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Al-Musalli, Alaa M. – International Journal of Listening, 2015
Note taking (NT) in lectures is as active a skill as listening, which stimulates it, and as challenging as writing, which is the end product. Literature on lecture NT misses an integration of the processes involved in listening with those in NT. In this article, a taxonomy is proposed of lecture NT skills and subskills based on a similar list…
Descriptors: Notetaking, Lecture Method, Taxonomy, Writing Skills
Ashcraft, Nikki, Ed.; Tran, Anh, Ed. – Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages, Inc. (TESOL), 2010
Listening is the most important of the four language skills and is used most often in everyday communication. Teachers need innovative ways to address the particular listening problems emerging in their own contexts. "Teaching Listening: Voices From the Field" shares successful practices employed by teachers at different levels of education around…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Listening Comprehension, Telecommunications, English (Second Language)

Sally, Ovaiza – ELT Journal, 1985
Describes an attempt to bridge the gap between the English learned in the classroom and the English encountered outside of class and to improve listening comprehension by putting engineering undergraduates through an experimental course in which a weekly academic lecture would be the point of focus. Discusses outcomes of the experiment. (SED)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Experimental Curriculum, Higher Education, Lecture Method

Thompson, Susan – English for Specific Purposes, 1994
Strategic support is needed for nonnative speakers of English to understand university lectures better. The application of the techniques of genre analysis to a corpus of lecture introductions is reported. Teaching implications are considered. (25 references) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), English for Academic Purposes, Foreign Countries, Higher Education

DeCarrico, Jeanette; Nattinger, James R. – English for Specific Purposes, 1988
Demonstrates the difficulty that English-as-a-second-language students experience in comprehending academic lectures, explores the lexical phrases that occur in several representative academic lectures and categorizes them in terms of the discourse functions they perform, and suggests ways of teaching such lexical phrases and functional categories…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English for Academic Purposes, English for Special Purposes, Higher Education
Mendelsohn, David – TESL Canada Journal, 2002
Describes a study of the listening comprehension of first-year, nonnative English speakers in a large North American university that sought to find out how students--all economics majors--were coping with listening to economics lectures and to try an experiment in mentoring by linking them with a lecture buddy. The mentoring project was found to…
Descriptors: College Students, Economics, English (Second Language), English for Academic Purposes

Flowerdew, John; Miller, Lindsay – English for Specific Purposes, 1997
Presents a range of insights that can be gained for English for Academic Purposes (EAP) listening comprehension pedagogy from the analysis of an authentic lecture. Notes that the salient features identified in the lecture are absent from academic listening textbooks surveyed and argues that EAP listening instructors need to supplement their texts…
Descriptors: Body Language, Discourse Analysis, English (Second Language), English for Academic Purposes