Kamis, 24 Juli 2014

Listening PPT

http://www.slideshare.net/Ekayani_5/listening-37311131

Textbook Analysis (Developing English for Grade XII Senior High School) PPT

http://www.slideshare.net/Ekayani_5/textbook-analysis

Recount Text PPT

http://www.slideshare.net/Ekayani_5/ppt-media-pembelajaran-recount-text-37310750

THINK PAIR SHARE

THINK PAIR SHARE
PART I. DEFINITION OF THINK PAIR SHARE
The Think-Pair-Share strategy is a three-step collaborative learning structure developed by Dr. Frank Lyman in 1981.  It is a relatively low-risk and is ideally suited for instructors and students who are new to collaborative learning. Each component is equally important in the process and shouldn’t be short-changed. This technique  is used by teachers to promote individual, small group, and whole group learning and discussion. Student are given a topic in which they "THINK" about individually. Then they "PAIR" with a partner and discuss what each other were thinking. Finally they "SHARE" their ideas on the topic with the entire class. The Think Pair technique is designed to differentiate instruction by providing students time and structure for thinking on a given topic, enabling them to formulate individual ideas and share these ideas with a peer. This learning strategies promotes classroom participation by encouraging a high degree of pupil response, rather than using a basic recitation method in which a teacher poses a question and one student offers a response. Additionally, this strategy provides an opportunity for all students to share their thinking with at least one other student which, in turn, increases their sense of involvement in classroom learning. Think Pair Share also be used as in information assessment tool; as students discuss their ideas, the teacher can circulate and listen to the conversations taking respond accordingly.
In this technique, a problem is posed, students have time to think about it individually, and then they work in pairs to solve the problem and share their ideas with the class. Think Pair Share is easy to use within a planned lesson, but is also an easy technique to use for spur-of-the-moment discussions. This technique can be used for a wide variety of daily classroom activities such as concept reviews, discussion questions, partner reading, brainstorming, quiz reviews, topic development, etc. Think Pair Share helps student develop conceptual understanding of a topic, develop the ability to filter information and draw conclusions, and develop the ability to consider other points of view.
Think Pair Share is a cooperative learning technique that encourages individual participation and is applicable across all grade levels and class sizes. Think-Pair-Share is a cooperative learning strategy, which allows students to think about a question, idea, issue, or notion, and share their thoughts with partners before discussion in a small group (http://www.learnnc.org/lp/editions/linguafolio/5794) . It is a simple technique, effective from early childhood through all subsequent phases of education. It develops skills of sharing information, listening, asking questions, summarizing others’ ideas, and paraphrasing. Furthermore, Think Pair Share has the useful aspects of a quiz (putting ideas) into your own (arguing) without nuisance and irrelevance of grades. During lesson in which teachers are lecturing or demonstrating, they often ask question to teach comprehension.
Think Pair Share Strategy is one of method that is taught by the teacher, in which the students work together in a group of the classroom to reach a purpose together. It also called team work or working in a group just like discussion. It means that every student work in a group and also should be active in the class room. The teacher give the topic, after that the students discuss the topic and then share the idea and information in group and finally entire in the class. This technique also gives the chances to the students to express their own ideas and opinions and we are as a teacher can reach all aspect of competence well. Think Pair Share Strategy gives the students helps students’ chances to work alone and work in group. It is involves three steps of cooperative structure, namely thinking, pairing and sharing. During the first step individuals think silently about a question posed by the instructor. Individuals pair up during the second step and exchange thoughts. In the third step, the pairs share their responses with other pairs, other teams, or the entire group (Lyman 1981).

