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The effects of controlled language processing on listening comprehension and recall

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journal contribution
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by M Jannejad, Hossein Shokouhi, S Biparva Haghighi
This study seeks to determine the possible interactions between listening proficiency and the state of strategic self-awareness; second, and more importantly, to investigate the effects of learned strategies on listening comprehension and recall; and finally to describe the most common real-time listening comprehension problems faced by EFL learners and to compare the differences between learners with different listening abilities. After ten training sessions, an assessment was made to see whether or not well-learned strategies could provide students with ample opportunity to practice the comprehension and recall processes. The analyses of the data revealed the causes of ineffective low-level processing and provided insights to solve the problems of parsing. Moreover, the study reveals that explicit instruction of cognitive and metacognitive strategies is needed if a syllabus wishes to help learners improve their listening comprehension and become more-proficient at directing their own learning and development as L2 listeners.

History

Journal

English language teaching

Volume

5

Pagination

155 - 165

Location

Toronto, Canada

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1916-4750

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, Canadian Center of Science and Education

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