This book provides an outline of listening theory, offers practical listening methods, and presents how metacognitive instruction can be integrated into real lesson practice. A useful resource for academics, educators, and curriculum designers in the field of applied linguistics, L2 language learning, and foreign language education.
This book addresses the gap between listening theory and practice by providing an outline of listening theory, offering practical listening methods, and presenting how metacognitive instruction can be integrated into real lesson practice. Applying these methods to teaching and learning can provide educators with the instructional guidance needed to offer their learners some tangibility in second language (L2) listening.
Based on original research, the book includes descriptions and accounts of teachers listening classroom practices to explain their teaching priorities and their teaching decisions. Further, samples of listening lessons and learners accounts of their listening experience provide additional insights into learning from listening. This book emphasizes the challenges that both teachers and learners face in the listening classroom and suggests metacognitive instruction as a remedy for these listening difficulties. It also outlines a four-stage pedagogic cycle including listening tasks and an additional journal component that integrates traditional teaching approaches and contemporary metacognitive methods.
This book is a useful resource for academics, scholars, educators, and curriculum designers in the field of applied linguistics, L2 language learning, and foreign language education.
Table of Contents
List of Acronyms/Abbreviations
Chapter 1: Metacognition in second language listening
Chapter 2: Teachers and learners perspectives on L2 listening
Chapter 3: Curriculum design and listening tasks in metacognitive
instruction
Chapter 4: Choosing a listening resource and lesson approach using TED Talks
Chapter 5: Classroom-based listening instruction: A face-to-face
metacognitive approach
Chapter 6: Self-led listening instruction: An autonomous metacognitive
approach
Chapter 7: Using in-class metacognitive listening journals: Learners
reflections
Chapter 8: Using metacognitive instruction in L2 listening pedagogy
Appendices
References
Index
Naheen Madarbakus-Ring works at the University of Tsukuba in Japan and has taught in South Korea, the UK, and New Zealand. Naheen received her PhD in Applied Linguistics from Victoria University of Wellington (NZ). Her research areas include listening strategies, curriculum design, and material development.