College of Engineering, Architecture and Technology: Odule IN Nglish Roficiency
College of Engineering, Architecture and Technology: Odule IN Nglish Roficiency
College of Engineering, Architecture and Technology: Odule IN Nglish Roficiency
PROFICIENCY
Overview:
The subject of English Proficiency is structured into main subject areas with competence
aims. The main subject areas supplement each other and must be considered together. The
subject of English Proficiency is a common core subject for all the upper secondary education
programmes.
Learning in this subject shall therefore be made as relevant as possible for pupils by adapting
each subject to the different education programmes. The main subject deals with
understanding and using the English language by listening, speaking, conversing, reading,
writing and applying suitable communication strategies. The main subject area involves
listening to, understand and using English in different situations where communication needs
to be done orally.
The first part of this module, on listening skills which includes comprehension of gist and
detailed information. Communication skills, which cover communication situations. Reading,
which involves study of instructional business-related texts of topical relevance. Writing
skills, which have a specific focus on Art of Condensation. This subject helps students
converse better in day-to-day situations.
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Indicative Content:
Listening is an art
Listening vs. Hearing
Poor Listening vs. Effective Listening
Process of Listening
Types of Listening
Intensive Listening vs. Extensive Listening
Barriers to Effective Listening
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UNIT I
INTRODUCTION
Listening is an everyday affair. Despite that, or probably owing to that, many of us
shirk listening. In fact, most listeners see listening as a challenging task, so much so that the
greatest challenge that a speaker faces is to make his/her speech worth listening to.
LISTENING IS AN ART
Considering listening as a potentially stressful business, many people sit through
speeches fretfully and hence miss the mark by miles. This probably explains why listening is
considered as one of the stressful tasks, a fact that makes successful listening all the more
challenging---something which if ever to be conquered would require a lot of practice over a
long period of time.
However, it is not just psychology that makes way for such lack of interest in the
listening activity. Research has established that human beings can speak at the rate of about
125-150 words per minute, whereas human brains can process 500-700 words per minute.
LISTENING VS HEARING
Hearing takes place when something disturbs the atmosphere disturbs the
atmosphere, and that disturbance takes the form of pressure waves that strike our eardrums as
sound.
Listening is different. It expands on hearing when we pay attention to the meaning of
what we hear. Therefore, listening is all about consciously, actively, and systematically
processing information. Listening demands perfect coordination between the ears and the
brain, which results in decoding the speaker’s message aptly. Regular practice and consistent
efforts are required if we want to improve our listening skills.
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PROCESS OF LISTENING
Although listening is considered as passive process, it is highly active process, because in
order to be part of it, you need to be extremely active and alert. In fact, becoming a good
listener requires us to understand how listening process. Essentially a cognitive process,
listening involves the following stages.
Sensing- At this stage, the listener has physical hearing of the message because the sound
waves fall on the eardrum, as a result of which he/she perceives the sounds.
Recognizing- After hearing the physical sounds, the listener identifies and recognizes the
pattern of sounds. After this, sounds are recognized in a specific context. Here, the listener
makes a conscious effort to recognize the word symbols that he/she hears.
Interpreting- Now the listener starts decoding the message. As he/she listens, he/she
employs his/her own values, beliefs, needs, ideas, etc. to interpret the speaker’s message.
Since he/she also pays attention to non-verbal messages, the accuracy of his/her interpretation
of the message also increases.
Evaluating- After he/she understands what the message actually means, he/she critically
evaluates it. He/ she assesses its strength and weaknesses, its accuracy, reliability, and
feasibility.
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Responding- At this stage, the listener is ready to respond and react. He/she shows his/her
rejection or acceptance, or understanding or confusion, or even indifference through his/her
non-verbal cues.
Remembering or memorizing- This is the final stage of listening. Good listening enables
the listener to retain the information for future reference. In order to increase the retention,
you need to make conscious efforts by taking down proper notes, organizing the matter
sequentially, or retaining the information by using analogies or other associated visual
symbols.
TYPES OF LISTENING
In order to hone your listening ability, it is advisable to know the different types of listening
that we need to employ on different occasions.
