Is your listening lesson just a test in disguise? Learn how to use a three-stage process and authentic audio to turn passive listening into active learning.

To really teach listening, we have to move from 'What did they say?' to 'Why are we listening to this in the first place?' It’s about making the invisible process of comprehension visible by prioritizing the process over the product.
The "Testing vs. Teaching" trap occurs when a teacher simply plays an audio track and asks comprehension questions to check what students already know or don't know. This approach merely measures proficiency rather than developing the skill. To truly teach listening, instructors must provide a framework that focuses on the process of comprehension, helping students navigate the "wall of words" through strategic support and feedback rather than just grading their final answers.
The framework consists of pre-listening, while-listening, and post-listening stages to make the invisible process of comprehension visible. Pre-listening activates background knowledge and sets a communicative purpose so students have a reason to listen. The while-listening stage involves playing the audio multiple times with a different, specific focus each time—moving from the general "gist" to specific details. Finally, the post-listening stage acts as a springboard, turning the information gathered into active output like speaking or writing.
Textbook audio is often overly scripted, perfectly paced, and lacks the natural emotion or background noise found in the real world. Authentic materials, such as podcasts, news clips, or YouTube videos, expose students to real-world elements like different accents and "connected speech" where words blend together. Using these materials builds student confidence and motivation, ensuring they are prepared for actual conversations rather than just "classroom English."
If the audio is too challenging, the script suggests that teachers should simplify the task rather than the text itself. Instead of asking for a detailed summary, a teacher might ask students to identify just one emotion or a single place name. Additionally, teachers can use technology to slow the playback speed to 0.75x, which provides students with extra processing time without distorting the natural rhythm and pronunciation of the speech.
Mining the transcript allows students to connect the sounds they heard to the written word, which is essential for building "bottom-up" processing skills. It helps clear up misconceptions or "miscues" where a student might have misheard a phrase. By reviewing the text, learners can identify specific language features like contractions or reductions—such as "whaddaya" for "what do you"—which helps them recognize these patterns in future listening encounters.
From Columbia University alumni built in San Francisco
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From Columbia University alumni built in San Francisco
