Listening Journal Guidelines 1. Listen. Listen to a talk‚ lecture or broadcast in English each week. a. The broadcast should be a minimum of 5 minutes. b. The broadcast should be on a subject appropriate for Academic English (i.e. no celebrity gossip or fashion news). 2. Take notes. Take notes as you listen. (Follow the guidelines provided by your teacher. See the example below.) 3. Summarize. At the bottom of your notes‚ summarize the main idea of the talk in 1-3
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GROUP_________________ 3.FILE 3 LISTENING 1 TASKS PRESENTER 1 LISTEN TO THE NEWS BULLETIN. MATCH THE FIVE PEOPLE WITH A WORD FROM THE BOX. THERE ARE THREE WORDS THAT YOU WILL NOT NEED. burglar pickpocket mugger drug dealer bank robber victim shoplifter witness 1 Jeremy Maguire was a ______. 2 Stephanie Flamstead was a ______. 3 Penny Green was a ______. 4 Sally Green was a ______. 5 David Clarke was a ______. FILE 3 Listening 2 Dialogue- Tasks 2 Listen
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people equate listening with passivity and weakness. We also live in a multi-sensory commercialized media world that invites us to be distracted from intimate connection with others. It’s wonderful that communication today can be lightning fast‚ yet email or instant messaging is a poor substitute for live‚ unconditional human presence. So how can we learn to be fully present with and for each other? We can do this by learning to listen in a genuinely empathic way. Empathic listening integrates an
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It is generally recognized that listening comprehension‚ which can be understood as the ability to identify and understand what others say‚ plays a key role in facilitating language learning. Gary (1975) said that giving pre-eminence to listening comprehension‚ particularly in the early stage of second language teaching and learning language. Firstly‚ listening is one of the basic sources of information. It is easy to see that all L2 learners want to understand target language‚ or they want to
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the exhibition. B do not manage to engage the visitor’s interest. C lack artistic originality. 2 Extract Three You hear a woman talking on the radio about her favourite piece of music. 5 How does the speaker say she feels when listening to her favourite piece of music? A B nostalgic C 6 engrossed inspired The speaker believes that critics of her favourite music are wrong to A doubt the level of its popularity. B disregard the composer’s skills.
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Stanford CA Characteristics of Effective Listening Ineffective Effective Non-Verbal Behavior Listener looks bored‚ uninterested‚ or judgmental; avoids eye contact; displays distracting mannerisms (doodles‚ plays with a paper clip‚ etc.) Listener maintains positive posture; avoids distracting mannerisms; keeps attention focused on speaker; maintains eye contact; nods and smiles when appropriate Focus of Attention Listener shifts focus of attention to himself: "When something like that happened to me
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Rachel Acrich MUSIC 3 Mike Crain 9/9/10 Listening Experience 0. 1. I chose to sit in a train station so I chose the sound of the wheels of the train. The sound of the wheels of the trains running over the tracks is a very steady rhythm. It is constant and calming in its certainty. After sitting for a while‚ it is a sound that fades into the background if I do not focus on it. This is surprising because it is such a loud‚ dominant sound. 0. 2. My sound is heard fairly constantly
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converse with each other? Is there a difference with how they communicate verbally and non-verbally? Studies and experiments by linguist have30 shown that differences in speech and body language are apparent between the male and female gender. First‚ men impose and lecture their side of the story when conversating while women on the other hand have a more open exchange of ideas. Second‚ men do not show any body signals indicating that they are listening but women on the other hand give signs that
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A few words by Teresa on Listening Steven Henagar’s College Teresa Palacios Communication Arts Dani Liese Assignment Issue Date: Week 3 Being Mindful Listening “Mindfulness is a choice. It is not a talent that some people have and others don’t.” Abstract The very first step in listening is the decision to be mindful. Mindfulness is being present‚ fully in the moment. I knew‚ I was in for a beating as soon as I started to read this subject on mindfulness. It is definitively
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There is an art to listening; and as Julia Wood states about listening‚ “We try to understand not just content but also the person speaking” (Wood 166). In essence‚ the goal of listening is to gasp the message‚ meaning and feelings of the person talking. Therefore‚ there are listening behaviors and listening styles that can either enhance or impede this process and flow of communication. To this point‚ observations have been made of two separate conversations in which listening behaviors and styles
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