Teaching of Listening J. C. Richards
Listening processes
There are two distinct processes involved in listening
comprehension. Listeners use 'top-down' processes when they use prior knowledge
to understand the meaning of a message. Prior knowledge can be knowledge of the
topic, the listening context, the text-type, the culture or other information
stored in long-term memory as schemata (typical sequences or common situations
around which world knowledge is organized). Listeners use content words and
contextual clues to form hypotheses in an exploratory fashion. On the other
hand, listeners also use 'bottom-up' processes when they use linguistic
knowledge to understand the meaning of a message. They build meaning from lower
level sounds to words to grammatical relationships to lexical meanings in order
to arrive at the final message. Listening comprehension is not either top-down
or bottom-up processing, but an interactive, interpretive process where
listeners use both prior knowledge and linguistic knowledge in understanding
messages. The degree to which listeners use the one process or the other will
depend on their knowledge of the language, familiarity with the topic or the
purpose for listening. For example, listening for gist involves primarily
top-down processing, whereas listening for specific information, as in a
weather broadcast, involves primarily bottom-up processing to comprehend all
the desired details.
Listeners do not pay attention to everything; they listen
selectively, according to the purpose of the task. This, in turn, determines
the type of listening required and the way in which listeners will approach a
task. (Richards, 1990) differentiates between an interactional and a
transactional purpose for communication.Interactional use of language is
socially oriented, existing largely to satisfy the social needs of the
participants; e.g., small talk and casual conversations. Therefore,
interactional listening is highly contextualized and two-way, involving
interaction with a speaker. A transactional use of language, on the other hand,
is more message-oriented and is used primarily to communicate information ;
e.g., news broadcasts and lectures. In contrast with interactional listening,
transactional listening requires accurate comprehension of a message with no
opportunity for clarification with a speaker (one-way listening). Knowing the
communicative purpose of a text or utterance will help the listener determine
what to listen for and, therefore, which processes to activate. As with the
advantages of knowing the context, knowing the purpose for listening also
greatly reduces the burden of comprehension since listeners know that they need
to listen for something very specific, instead of trying to understand every
word.
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