PART II THE STEPS, LEVEL AND IMPLEMENTATION THINK PAIR SHARE IN READING COMPREHENSION.
Reading is an important activity in every language. Reading is only incidentally visual, the reader then contributes more information by the print on the page (Brown 2001:299). Reading enables people to find out information from a variety of texts, written or printed information from newspapers, magazines, advertisements, and brochures. In  reading activity, we are not only reading the text, but also trying to understand what we are reading. Leipzig (2001) states that reading requires words recognition, comprehension, and fluency. To understand all types of information in an array of the texts, it requires not only the reading activity, but also ability to understand the content. In addition, he states that without the ability to understand the text content, one is not able to absorb or comprehend a lot of information quickly, accurately, and easily. This technique can apply in all level education, elementary school, junior high school, or senior high school. TPS strategy includes three steps, namely, thinking, pairing, and sharing (Lyman, in Arends: 1997). In the thinking step the teacher poses a question or issue associated with the lesson and asks students to spend a minute thinking alone about the answer or the issue. Students need to be taught that talking or walking about is not part of thinking time. In the pairing step the teacher asks students to pair off and discuss what they have been thinking about. Interaction during this period could be sharing answers if a question is posed or sharing ideas if a specific issue is identified. Normally, teachers would allow no more than 4 or 5 minutes for pairing. In the sharing step the teacher asks the pairs to share with the whole class what they have been talking about. It is effective to simply go around the room from pair to pair and continue until about a fourth or a half of the pairs have had a chance to report. In Junior High School this technique is good to helps students in reading activity because students are not only reading the text, but also trying to understand what they are reading. To apply this technique in the classroom, teacher can
1.      Explain strategy to students. Before beginning the lesson, the teacher explains the Think Pair Share strategy: Students will have partners with whom they will exchange ideas during the lesson, whenever the teacher signals them to do.
2.      Form Partnership. The teacher forms partnerships, using a simple pairing scheme, for example, having students count off in duplicate – 1,1; 2,2; 3,3; 4,4; and so on. If necessary, the last group may be a three or the teacher may take partner. With students seated in teams of 4, have them number them from 1 to 4.
3.      Pose question; direct to “think”. At appropriate points during the lesson, the teacher poses a  question and calls for a short “think-time,” perhaps ten seconds or more, depending on the nature of the question. During this think time, students must remain silent, forming their own answers. (Example: Which room in our school is larger, the cafeteria or the gymnasium? How could we find out the answer?) Give students at least 10 seconds of think time to THINK of their own answer. (Research shows that the quality of student responses goes up significantly when you allow "think time.")
4.       Using student numbers, announce discussion partners. (Example: For this discussion, Student #1 and #2 will be partners. At the same time, Student #3 and #4 will talk over their ideas.)Ask students to PAIR with their partner to discuss the topic or solution.
5.      Finally, randomly call on a few students to SHARE their ideas with the class.
The final step of Think Pair Share has several benefits to all students. They see the same concept expressed in several different ways as different individuals finds unique expression for an answer to the question. Moreover, the concepts embedded in the answer are in the language of the textbook or teacher. Teachers may also ask students to write or diagram their responses while doing the Think-Pair-Share activity. Think, Pair, Share helps students develop conceptual understanding of a topic, develop the ability to filter information and draw conclusions, and develop the ability to consider other points of view.
Hints and Management Ideas
  • Assign Partners - Be sure to assign discussion partners rather than just saying "Turn to a partner and talk it over." When you don't assign partners, students frequently turn to the most popular student and leave the other person out.
  • Change Partners - Switch the discussion partners frequently. With students seated in teams, they can pair with the person beside them for one discussion and the person across from them for the next discussion.
  • Give Think Time - Be sure to provide adequate "think time." I generally have students give me a thumbs-up sign when they have something they are ready to share.
  • Monitor Discussions - Walk around and monitor the discussion stage. You will frequently hear misunderstandings that you can address during the whole-group that discussion that follows.
  • Timed-Pair-Share - If you notice that one person in each pair is monopolizing the conversation, you can switch to "Timed-Pair-Share." In this modification, you give each partner a certain amount of time to talk. (For example, say that Students #1 and #3 will begin the discussion. After 60 seconds, call time and ask the others to share their ideas.) Rallyrobin - If students have to list ideas in their discussion, ask them to take turns. (For example, if they are to name all the geometric shapes they see in the room, have them take turns naming the shapes. This allows for more equal participation.) The structure variation name is Rallyrobin (similar to Rallytable, but kids are talking instead of taking turns writing).
  • Randomly Select Students - During the sharing stage at the end, call on students randomly. You can do this by having a jar of popsicle sticks that have student names or numbers on them. (One number for each student in the class, according to their number on your roster.) Draw out a popsicle stick and ask that person to tell what their PARTNER said. The first time you do this, expect them to be quite shocked! Most kids don't listen well, and all they know is what they said! If you keep using this strategy, they will learn to listen to their partner.
  • Questioning - Think-Pair-Share can be used for a single question or a series of questions. You might use it one time at the beginning of class to say "What do you know about ________ ?" or at the end of class to say "What have you learned today?"
PART III THE STEPS, LEVEL AND IMPLEMENTATION THINK PAIR SHARE IN WRITING SKILL.
