Chapter 6 – Listening or Viewing Skills

Listening/Viewing Strategies & Stories

Keli Yerian; Logan Fisher; and Bibi Halima

Let’s take a closer look at some specific strategies to improve your listening/viewing skills. These are some actionable steps based on the research and broader principles we’ve already discussed that you can incorporate into your regular language learning routine. Some of them were crowd-sourced from students in our LING 144 Learning How to Learn Languages class when they reflected on their own language learning journeys and shared some of their favorite and preferred methods. We expect to gather more example strategies from future cohorts of students. 

Make sure to click on the strategies below to see more about each one. Some of them are illustrated by personal stories and media created by students.

Metacognitive strategies for listening/viewing

Make a goal to recognize 5-10 new words per week
Think about context and genre
Think about your purpose for listening/viewing
Activate your prior mental schemata
Stay open to non-literal or metaphorical meanings
Retain essential knowledge

Socio-affective & interpersonal strategies for listening/viewing 

Many of the strategies for interpersonal listening or viewing are the same actions you could take for socio-affective strategies, since both involve using the help of other people to practice and improve your listening.

 

Find content you like
Understand that attrition is normal
Find online or in-person groups who want to practice the language 
Interact with friends or family
Interact with language exchange partners
Play online multiplayer games in your L2
Take advantage of your language class 
Use phrases to get help from the speaker
Notice and benefit from redundancy 
Pay attention to non-verbal communication
Pay attention to cohesive devices
Listen for cognates 
Listen for prosodic cues (volume, pitch, length, voice quality)

strategies specific to Viewing signed languages

Practice viewing fingerspelling
Watch the interpreter on the news
Try to look at a signer’s face, not their hands

Interpretive listening strategies for online media 

Listen to music and see what you can understand
Listen to podcasts, videos, etc. made for language learners
Also watch media in your target language that was NOT made for language learners
Change your language settings in streaming services
Use the control tools on media
Use tools like Youglish to listen to words in context

 

‘Live’ interpretive listening

Take notes in class
Ask questions of the teacher or your peers
Use predicting strategies

Can you think of any other listening/viewing strategies that we could add to any of the lists above?

 


References

Brown, H. D. & Lee, H. (2015). Teaching by principles: An integrative approach to language pedagogy (4th ed.). Pearson Education, Inc.

Duke, I. (2009). The everything sign language book: American Sign Language made easy (2nd ed.).  Adams Media.

Paige, R. M., Cohen, A. D., Kappler, B., Chi, J. C., & Lassegard, J. P. (2006). Maximizing study abroad: A students’ guide to strategies for language and culture learning and use (2nd ed.). Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition, University of Minnesota.

Shelly, S. & Schneck, J. (1998). The complete idiot’s guide to learning sign language. Alpha Books.

 

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Learning How to Learn Languages Copyright © 2024 by Keli Yerian; Bibi Halima; Faith Adler; Logan Fisher; Cameron Keaton; Addy Orsi; and Abhay Pawar is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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