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Using technology to help learners develop listening skills on their own



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Almardonova Muslima THE USE OF INTERACTIVE LEARNING TECHNOLOGIES

3.Using technology to help learners develop listening skills on their own
Listening can be one of the hardest skills to help your students develop, especially as many materials and curricula focus on a fairly narrow set of tasks and methods. Luckily, there are a wide number of new technological tools that can help any language learners you work with develop listening skills. I thought this was a promising path to help learners with, so I did some research and compiled some best practices. Using these technological tools benefits from the right training in strategies, self-awareness, and process.
Having explicit strategies is key to dealing with new listening materials because most authentic listening materials don’t come with handy vocabulary lists or warmup materials or comprehension questions. Learners have to figure out for themselves what they’re listening for! Learners often get the advice to just turn on the TV or radio and do their best, but that constant stream of hard-to-contextualize language gets overwhelming quickly. Explicit learning strategies can be integrated at several points in the process, including:
Pre-listening expectation and goal setting, followed by assessment
Metacognitive awareness of comprehension
Research strategies for understanding new vocabulary or grammatical structures
Social strategies for getting understanding from other people
Recording and reflecting on progress over time
Self-awareness is a key part of this process as well. Learners need to make sure that they’re in the right mindset while listening. It can help to set a goal for comprehension that is less than 100% so that there’s less stress to catch every word or pressure to listen to it dozens of times. Throughout the listening process, they need to check in with themselves to make sure that they’re sitting squarely in the zone of proximal development, where the material is challenging enough to be understood, but with some effort.
Giving learners a picture of how this process works is key. Doing an in-class walkthrough of this process can be valuable, especially with the instructor modeling and thinking aloud throughout. I like to do think-aloud demonstrations to show metacognitive process with exaggerated gestures and facial expressions to show how an expert listener engages with new materials so that the learners have something that they can mimic. Here is a walkthrough of the process that I use with students as they’re encountering new listening materials so that they’re prepared to do it on their own:
Preview it (look at the title, context, source, etc.) and brainstorm the topics, vocabulary, and information you might be about to see.
As you listen, revisit your expectations. Were you right or wrong?
Also, as you listen, check in with your emotional state. Is this getting stressful or is it going smoothly? Adjust the listening materials (speed, pause and restart, add captions, or choose something new) to make sure you’re being challenged, but not too much.
After you’ve listened to it a couple of times, make a plan for how you’ll fill in the gaps. How will you find the vocabulary that you didn’t know? How will you understand points that you missed?
This process can be very effective, and using technology can greatly augment it. Using the tools that people already prefer to use in their daily life is a great way to help learners develop an easy, comfortable routine to their language development. Podcasts, online video, and media outlets that offer audio or video versions of their stories have some of these same features, but I’ll focus here on YouTube. YouTube offers a few excellent features that give learners a lot of support in their language development:
You can add closed captions for many videos by clicking the “CC” button. Some of these are transcribed by people, but most are done by machine, so there might be some issues, especially with proper nouns or fast, casual speech.
You can also see the closed caption text compiled into a transcript by clicking the Extra Options (···) button and then “Open Transcript”.
Each of these features can help learners to adjust the video quality to better suit their listening experience. I typically advise learners to listen to it once at full speed without captions or transcript, and then use those tools to go back and listen again and fill in gaps.
Educational technology is a systematic and organized process of applying modern technology to improve the quality of education (efficiency, optimal, true, etc.).6 It is a systematic way of conceptualizing the execution and evaluation of the educational process, i. e. learning and teaching and help with the application of modern educational teaching techniques. It includes instructional materials, methods and organization of work and relationships, i.e. the behavior of all participants in the educational process. The term “teaching resources” is commonly used, although they are not synonymous (Pedagoški leksikon, 1996). The word technology is derived from the Greek word “techno” which means the willingness, skills, knowledge of the way, rule, skill, tools and “logos” which means science, word, learning, mental state. There is no single term for educational technology. Different countries use different terms and synonyms as educational technology, educational equipment, AV resources, the technology of teaching...
Terminological differences mostly occur on the grounds of the approach to the technical characteristics and the use of modern appliances, and not their actual application in teaching i.e. their actual pedagogical application. For this reason, there are different opinions among teachers in the field of social and technical sciences. Therefore, the application of educational technology requires knowledge from several areas: pedagogy, psychology, didactics, computer sciences, informatics... Because of this diversity, there are also different perceptions of educational technology, where every author defines the concept of educational technology, according to their needs. Educational technology is still not being applied sufficiently, mostly for reasons of lack of school equipment necessary resources and insufficient qualification of teachers for the implementation of these funds.
Educational technology has three domains of use:
Technology as a tutor (computer gives instructions and guides the user),
Technology as a teaching tool and
Technology as a learning tool.
Depending on the use and benefits, the research by Lowther et al., suggests that education technology has not yet taken its place, in spite of their recommendations. This is probably the reason for the statute of the social company. Leu et al., (2009) state that children in poorer areas very rarely use the Internet as a learning tool. Today’s children use modern technical equipment from an early age (Gutnik et al., 2011; Rideout 2011) so that their coming in with new educational technologies at school will not be a problem.
In studies (Greenhow et al., 2009), we can find out that more students use modern technical equipment. Serious research on the influence of education technology on cognitive processes was conducted by Kaufman, 2004; When using educational technology we should be primarily focused on the educational value of the tools and applications we use, how adequate they are in the acquisition of knowledge, whether there is an interaction between users and tools, and if we have positive effects in using them. A number of authors suggest that we should focus on five areas of software programs that have the potential to strongly influence children’s learning experience:
The educational value of the program,
Its ability to engage children in learning,
Ease of use,
Interactivity between the child and programs,
The possibility that a software program monitors the progress of the child.
Since computers are still not widely used in many schools, the teaching process is dominated by traditional methods. It is dominated by the frontal form of work where the teacher had enough interaction with students. Failure to thrive at their own pace and insufficient activity of students was one of the drawbacks of this type of learning. In class, we have children who are not uniform in knowledge and never pay enough attention to those who are not sufficiently mastered the material and those who are above their average. This difference is often hampered by teacher assessment work and how to transfer knowledge to a group of children with different knowledge. The teacher chooses to keep average to good teaching where children with insufficient knowledge would not get the necessary knowledge. The children with insufficient knowledge can progress smoothly without unpleasant feeling of their ignorance, no frustration, and humiliation while for the most advanced children teaching will be boring.
With the development of information and communication technology, especially computers, a number of researchers were trying to see the benefits and the effect of their use compared to older traditional learning. For many years, we tried to give answers to the question of advantages and disadvantages between traditional and modern teaching where the prevailing educational technology. The period from 1967. to 1972. is considered to be a period of consolidation of educational technology, which has become the most commonly used term in the science of pedagogy and the educational process (Даниловић, 2004). With the application of educational technology, students can independently progress in mastering teaching materials, to choose the pace of work, to repeat the material that is not sufficiently clear, that after tests performed immediately get results and track their progress. Interactive, multimedia content provides a great advantage of modern learning over traditional learning. With the application of educational technology we get feedback between the teacher and the studen7t.
Among the first studies on the comparison of the traditional and modern ways with the help of educational technologies research was Clark Richard (Clark, R. 1983). He tried to compare research between lectures and computer guidance and instruction to determine which the better way of learning is. He came to the conclusion that they are both effective depending on.8

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