and hungry. Last year, I had to visit Lagos again
on business. I boarded the plane at ten oclock in the morning, and it took
only 55 minutes to reach Lagos by air. I had had time to have my
breakfast, work on my computer during the flight and reach Lagos in time
for my meeting. Even better, I caught a late flight out of Lagos, and was
back home in Abuja in time for dinner with my family!
Some people say that air travel is dangerous, and they would prefer to be
safe and late, rather than fast and sorry. But it is on record that since
January 2009, there has not been any incident of air disaster in the
aviation industry in Nigeria. However, it is a known fact that several
accidents occur on our roads daily with varying degrees of fatality. The
financial loss in these road accidents is also very alarming. It is true that it
costs much more to travel by air than by road. The cheapest airline
charges not less than N16,000 from Abuja to Lagos while the most
expensive passenger cars or luxurious buses charge not more than
N5,000. However, if you consider financial benefit in terms of time
saved, no amount of money is great enough. What I spent on air travel to
Lagos was very little compared to the amount of business I won by
talking to various clients in the meetings I attended there.
Even if you are not travelling on business, I think the amount of money
you spend on air travel is well spent. If, like me, you do not have relatives
to stay with in Lagos, and you are travelling by car, you would have to
check into a hotel for the night, and travel back the next day. Doesnt this
cost a lot of money? If you flew to Lagos on an airplane, you would be
able to return home the same day after your work is over, and still have
time to spend with your family. Can any amount of money compensate
for that? It is because of this that I believe that travelling by air is far
more sensible than travelling by road.
Resource file
Audio
35
Resource 1b
1 You are going to hear Mrs Abdul of Abuja speak on a topic she calls
Travelling Fast . What do you think she will tell us in her lecture? Note
down two things that you think she will talk about. After you hear the
lecture, read what you had written. Did you guess correctly?
2 The four sentences below sum up what Mrs Abdul says in her lecture.
They are numbered iiv. Listen to the lecture carefully, and, working
with a friend, put the sentence summaries in the correct order
according to what Mrs Abdul talked about first, what she said next and
so on.
i
ii In the long run, the cost of travelling by air is less than road travel
because we spend more money on overnight stay in hotels, and are
not able to be with our families at night.
iii When compared to travelling by road, air travel is better, faster and
safer, but costlier.
iv Contrary to popular belief, statistics show that travelling by air is
safer than travelling by road in terms of fatal accidents, and less
costly.
Resource 2a
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Module 1
Resource file
Scripts\Module1\Unit3\Activity1\Resource2a\Audio\Graduation_Day_Speec
h.mp3
Your grades
Complaints to parents
Gods blessings
2 Read the following summaries before you listen to the speech. Then
listen to the speech carefully. Discuss with a friend which summary
gives us the main idea of the speech. Which words or sentences
helped you to decide on the correct summary?
a In this speech, the principal of Perfect Memorial Secondary School
congratulates his students on their successful completion of Junior
Secondary School education. He talks about the schools
commitment to discipline and good conduct and its motto, Light of
the World . The principal recalls earlier students and mentions their
successful careers as responsible members of society. He reminds
the students to follow the good values they learned at school, and
prays to God to bring them success in life.
b In this speech, the principal of Perfect Memorial Secondary School
congratulates his students on coming to the school with their
parents. He tells the parents of their childrens discipline and good
conduct. He tells the students to study well for the Junior
Secondary School examinations. He warns them that they will be
sent away if they perform poorly in the exams.
c In this speech, the principal of Perfect Memorial Secondary School
congratulates his students on their successful completion of Junior
Secondary School education. He talks about the schools
commitment to discipline and good conduct and its motto, Light of
the World . The principal recalls earlier students and mentions their
successful careers as responsible members of society. He reminds
37
the students to follow the good values they learned at school, and
prays to God to bring them success in life.
d In this speech, the principal of Perfect Memorial Secondary School
congratulates his students on coming to the school with their
parents. He tells the parents of their childrens discipline and good
conduct. He tells the students to study well for the Junior
Secondary School examinations. He warns them that they will be
sent away if they perform poorly in the exams.
