How To Teach Listening


Some useful techniques to use when teaching listening. Why not add a tip of your own!

Pre-listening

    * Tell your students they shouldn’t worry that they have to understand every word they hear. Not every word is important!
    * Where possible, make sure students know what they are listening for before you start listening. Explain they should focus only on the information they need.
    * Give two or three general questions to check students comprehension of the basic details.
    * If possible, check for any words that your students may not know.  Pre-teach these so they do not interfere with understanding.
    * Brainstorm students’ ideas on the topic they are going to listen to.  This will help focus them.
    * Don’t choose a listening that is too long. If necessary, stop the recording at certain points and review what students have understood so far.

While listening

    * As a general principle, try to play the recording once for overall comprehension. Then play the recording again for specific details.  
    * Tell students to note any dates, people or places they hear.  
    * Divide students into groups and give each group a different listening task (e.g. different questions). Then swap their answers and have students listen again and check their classmates’ answers.  
    * Don’t be afraid to repeat the recording… especially the parts students have most trouble understanding.

Post-listening

    * Tell students to compare their notes and discuss what they understood in pairs or small groups.  
    * Encourage students to respond to what they heard. For example, where possible ask questions like Do you agree? and encourage debate.  
    * Tell pairs to write a summary of the main points. Then have them compare their summaries and check if they covered all the main points.  
    * Play the recording again and tell students to call out ‘Stop!’ when they hear the answers they were listening for.  
    * Put students into groups and tell them to make a list of comprehension questions to ask each other.  
    * Tell students to make a list in their notebooks of any new vocabulary they feel is useful.

Remember, it’s important to give students a lot of variety in what they listen to. Try to use as many different sources of listening material as you can: advertisements, news programs, poetry, songs, extracts from plays, speeches, lectures, telephone conversations, informal dialogues… the more varied and authentic the listening practice you offer them, the more fun you’ll all have!