Most of us will have been through the trauma of a listening exam (or aural) at some point. Until relatively recently prevailing wisdom saw the aural as an adjunct to the oral and teaching methods were geared around that relationship. Michael Rost, however, treats listening as a quite distinct field
Teaching and Researching Listening
β Scribed by Michael Rost
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2015
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 342
- Series
- Applied Linguistics in Action
- Edition
- 3
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
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 readersβ 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.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Series Editor Preface
Preface
Acknowledgements
Copyright Acknowledgements
Introduction
Section I: Defining Listening
1 Neurological Processing
2 Linguistic Processing
3 Semantic Processing
4 Pragmatic Processing
5 Automatic Processing
6 Listening in Language Acquisition
Section II: Teaching Listening
7 Approaches to Teaching Listening
8 Input
9 Designing Instruction
10 Listening Assessment
Section III: Researching Listening
11 Sociolinguistic Orientations
12 Psycholinguistic Orientations
13 Developmental Orientations
Section IV: Exploring Listening
14 Resources for Further Exploration
Glossary
Index
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