3 What example does the principal give to show how the students will
benefit from the things they learned in school?
a Examples of good conduct by teachers of the school such as the
Moral Science teacher, the Maths teacher and the Geography
teacher.
b Examples of successful past students who have become governors,
ministers, civil servants, etc.
c Examples from the principals own life, such as being a good
student, performing well at college, getting the job of principal and
so on.
d Examples of religious beliefs such as discipline, good conduct,
truthfulness, light of the world and punishment.
4 Listen to the speech attentively once more. What do you think of the
principals attitude or feelings towards the students? Sit in groups of
four and discuss with your group whether you think the principal
sounded like a kind and encouraging man or an unpleasant and
discouraging man . Share with the other groups why you felt so.
Resource 3a
Speaker 1:
38
Module 1
Speaker 3:
Timekeeper:
Speaker 3:
39
40
Speaker 4:
Timekeeper:
Speaker 4:
Speaker 5:
Speaker 6:
Module 1
We have run out of our allotted time, so this was the last
speech from any team. On behalf of the organisers, I
thank the participating teams for their wonderful
presentations, and wish both teams good luck. Thank
you, audience, for being such interested listeners.
I now request our honourable judge to declare the results
of this debate and give his concluding remarks.
Judge:
Moderator:
Resource files
Scripts\Module1\Unit3\Activity2\Resource3a\Audio\Debate.mp3
41
Resource 3b
Look at the video of/listen to the debate between St. Anthonys School
and Lagos Secondary School on the topic Teachers are more important
than doctors . Imagine you are the judge of the competition. Who,
according to you, has won? As you listen, fill in the worksheet with your
answers. Then discuss the debate with a partner and decide on the
winners. Listen to the recording once again and cross-check your notes.
How well did you listen? How many classmates chose the same winner as
you did?
1 The topic of the debate is ___________________________.
2 The participating teams are ____________ and _______________.
3 The speakers for the motion are from ____________ School, and the
team opposing the motion is from _________ School.
4 The first speakers main point is ______________________.
5 The second speaker, who is from the team against the motion, argues
that health ___________________. She adds that in a matter of life
and death, we do not rely on our ___________, ____________ or
_____________ teacher.
6 Speaker 3 talks about the need for a doctor to pass _____________
and have a proper __________ He defines a teacher as someone who
transfers their __________________________________________.
7 Speaker 4 is amazed at the opposite teams __________________
attitude to teaching. His argument is that we need ______________
people to become teachers.
8 Speaker 5 sums up the opposite teams arguments, which she calls a
______________ vision. She picks up the argument about competent
teachers by saying that it is a ___________ who judges the
competence of a ______________ in the licensing exam.
9 The last speaker argues that even the people who ________________
have to be ____________ themselves.
10 In your opinion, the winning team is ______________________.
11 The reasons why they have won are: _________________________
________________________________________________________.
42
Module 1
also work out what the other team member is suggesting indirectly.
4 The judges will award marks to a team based on the points raised as
well as the opponents points countered.
5 Whether one is supporting or opposing a motion, it is important to
think of all possible arguments beforehand and to enumerate them.
6 It is equally important to think of counter-arguments that the opposite
team will raise, and to be ready with answers or arguments for them.
7 Each team should note all the points mentioned as the opposite team
members speak, and counter these effectively when their own turn
comes.
8 To convince the judge and audience of their arguments, the speaker
should use examples, illustrations and evidence for each point.
9 The speaker should use introductory phrases for each point, so that the
audience can easily follow the argument. Some such phrases are The
main point is..., What I feel is..., However, ..., In todays world..., My last
point is ...., For example,..., In conclusion, I would like to say that..., To sum
up...., etc.
Resource 4a
43
Scripts\Module1\Unit3\Activity3\Resource4a\Public_Announcements
.mp3
3 We regret to inform you that Western Railways has cancelled their last
train to Nairobi because of heavy fog.
