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Listening in Language Learning
by Michael Rost

Listening in Language Learning is probably the most authorative and comprehensive
text about listening in a second language that has ever been
written with both the applied linguist and language teacher in
mind. It covers auditory perception of linguistic processing,
including lexical, syntactic and schematic effects, learner inference,
collaborative and non-collaborative listening skills and strategies,
developing and assessing listening skills, and the placing of
listening in a language curriculum. This book may not be the
ideal choice for a teacher new to EFL, as there is rather a lot
of specialist terminology - so much to the extent that at times
I felt that I was reading a linguist's learner dictionary. What
I liked best about this book is that it allowed me to focus more
clearly and scientifically on creating and evaluating listening
tasks for my high school teaching situation, and for that reason
alone, the book was worth buying.
Read about Listening
in Language Learning at Amazon.com.
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