Content listening- In this type of listening, the primary focus is on understanding the
message sent by the speaker. Most of the time, we use this type of listening to gather and
understand the information. Therefore, it is also known as informative listening. Will listen
to reports, briefings, instructions, speeches and conversations to obtain the desired
information.
Empathetic listening- This is also known as therapeutic/relationship listening for the
obvious reason that is used in times of crisis. This is mostly done by us when we allow a
troubled friend to express his or her feelings.
Appreciative listening- You do not employ content listening or Empathetic listening when
you listen to music or watch a movie. In these situations, you use appreciative listening since
you appreciate the lyrics, directions, melody, style, or dialogue delivery. Thus, it is listening
for the leisure or enjoyment.
Analytical listening- The purpose of this listening is two-fold. On one hand, you try to
absorb the message and on the other, you attempt to analyse the ideas or facts and make
critical judgement. In fact, this type of listening helps you evaluate the strength of argument,
accuracy of evidence or facts, validity of references and gaps in thinking.
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Forged attention- this is one of the most common barriers to effective listening. We
usually find audiences staring at the speaker but their minds preoccupied minds with
something else. They have a very attentive posture with their hands below their chins
and eyes wide open but they are not listening at that point of time, only faking it.
Premature Evaluation of the Subject Matter and Speaker- we often find that
poor listeners convince themselves that the topic is uninteresting even before
listening to the speaker and the complete message, and thereby a chain of negative
thoughts start mushrooming.
Hard Listening- Poor listeners try very hard to listen to and absorb every word of
the speaker utters. By employing this, listeners lose sight of the main idea by
concentrating too hard on details. In such cases, the listeners pay more heed to the
individual words and expressions rather than concentrating on the actual message of
the message.
Poor Interpersonal Relations- Interpret the message according to their past or
present relation with the speaker. A lack of confidence, or a sense of superiority or
inferiority, prevents them from having poor involvement in the listening task.
Over Excitement- Whenever we hear something with which we happen to disagree,
we get swayed by a chain of thoughts related to that. We spend too much time on
thinking about the counter arguments and we tend to lose track of the speaker’s idea.
Different Language Variety and Accent- When the speaker uses a different accent
which the audience is unable to understand, it becomes a great barrier to listening.
Distractions- Some listeners have very poor concentration while listening. They
actually get distracted even the slightest sounds of opening and closing doors, people
whispering to each other, or vehicles outside.
Evading the Difficult Types- We have a tendency to listen to whatever is easy and
familiar, and avoid whatever seems to be difficult and unfamiliar. Poor listeners
become easy victims of this in classrooms, meetings, interviews, or group
discussions. This in turn leads to poor or inadequate performance.
Non-attentive State of Mind- The listener often fails to listen to the speaker’s
message because he/she preoccupied with certain thoughts, or is tense or exhausted.
Various other distractions, such as hunger or drowsiness, and some other discomforts
of a similar sort, can stop him/her from being attentive while listening.
Different Levels of Perception- The speaker at time presumes that all his/her
listeners have the same level of understanding that he/she enjoys, which might lead
to information redundancy, or at time complex information, which may not be easily
comprehend by the listeners.
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2. What are the different types of listening that we use on our day-to-day life?
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3. Lack of effective listening skills results in loss of time, lowering of productivity, and
missed opportunities. Do you agree with the statement? If yes, substantiate your answer with
appropriate examples.
4. One of your friends tells you, ‘I feel that you must not waste your time in listening to the
personal problems of your classmates.’ Do you agree with your friend? If not, state reasons
and elucidate with appropriate examples.
ACTIVITY
Name: _____________________________________________ Date: _________________
Reflect on a situation in your personal life where poor listening skills created a
problem. Briefly describe the situation, then spend the bulk of your reflection
analysing what went wrong in terms of listening and how, specifically, effective
listening would have made a difference.
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other barriers to listening you might encounter in each setting? What might you do to
overcome the barriers to effective listening in each situation?
A) At a concert
B) In class
C) In school
Reference:
Communication Skills by Sanjay Kumar and Pushp Lata; 1st Edition published in
2011 by Oxford University Press