4 An important announcement: Platform 6 has been temporarily closed
for repairs, and the Midland passenger train will now leave from
Platform 5b.
5 Your attention, please. Passengers departing from Platform 4 are
requested to stay away from the main doors.
Resource file
Scripts\Module1\Unit3\Activity3\Resource4b\Audio\Predicting_Information_
In_Public_Announcements.mp3
44
Module 1
Resource 4c
correct words?
______________.
45
Feedback
46
Question:
Answer:
Module 1
Unit outcomes
Upon completion of this unit, you will be able to:
help your students follow simple directions in English,
have your students understand the difference between fact and opinion
in someones speech, and
Outcomes
Case study
Case study
47
feeling that she would need more than one meeting with the students to
prepare them fully for the excursion.
She realised that not only would this be most of the students first trip to
South India, but also none of them spoke the local language. They would
all have to converse in English, right from the airport in New Delhi to the
Tourist Lodge in Ooty, with airport personnel, travel guides, hotel staff,
local residents and so on. Mrs Robins decided that even with the little
time she had, she would need to make the students brush up their social
skills, including performing simple functions in English such as making
requests, asking for and following directions, making small talk with
other tourists, asking for information, etc.
Over the next two weeks, Mrs Robins gave her students intense practice
in understanding and responding appropriately to spoken English. She
devised role plays in which students took on various roles as hotel and
airport personnel, travel guides, etc., and practised what they would hear
and how they would respond. During the trip, Mrs Robins was relieved to
find that her students were able to have meaningful conversations with
people everywhere, because they could understand the language easily
and respond appropriately. Back home after the trip, Mrs Robins
discussed this with the principal, and began teaching special classes once
a week to develop students listening and speaking skills in English.
Points to ponder
Activities
Activity 1: Listening to directions
Activity 1
One of the most common functions of English is asking for and giving
directions. Whether one is in a new place for work or personal reasons, or
in an unfamiliar location in ones own city, hometown or building, one
often needs guidance from others to reach a destination. In the classroom,
students usually get some practice in other functions such as following
instructions, asking and giving permission and so on, but little in
following directions.
In this activity, you will learn how to devise situations for students to
practise understanding and responding to directions. As a preparatory
task, write short instructions giving directions like Get up and walk to the
blackboard/Go to the far left corner of the room and sit down/Walk to Jennys
desk, pick up her pen and put it on my table on three or four small slips of
48
Module 1
paper. Select four students at random and have them do the activities one
by one. After the first student has done her part, describe what she did:
Mary got up from her seat and walked three steps north. Then she
turned left and walked three more steps. Then she walked straight
north until she reached the blackboard.
Now ask the class to describe each students movement as he or she picks
up a slip of paper from the table and follows the directions.
This activity is meant to elicit the language of asking for and giving
directions , such as nouns showing directions and landmarks (north, east,
west, south, corner, traffic point, building, landmark), verbs of movement
(turn, follow, skip, cross), prepositions (around, across, behind, below)
and their matching structures. This will prepare them for the main
activity, which is an exercise for students to complete a map while
listening to directions.
For the main activity, you can draw or have someone make you a rough
sketch of the area in which your local library is located. The map should
have a few landmarks that the students are familiar with. The activity is
for students to write the names of the landmarks in the space provided on
the map as they listen to you giving directions to a stranger to the library.
They should also trace the route from the starting point to the library as
they listen.
See Resource 1 for a video on listening to directions. If you cannot play
the video, you could have the students listen to the directions given in the
audio, or read them out from the transcript. You can make the map
according to these directions, or write your own set. It is best to work
with a map that students would be familiar with so that they can
concentrate on understanding the language of directions.
Activity 2
49
favourite place in their hometown, and then write two sentences, the first
naming the place and the second saying why they like it. Ask a few
students at random to read out their responses, and put these sentences on
the board in two columns. The first column should contain the factual
details of the place (e.g., my favourite place in town is Central Park ), and the
second column should list their reasons (I like it because it has swings,
seesaws and an ice cream shop ). After you have collected a few samples
for each column, bring to their notice that the information in Column 1
relates to facts , while that in Column 2 relates to opinions . Remind them
that we include both facts and opinions in conversation, the factual
details being something that is true for all time and the opinions being
personal reasons and feelings about a topic.
Now give them the set of sentences in Resource 2a and ask them, in pairs,
to sort them into facts and opinions . This will prepare them for the
listening task. After this preparatory activity, show them the video in
Resource 2b. In pairs, they will have to listen carefully and note down the
facts and opinions. Partner 1 in each pair should note the facts and
Partner 2 the opinions. After they finish writing, play the video once
more and have a class discussion about whether they were able to make
the appropriate distinctions.
Here are some questions you can ask the students after the video to elicit
the facts:
1 What is a tsunami?
2 What causes a tsunami?
3 What happens when a tsunami hits the shore?
4 How many people were affected by the tsunami in Japan?
5 Who took the pictures that flashed on television?
These questions can elicit the opinions expressed in the video:
1 What is Rays grandfathers explanation of a tsunami?
2 Why should people not live near the sea, according to Ray?
3 Are people who drive on seaside roads foolish?
4 What do waves do to people when people annoy them?
5 How does Rays father know where Mr Sharp is?
6 Is being a reporter a sensible job?
Activity 3
50
Module 1
Unit summary
Summary
51
Reflections
How well did you manage to use the audio and video files in the class?
Reflection
What specific challenges did you note as the students carried out each
activity?
How can each activity be made enjoyable for the students?
Resources
Resource 1: Understanding directions: Following directions
Resource 1
52
Stranger:
You:
You mean the Town Library? Oh its not very far from
here. Just walk straight for two blocks until you reach the
intersection.
Stranger:
You:
Okay, here you are. As I was saying, walk straight for two
blocks until you reach the intersection the traffic signal.
Then take a left turn there, and walk until you reach St.
Johns Hospital.
Stranger:
You:
Stranger:
You:
Stranger:
You:
Module 1
Stranger:
You:
Resource file
Scripts\Module1\Unit4\Activity1\Resource1\Video\Understanding_Directions.mp
4
Resource 2a
1 Tsunamis are underwater earthquakes that cause sea and ocean waves
to rise unnaturally high.
2 Tsunamis usually occur in places that are prone to earthquakes.
3 Tsunamis are caused because the gods get angry with human beings
for spreading evil.
4 Tsunamis can be prevented by mass prayers by people from all
religions.
5 The latest tsunami to have caused extensive damage is the one
occurring off the coast of Japan on 11 March 2011.
6 Many people lost their lives in this tsunami because they were careless
and should have remained at home on that day.
7 The Japan tsunami was so severe that it caused Japans nuclear
reactors to burst.
8 The radiation emitted by the damaged reactors constitutes a serious
health hazard to people living within a 50- to 80-kilometre radius.
9 I think people all around the world should raise funds to help the
people of Japan.
10 One should never travel to Japan in the future because they may be
burnt by the radioactive gases coming out of the nuclear reactors.
(Answers: Sentences 1, 2, 5 7 and 8 are facts; the rest are opinions )
Did you watch the evening news yesterday? It seems there was a
big tsunami in Japan!
53
Chris: Is that so? Then we should never go near the sea the water god
lives in the sea, doesnt he?
Ray:
Yeah, thank God we dont live anywhere near the sea! I was
watching TV yesterday, and the big waves came and carried
away people, houses, cars and even airplanes out to the sea in just
one minute.
Chris: You mean the waves came into the roads and airports? That must
have been horrible!
Ray:
Yeah, and if people are so foolish to drive on the roads near the
seashore, they WILL be carried away! Ive never seen a sea, but I
know waves come quietly and pull you to the sea if they dont
like you. Ive heard of many people who went on holiday to the
seaside and never came back home because they did something to
make the waves angry!
Anyway, as I was telling you, the news report said more than
80,000 people must have died. It seems tsunamis can also break
down houses, big buildings, telephone lines, electric poles,
bridges...
Chris: How horrible! Is anybody in Japan still alive? Who is taking the
pictures?
