CHET TILINI O‘QITISHDA AXBOROT KOMMUNIKATSION
TEXNOLOGIYALARNING AHAMIYATI VA O‘RNI
Tillar kafedrasi – 2021
||213||
Don’t beat yourself up. Don’t use that as an excuse to quit. Just relax, and
promise yourself that you will listen to some English the next day. Tip 1: Start with a
Positive Mindset. The first thing you want to learn to do is to listen optimistically.
Why? You have to actually believe that you can hear and understand what people are
saying.
I know English listening can be very difficult, especially with speakers who
have a strong accent or who talk really fast. But you’ve actually done it before! You
learned how to listen and understand and speak a language when you were a baby.
Why should it be any different now that you’re an adult? If you listen with a good
frame of mind, you’ll see it’s not impossible.
Focus on actively listening. When people are talking, don’t focus on what
you’re going to reply, don’t try to translate what they’re saying, don’t analyze the
grammar structure of the sentences… just listen. Tip 2: Choose Diverse English
Listening Materials don’t just listen to the same kind of English audio materials all
the time.
Don’t stick to listening to only the news, or only watching the same TV shows
over and over. Instead, listen to a variety of different kinds of situations and topics.
As long as you find a resource that makes you happy, keeps you learning
English by listening and lines up with your goals and interests, you have my full
support. Tip 3: Predict Audio Content
Pretend you’re listening to the radio. You hear a helicopter in the background,
and a speaker is mentioning the names of streets, roads and avenues, and talking
about how many vehicles are currently on these roads.
Based on the context, you can often predict the words and even style of
language you will hear. That’s a big first step forward! Unless you know nothing, like
Jon Snow from “Game of Thrones,” your previous knowledge of the world will help
you predict what information you’ll likely hear. When you predict the topic of a
conversation, all this knowledge and related vocabulary stored in your brain will be
turned on to help you better understand what you’re listening to.
Next time you’re watching or listening to an English TV show or the radio, pause
after every few sentences. Try to predict what’s going to happen or what the speaker
might say next.
For instance, the words “avenue,” “vehicle,” “jam,” “bottle” and “neck” all
have their own separate meanings, but when you hear them together, they form the
context of a traffic-related conversation. A powerful way to practice this is by
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |