Listening Strategies
3
sympathy in the classroom often intimidates learners from asking questions
during the listening process (Serri, Boroujeni, & Hesabi, 2012). It also shows that
socioaffective strategies can help learners stay motivated and well‐focused, as
well as control emotion, communicate with peers, and get help from them
(McCombs, 1982, 1988). Studies on metacognitive instruction have confirmed
positive values in the effect of visuals (Kim, 2004), the use of videotexts (Gruba,
2006), and the role of technology in learners’ ability to mediate listening scripts
(Robin, 2007).
Overall, research on listening strategy instruction clearly indicates that such
training often leads to positive results in improving comprehensibility (see, for
example, Rost & Ross, 1991). A study on students’ learning improvement based on
strategy training (O’Malley & Chamot, 1990) adds more nuance to the above
understanding by showing that such training only works if a text is not too diffi-
cult and students have some prior knowledge of the listening content. Another
project by Ozeki (2000) contributes a good idea to strategy instruction by high-
lighting the need to identify students’ existing listening strategy use knowledge
prior to the training plan. Other studies have proven the value of modeling, peer
discussion, selective attention, anticipation, and note‐taking in improving learn-
ers’ comprehension (Vandergrift, 2003). Other areas of attention comprise oppor-
tunities to explore various strategies and genres, providing timely feedback, being
goal‐oriented during practice, developing self‐regulated strategies without dis-
traction, understanding context‐specific strategies (Goh & Taib, 2006), participat-
ing in real‐life communication (Jou, 2010), developing a performance checklist, as
well as focusing both on the process and product of listening (Vandergrift, 1999).
The social climate of the classroom also plays a role in training learners with listen-
ing motivation, efficiency, and autonomy.
The main weakness of many studies on listening strategies is their short‐
duration design as well as the absence of follow‐up research. Areas for further
research include studies on the long‐term effect of students’ exposure to strategy‐
practice activities, learners’ ability to reflect on and improve strategy use, second
language beginners’ learning pace with the support of strategy training. Besides,
until recently there have been few studies focusing on the training of language‐
learning strategies in classroom settings (Chamot, 2005). There is also a lack of
research investigating the development and change of listening strategy use in
the absence of explicit strategy training. Such areas are vital for the planning of
listening strategy instruction and for the teaching of listening in the second
language curriculum.
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