Ray:
Silly boy, of course people are still there! The reporter was
saying the photos were taken by local people and also by
reporters from foreign countries. Father was saying his friend Mr
Sharp from National Television must be in Japan by now. Mr.
Sharp is a fearless man who always wants to be at the centre of
action.
Chris: I dont think reporters have a good job. Ill never be a reporter
they have to go to such dangerous places!
Ray:
Me neither!
Resource file
54
Scripts\Module1\Unit4\Activity2\Resource2b\Video\Distinguishing_facts_an
d_Opinions.mp4
Module 1
Column 2
Invitation
Request
Invitation
Permission
Invitation
Request
Permission
Responses
55
Resource 3b
Raveena:
Richa:
Raveena:
Richa:
Raveena:
Richa:
Raveena:
Richa:
Raveena:
Richa:
Rahman:
56
Rahman:
Abdul:
Module 1
Tim:
Sandy:
Mike:
Abdul:
Mike:
Abdul:
Mike:
Abdul:
Sally:
Rodney:
Sally:
Rodney:
Sally:
Rodney:
Sally:
57
Rodney:
Sally:
Rodney:
Sally:
Conversation 4: At a party
58
Richard:
Jeremy:
Colleen:
Richard:
Jeremy:
Colleen:
Jeremy:
Colleen:
Jeremy:
Colleen:
Jeremy:
Colleen:
Richard:
Module 1
Jenny:
Conny:
Jenny:
Conny:
Jenny:
Conny:
Jenny:
Conny:
Jenny:
Conny:
Resource files
Scripts\Module1\Unit4\Activity3\Resource3b\Video\Workplace.mp4
Scripts\Module1\Unit4\Activity3\Resource3b\Video\Footballmatch.mp4
Scripts\Module1\Unit4\Activity3\Resource3b\Video\Street.mp4
Scripts\Module1\Unit4\Activity3\Resource3b\Video\Party.mp4
Scripts\Module1\Unit4\Activity3\Resource3b\Video\Park.mp4
59
60
Module 1
Feedback
Question:
Answer:
61
Module 1
Unit outcomes
Upon completion of this unit you will be able to make your students
listen effectively and understand:
the gist of a topic,
specific information on a topic,
Outcomes
Case study
Case study
63
Activities
Activity 1: Listening for specific information
Activity 1
64
Module 1
the street the previous day. No one is allowed to write down the
information; they will all have to report from memory. Give the students
not more than three minutes per exchange. Then ask a few students
randomly to report what their partners said. This exercise usually
generates a lot of laughter, as people tend to forget, reword or even
change the information when they report back. After the exercise, have a
discussion on the importance of listening intently to look for/hear specific
information. Then tell them what they have to do in the activity.
In the activity, the students will have to note down information after
listening to a teachers speech about Michael Jackson. (See Resource 1a .)
This activity is to be done in pairs again. Tell the students that they will
have to listen to their teacher carefully because one of them will have to
deliver a short speech on Michael at tomorrows morning assembly. The
first partner in each pair will note down the information about Michaels
family background in Worksheet 1, and the second partner will note
down important aspects of Michaels singing career in Worksheet 2. (See
Resource 1b .) After they finish, they will have to compile their notes and
prepare a short summary. The pair who writes the best summary will
make a presentation at the morning assembly. Before they listen to the
recording, take the students through the worksheets so that they are
prepared for the listening activity. To enable everyone to get the correct
information, you can play the audio file once again after they finish the
activity and let them check for errors. You can end by telling them that
they will have to listen to more conversations/speeches to practise their
listening skills, so that they can locate correct information easily when
they listen to lectures, news reports, the teachers instructions, etc., later.
Activity 2
65
For the main activity, have the students listen to/watch three lectures on
three different topics delivered by JSS teachers (see Resource 2b ). They
will have to listen carefully and write the gist of the topics in the passage.
As they listen, they can make notes on the important points and use that
to write the gist.
