The document discusses listening skills for English for Specific Purposes (ESP) and compares it to general English listening. While ESP listening focuses on specific vocabulary and content areas, general English listening competence is more important for overall performance. Both involve using bottom-up and top-down cognitive processes that draw on knowledge of language forms, use, and context. Key factors like vocabulary, syntax, discourse structure, pragmatics, and core comprehension skills influence listening ability. Developing automaticity in these areas allows learners to actively construct meaning from what they hear.
The document discusses listening skills for English for Specific Purposes (ESP) and compares it to general English listening. While ESP listening focuses on specific vocabulary and content areas, general English listening competence is more important for overall performance. Both involve using bottom-up and top-down cognitive processes that draw on knowledge of language forms, use, and context. Key factors like vocabulary, syntax, discourse structure, pragmatics, and core comprehension skills influence listening ability. Developing automaticity in these areas allows learners to actively construct meaning from what they hear.
The document discusses listening skills for English for Specific Purposes (ESP) and compares it to general English listening. While ESP listening focuses on specific vocabulary and content areas, general English listening competence is more important for overall performance. Both involve using bottom-up and top-down cognitive processes that draw on knowledge of language forms, use, and context. Key factors like vocabulary, syntax, discourse structure, pragmatics, and core comprehension skills influence listening ability. Developing automaticity in these areas allows learners to actively construct meaning from what they hear.
The document discusses listening skills for English for Specific Purposes (ESP) and compares it to general English listening. While ESP listening focuses on specific vocabulary and content areas, general English listening competence is more important for overall performance. Both involve using bottom-up and top-down cognitive processes that draw on knowledge of language forms, use, and context. Key factors like vocabulary, syntax, discourse structure, pragmatics, and core comprehension skills influence listening ability. Developing automaticity in these areas allows learners to actively construct meaning from what they hear.
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ESP and Listening
Handbook- Chapter 3 UNlaM 20 professional areas in which we need English for effective communication
aviation, commerce, customer
care, engineering, finance, human resources, information technology, law, law enforcement, maritime communication, media, medicine, nursing, telecommunications, and tourism ESP vs General ESL LISTENING The two share many fundamental characteristics
While specificity of subject/domain content
for ESP listening is useful, it is the general ability to listen in the target language (ESL listening competence) that would have a greater impact on learners’ overall ESP listening performance. Differences between ESP and ESL listening Learners who require ESP training already possess some level of proficiency in the language that enables them to communicate in English.
Learning materials for these learners
therefore tend to focus on developing the specific vocabulary of the field of work or study. AVIATION In the aviation industry, pilots, air traffic controllers and ground crew are expected to use and recognize phrases specific to their area of work so that they can communicate effectively with speakers of English from different countries. EAP Students in English-speaking universities are expected to have a level of mastery of English as indicated by scores on international standardized tests of English (Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), the IELTS (International English Language Testing Service) EAP The purpose of academic listening instruction in tertiary institutions is typically to develop skills such as lecture comprehension that will help students participate and succeed in academic-related discourse Exploring ESP Listening The goal of second language listening instruction is to develop active listeners and this is also the goal of the more defined area of ESP listening. ACTIVE listener: someone who constructs reasonable interpretations on the basis of some input and recognizes when more specific information is required. The active listener asks for the needed information To listen actively, language learners need to: • have an available source of relevant knowledge to support cognitive processing • use listening skills to facilitate comprehension and interaction • engage in metacognitive processes to enhance and regulate their own comprehension and listening development Metacognitive strategies methods used to help sts understand the way they learn, processes designed for sts to “think” about their “thinking Interactive vs. One-way Listening • Active listening can occur in all types of listening contexts and is not restricted to situations where the individual is interacting with others. • talking to another person (interactive listening) • listening to a talk or a lecture (one- way listening). In interactive listening, listeners engage their interlocutors in repeating and explaining messages to obtain greater clarity in their attempt to construct an understanding of the message One-way listening In one-way listening, active listeners make use of appropriate strategies to cope with difficulties and facilitate their comprehension by making predictions or drawing inferences, as well as monitoring and evaluating their understanding ESP Listening and ESL Listening ESP listening has many similarities to ESL listening. It involves the same cognitive processes that draw from a number of similar knowledge sources to process spoken input, and requires the use of the same core (or “macro”) skills that enable effective attention to information in accord with the purpose for listening. Where the two types of listening differ is in the additional skills and specific types of knowledge required for EAP and EOP purposes Listening problems Listening problems encountered by learners in both General English and ESP contexts are similar and are linked to factors that influence fundamental cognitive processes: • Accents • Vocabulary • The demands of interactive listening that require quick and appropriate responses Cognitive processes and knowledge sources To recognize the sounds they hear, and construct meaning from the spoken text, all second language listeners need three types of knowledge:
• knowledge about the language (phonology,
syntax, and vocabulary), • knowledge about language use (discourse and pragmatic) • knowledge about context, facts and experiences (prior or background knowledge, or “schema”) Two types of PROCESSING Successful listening comprehension is the result of the interplay of two types of processing that draw on these knowledge types: • bottom-up (sounds- and text-driven) processing • top-down (schema-driven) processing • Bottom-up processing involves the decoding of sounds • Top-down processing uses prior knowledge to help listeners draw inferences. For optimal comprehension of input, both sets of processes interact in a harmonious manner to enable the listener to construct an understanding of the message. Knowledge about language and language use which affects overall language proficiency plays an important role in second language listening comprehension. When learners can apply this knowledge quickly or in an automatized manner during listening, they will have more cognitive capacity for deep meaning construction to occur Knowledge about SOUNDS Listening comprehension is built upon effective sound discrimination, which is dependent on listeners’ knowledge of the English sound system and ability to convert those sounds to recognizable words or strings of words in a process called perception or perceptual processing While this ability is largely automatized or “second nature” in first language listening, it requires a range of word recognition and segmenting skills in second language listening Less proficient listeners are generally slow at doing this and suffer interference in their echoic memory, a type of sensory memory that retains aural input long enough for processing Comprehension is affected when word recognition and segmentation skills are not adequately automatized Syntactic knowledge Knowing how information is structured grammatically in an utterance, is needed for parsing: process by which an utterance is segmented according to meaning units based on the grammar of the language in order for the listener to create a composite mental representation of the combined meaning of the words Listeners’ syntactic knowledge is also helped by their knowledge about how tense and aspect are indicated in the English language. Research suggests that some second language listeners rely heavily on syntactic clues to process what they hear and there are indications of a fairly strong correlation between grammar knowledge and listening comprehension Vocabulary Knowledge Another source of knowledge for comprehension is vocabulary or lexical knowledge and it includes not only knowing the literal meaning of words but also other semantic references of the same words used in variety of contexts. Vocabulary has been shown to be a key factor affecting the outcome of L2 comprehension even in advanced learners ESP Listening ESP listening depends on knowledge about language forms and vocabulary that directly facilitates the perception and parsing of spoken input. Vocabulary: a challenge for ESP listeners • Each discipline has its body of technical and specialized terms • Even after a learner has encountered these words and become familiar with their meanings, they may still have problems recognizing the words in a stream of speech. IDIOMS Another challenge related to vocabulary is ESP listeners’ lack of familiarity with idiomatic and fixed expressions that may be used by their interlocutors or lecturers “off the beaten track/path” or other expressions which may have specific sociocultural connotations “a sandwich short of a picnic” Knowledge of Discourse Need to understand how the speech they are listening to can unfold in predictable ways according to speaking event Second language learners use their knowledge of the structure of a genre to facilitate listening comprehension and recall while those who are involved in two-way or interactional listening can also predict the development of a conversation if they have some prior knowledge of how the discourse in that context is typically structured. Pragmatic Knowledge Listening is an intention to complete a communication process. Pragmatic knowledge is as important for general listening as it is for listening for specific academic or occupational purposes. In many listening contexts of an interactive nature, listeners have to interpret what they hear and respond appropriately by first understanding the function of an utterance and its intended effect. Demonstrating pragmatic knowledge through behaviors such as asking for repetitions or rephrasing statements for clarification. Receipt tokens that (“mmm,” “yeah,” “mm hm”) provide speakers with crucial indicators of listeners’ feedback are a sign of good listenership Core Comprehension Skills Effective listeners use these Comprehension Skills either singly or in combination in order to achieve their desired comprehension goals • Listen for details • Listen for main ideas • Listen for global understanding • Listen and infer • Listen and predict • Listen selectively Core Comprehension Skills • Understand and identify specific information • Understand and summarize key points in a text • Understand the gist of the messageFill in the gaps in one’s understanding by using knowledge about the language forms and use, and relevant prior knowledge • anticipate what one will hear Core Comprehension Skills in ESP These skills relate to turn-taking and include recognizing turn-giving cues, and gaining the floor, as well as using a variety of questions to check understanding, seek clarifications and probe for more information. Second language speakers in general need these skills as well as others (e.g. recognizing gestures and other nonverbal cues), in order to manage spoken interactions in interactive listening events Thanks for listening to Listening and ESP