Teaching and Researching Listening provides a focused, state-of-the-art treatment of the linguistic, psycholinguistic and pragmatic processes that are involved in oral language use, and shows how these processes influence listening in a range of practical contexts. Through understanding the interaction between these processes, language educators and researchers can develop more robust research methods and more effective classroom language teaching approaches. In this fully revised and updated second edition, the book: examines a full range of teaching methods and research initiatives related to listening gives definitions of key concepts in neurolinguistics and psycholinguistics provides a clear agenda for implementing listening strategies and designing tests offers an abundance of resources for immediate use for teaching and research Featuring insightful quotes and concept boxes, chapter overviews and summaries to guide the reader, Teaching and Researching Listening will engage and inform teachers, teacher trainers and researchers investigating communicative language use.
Now in its third edition, Teaching and Researching Listening renews its commitment to provide language educators, practitioners, and researchers in the fields of ESL, TESOL, and Applied Linguistics with a state-of-the-art treatment of the linguistic, psycholinguistic and pragmatic processes underpinning oral language use, and demonstrates how they influence listening in a variety of practical contexts. This revised edition incorporates significantly updated sections on neurological processing, pragmatic processing, automated processing, and pragmatic assessment, as well as coverage of emerging areas of interest in L1 and L2 instruction and research. Boxes throughout, including "Concepts" and "Ideas From Practitioners", help to both reinforce readers’ understanding of the topics covered and ground them in a practical context, while the updated chapter, "Exploring listening", contains an overhauled section on listening technologies that provide readers with a range of tools to explore other perspectives on listening. Combining detailed overviews of the underlying processes of listening with an exhaustive set of practical resources, this third edition of Teaching and Researching Listening serves as an authoritative comprehensive survey of issues related to teaching and researching oral communication for language teachers, practitioners, and researchers.
Listening is now regarded by researchers and practitioners as a highly active skill involving prediction, inference, reflection, constructive recall, and often direct interaction with speakers. In this new theoretical and practical guide, Michael Rost and JJ Wilson demonstrate how active listening can be developed through guided instruction. With so many new technologies and platforms for communication, there are more opportunities than ever before for learners to access listening input, but this abundance leads to new challenges: how to choose the right input how to best use listening and viewing input inside and outside the classroom how to create an appropriate syllabus using available resources Active Listening explores these questions in clear, accessible prose, basing its findings on a theoretical framework that condenses the most important listening research of the last two decades. Showing how to put theory into practice, the book includes fifty innovative activities, and links each one to relevant research principles. Sample audio recordings are also provided for selected activities, available online at the series website www.pearsoned.co.uk/rostwilson. As a bridge between theory and practice, Active Listening will encourage second language teachers, applied linguists, language curriculum coordinators, researchers, and materials designers to become more active practitioners themselves, by more fully utilising research in the field of second language listening.
Examines listening as both a means of achieving understanding and as a teachable skill. The underlying theme of the volume is that an integration of cognitive, social, and educational perspectives is necessary in order to characterise effectively what listening ability is and how it may develop. It introduces listening from a cognitive perspective, and presents a detailed investigation of listening in social and educational contexts. The study concludes with an analysis of how listening development can be incorporated effectively into curriculum design.
Focuses on key areas such as relationships between writing and speech and learning of English-language teaching, and outlines ways of describing text types and examines many aspects of teaching writing.
An intermediate level course in English with an emphasis on interpretative and problem-solving skills. Designed to improve language skills and to develop communicative abilities.
WorldView , a four-level course for adults, covers a wide range of compelling topics from an international perspective. Its trademark two-page lessons ensure that students stay focused on clear and attainable language goals. With its flexible format and course components, WorldView responds to a variety of course needs. Short units build fluency by focusing on specific language targets. The Self-Study Audio CD coordinates with the Student Book and Workbook to extend listening and pronunciation practice outside of class. The WorldView To Go CD-ROM provides fun, interactvie activities, including model conversations with record-and-compare and role-play. A Grammar Reference section functions as a handy tool for instruction, homework, and review. A Teacher's Resource Book contains a bank of supplementary activities and a complete testing program, including a Testing Audio CD and TestGen software. For even more variety, a video program (VHS or DVD format) and a course Companion Website (http://www.longman.com/worldview) provide engaging supplemental activities. The WorldView approach follows a simple and proven M.A.P.: Motivate learning through stimulating content and achievable goals. Anchor production with strong language presentations. Personalize learning through engaging and communicative speaking activities.
High-interest topics and a well-balanced range of vocabulary, listening, grammar, pronunciation, speaking and writing activities will help students develop well-rounded language skills.
Taking up where Basics in Speaking leaves off and continuing in a simple style with a slightly higher language level, Strategies in Speaking offers systematic practice and communication tasks for students.
The WorldView Class Audio Program contains all the recorded material for in-class use. WorldView is a four-level English course for adults and young adults. WorldView builds fluency by letting students explore and talk about a wide range of compelling topics presented from an international perspective. WorldView's trademark two-page lesson design, with clear and attainable language goals, ensures that students feel a sense of accomplishment and increased self-confidence in every class.
WorldView , a four-level course for adults, covers a wide range of compelling topics from an international perspective. Its trademark two-page lessons ensure that students stay focused on clear and attainable language goals. With its flexible format and course components, WorldView responds to a variety of course needs. Short units build fluency by focusing on specific language targets. The Self-Study Audio CD coordinates with the Student Book and Workbook to extend listening and pronunciation practice outside of class. The WorldView To Go CD-ROM provides fun, interactvie activities, including model conversations with record-and-compare and role-play. A Grammar Reference section functions as a handy tool for instruction, homework, and review. A Teacher's Resource Book contains a bank of supplementary activities and a complete testing program, including a Testing Audio CD and TestGen software. For even more variety, a video program (VHS or DVD format) and a course Companion Website (http://www.longman.com/worldview) provide engaging supplemental activities. The WorldView approach follows a simple and proven M.A.P.: Motivate learning through stimulating content and achievable goals. Anchor production with strong language presentations. Personalize learning through engaging and communicative speaking activities. See also: WorldView 1 WorldView 2 WorldView 4
WorldView is a four-level American English course with compelling topics and an international perspective. The video program is designed to complement the textbooks and to serve as a tool for review, consolidation, and expansion of the material in the units. Accompanying workbooks include complete lesson plans, video scripts, teacher's notes and student activity worksheets -- Container notes.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.