For further practice, and as a follow-up activity, you can give the students
another exercise. Write a few passages on separate sheets of paper, fold
them and keep them on your table. Ask a few students to come up one by
one, select one passage and read it aloud for the class. The class will have
to listen carefully and note what the topic is about, in just one or, at the
most, two sentences. After all the passages have been read, ask the
students to read out their summaries/gists. You can have a discussion and
pick the best gist. Wind up the activity by reviewing the main features of
a gist.
Activity 3
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Unit summary
In this unit you learned a few strategies to help students improve their
listening skills for academic purposes, especially for specific information,
gist and detail.
Summary
This unit should help you to develop similar techniques in your classroom
while teaching other subjects, or help other subject teachers engage their
students in more meaningful classroom interaction. The activities
described in this unit should be supplemented with similar activities using
passages from subjects other than the examples given here. This will give
students more focused practice in listening for comprehension. The
feedback sessions for each activity are important as they make students
reflect on what they have learned. It would be worthwhile, therefore, to
ensure that every activity is followed by a round of discussion.
Reflections
Did the pre-activity tasks help your students do the main task more
efficiently?
Reflection
Resources
Resource 1a: Listening for specific information (transcript)
Resource
1a
Teacher:
Students:
Teacher:
Today I have very sad news to share with you. Michael Jackson,
probably the most famous musician of our time, died last night.
Students (all at once ): Michael Jackson died? But I saw him on TV only last week.
How can he die? Did he have an accident?
Teacher (gently):
Quiet, children. He died in his sleep in his own bed, and the
doctors, his family and the police are still trying to find out what
exactly happened. Maybe well learn more by tomorrow. (Pause)
I know all of you are MJ fans, but did you know about his
background and childhood? Let me tell you how he became so
famous. Michael was born on August 29, 1958, in an American
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Audio
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Column 1: Passage
Column 2: Gist
Module 1
Column 1: Passage
Column 2: Gist
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Resource 2b
I hate watching TV. This idiot box just wastes peoples valuable time.
Just when an idea occurs to you, and you want to rush to your table and
put it down, someone in the next room turns the TV on. By the time you
yell at them to turn down the volume, youve lost that wonderful idea that
was to earn you millions! And then theres the problem when you have
guests. Your familys there, glued to the screen and when the doorbell
rings, who do you think answers the door? You! Who else? And then Mr
So-and-So will rush in, make himself comfortable on your favourite
couch, and ask, So whats the score? No hellos necessary, either from
the hosts or the guest both parties completely at ease at the situation.
Two goals to Man U answers someone with eyes fixated on the screen,
and then they all settle down to a very companionable silence. Nobody
looks at you, and you find yourself addressing your Hows everyone at
home? to the walls!
The worst thing about TV is that you cant have a normal conversation
with people any more. You take a cup of coffee in the office break and
try to make small talk with your colleagues. No way! you hear one of
them say, Gerard Butlers the best! Did you watch The Ugly Truth last
night? You turn to the other end of the lounge, and before you get a
word out of your mouth, someone gives you a smack on your back and
shouts in your ear, What say, old man? England or South Africa? I bet a
hundred dollars the World Cup will go to South Africa this time!
Passage 2
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holding the ballot papers into a garland and carries it to a table under a
chimney. He mixes a special set of chemicals with the ballot papers so
that it gives out smoke. If there is a clear majority and a new Pope has
been elected, the chemicals emit white smoke, which goes out through
the chimney and confirms the good news for the millions waiting outside.
If, however, no cardinal gets absolute majority, the ballots are burnt in
chemicals that give out black smoke. Another round of voting then
begins. All this happens without any word exchanged with the outside
world! After the procedure is over, the new Pope, wearing his Papal robes
and crown, emerges at a special window to greet the people waiting on
the grounds.
Passage 3
In Africa, there are many tribes that make a pastoral living. Communities
like the Bedouins, Maasai, Boran, Turkana and Somali cannot depend on
agriculture to make a living as vast stretches of fertile lands have become
semi-arid grasslands or dry deserts. These tribes raise cattle, camels,
goats, sheep and donkeys, and make a living by selling milk, meat, wool
and animal skin. The Maasai, cattle herders of eastern Africa, are one
such tribe. The Maasai are spread over southern Kenya and Tanzania.
Before Europeans colonised the African nations, Maasailand stretched
from north Kenya to the steppes of Tanzania. In 1885, however,
Maasailand was divided between (British) Kenya and (German)
Tanganyika, and the best grazing lands were gradually turned into
settlements for the whites. The Maasai were thus left with very little land
to make a living. Later, large areas of their remaining grazing land were
also turned into national parks like the Maasai Mara and Samburu in
Kenya, and Serengeti in Tanzania.
As if these troubles were not enough, the Maasai face a water shortage
problem. The Kilimanjaro Water Project runs through Maasai territory,
but the Maasai community is not allowed to use the water to irrigate their
lands or feed their cattle. Gradually, the reduction in the area of grazing
land, droughts and lack of water resources have left the Maasai with very
little pastoral land. Forced to graze their cattle in the same area time and
again, the Maasai are also facing loss of fertility in the grazing grounds.
These changes are bringing in more and more hardships for this tribe, and
they are in danger of losing their livelihood. Unless the government finds
a way of giving these communities their pastures back, these tribes may
even face death.
Resource files
Audio
Scripts\Module1\Unit5\Activity2\Resource2b\Audio\Passage2.mp3
Scripts\Module1\Unit5\Activity2\Resource2b\Audio\Passage3.mp3
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Resource 3a
Baking a chocolate cake is not very difficult if you have the patience to
do it! All you have to do is collect the ingredients, mix them well into a
dough and bake it in an oven. Heres how I do it: I take four eggs and
beat them well with an egg beater. When they become fluffy, I add two
cups of fine sugar and beat the mixture again. Then I add 200 grammes
of cooking oil or butter and beat again. The more you beat the cake
dough, the softer the cake turns out. Anyway, when the mixture turns
smooth and the sugar has dissolved, I add flour to it. I use two cups of
flour, two tablespoons of cocoa powder and one tablespoon of baking
powder for a chocolate cake. As I was saying, when the egg batter turns
smooth, I add the flour mix gradually to it. Dont pour all the flourcocoa-baking powder mix all at once into the batter it wont mix well.
What I do is, I pour about three or four tablespoons first, and beat it into
the batter for some time until all the dry powder has blended into the
batter. I repeat this process, taking about three tablespoons at a time,
until all the flour, cocoa and baking powder has blended completely into
the batter. By this time the dough becomes thick and difficult to beat, but
as I mentioned before, the more you beat the softer the cake becomes.
To bake it, I grease a baking dish by spreading a bit of oil all around the
inside. Then I dust some dry flour on it. This makes it easy to take the
cake out once it is baked. Then I pour the dough into the baking dish, set
the oven at the right temperature and let it bake. In half an hour my
chocolate cake is ready!
Resource file
Scripts\Module1\Unit5\Activity3\Resource3a\Audio\Listening_for_Detail.mp3
Audio
1 The mixture should turn smooth and the sugar should dissolve.
2 Add the flour-cocoa-baking powder mix gradually to the batter.
3 Pour the dough into the baking dish, set the oven at the right
temperature and bake the cake.
4 Take four eggs and beat them well with an egg beater.
5 Then add 200 grammes of cooking oil or butter and beat again.
6 To bake it, grease a baking dish by spreading a bit of oil all around the
inside.
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7 Take two cups of flour, two tablespoons of cocoa powder and one
tablespoon of baking powder.
8 Add two cups of fine sugar and beat the mixture again.
9 Pour about three or four tablespoons first, beat it into the batter for
some time until all the dry powder has blended into the batter.
10 Repeat the process, taking about three tablespoons at a time, until all
the flour, cocoa and baking powder has blended completely into the
batter.
11 Then dust some dry flour on it.
Resource 3c
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Scripts\Module1\Unit5\Activity3\Resource3b\Video\Laboratory.mp4
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Feedback
Question:
Answer:
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