Writing is a process of formulating and organizing ideas in right words to deliver the aim and present them on a piece of paper. According to Jones in R. Cooper and Odell (1977:33) writing is synonymous with discourse, and discourse is discussed in terms of its aims, it relate to the function of language, and in terms of its feature, which are the separate elements, devices, and mechanism of language.
On the other hand, Reinking, Hard and Osten (1993:188) state that writing is a way of communication and of course communicates all the time. And then Deporter and Heracki (2002:179) explain that writing is a whole brain activity, which use bright brain side (emotion) and left-brain side (logic). Although right and left-brain sides are used in writing, right brain side has a big position because it is a place, which appears new ideas and emotion. To state that, writing is a whole brain activity to formulate and organize ideas in right words to deliver and communicate the aims to the reader and present it on a piece of paperWriting is one of the most powerful communication tools we use today and for the rest of our life. Writing is one way making meaning from experience for us and others. It is process of transforming thoughts and ideas into written form. There are many types genre of writing such as recount, narrative, procedure, descriptive, and news item in the context daily life.
According to Hylan (2002), Writing is central to our personal experience and social identities, and we are often evaluated by our control on it. Writing is a productive skill. It is very useful for students because it can convey their message through their minds in the written form. Writing involves transferring a message from our thoughts using language in the written form and it is a communicative competence that must be read and comprehended in order to communicate.
Writing skill is complex and difficult to teach, many students think that writing is complicated to study. It makes the assumption that writing maybe considered as the most difficult of the language skill. Writing has always had problem which put students into trouble as shown by errors made in both the organizing of the composition and the language so the students’ writing topic cannot be stated correctly. Think-pair-share strategy is a three step structure in which students “Think” individually about the question posed by the teacher (step1); “Pair” up with a neighboring student and discuss their ideas together (step 2); “Share” the ideas discussed in pairs with the entire class (Step 3). This is a great way to motivate students and promote higher-level thinking. By using Think-pair-share strategy, students are able to write the text well. In other words, think-pair-share strategy is one of cooperative learning, which gives a chance for students to write as implementation. Writing is a very essential capability for being mastered by students; writing is also an excellent communication tool. Through writing, each person is able to convey feelings, ideas, and announcements to others. Sharples
(1999:8) actually, writing is an opportunity; it allows students to express something about themselves, explore and explain ideas. Student can convey their ideas in their mind by organizing them into a good text so that the others easily know them and they can think critically. Therefore, learning is very significant to improve writing skill in particular learning of English in Indonesia because the writing is a process of transformation of thoughts and ideas into tangible forms of writing. In addition, many people choose writing as a means of effective and efficient communication of information to be conveyed in some ways like posting letters, business letters and important information in a company's product.
This technique can apply in all level of education, elementary school, junior high school, or senior high school. But in this chance I choose junior high school as the grade that I use to apply Think Pair Share technique. Think Pair Share (TPS) is one of the Cooperative Learning techniques which poses a challenging or open-ended question and gives students a half to one minute to think about the question. Students then pair with a collaborative group member or neighbor sitting nearby and discuss their ideas about the question for several minutes. Furthermore, Lyman Proposed Think Pair Share (TPS) in 1981. She stated that TPS is short collaborative learning structure and minimum risk, in addition is appropriate technique for teachers and learners who are beginner to collaborative learning (www.wcer.wisc.edu). It is designed to motivate the students to tackle and succeed at problem which initially beyond their ability. It is based on the simple nation of mediated learning. Obviously, one alternative to solve the problem of writing descriptive paragraph is by applying TPS.
The think, pair, share strategy is a cooperative learning technique that encourages individual participation and is applicable across all grade levels and class sizes. Students think through questions using three interesting parts:
1.      Think: Students think independently about the question that has been posed, forming ideas of their own.
2.      Pair: Students are grouped in pairs to discuss their thoughts. This step allows students to articulate their ideas and to consider those of others.
3.      Share: Student pairs share their ideas with a larger group, such as the whole class. Often, students are more comfortable presenting ideas to a group with the support of a partner. In addition, students' ideas have become more refined through this three-step process (www.teachervision.fen.com).
On the other hand, Think-Pair-Share is a strategy designed to provide students with “food for thought” on a given topics enabling them to formulate individual ideas and share these ideas with another student. It is a learning strategy developed to encourage student classroom participation. Rather than using a basic recitation technique in which a teacher poses a question and one student offers a response, Think-Pair-Share encourages a high degree of pupil response and can help keep students on task.
The Steps of Think Pair Share
1.      With students seated in teams of 4, have them number them from 1 to 4.
2.      Announce a discussion topic or problem to solve. (Example: Which room in our school is larger, the cafeteria or the gymnasium? How could we find out the answer?)
3.      Give students at least 10 seconds of think time to THINK of their own answer. (Research shows that the quality of student responses goes up significantly when you allow “think time.”)
4.      Using student numbers, announce discussion partners. (Example: For this discussion, Student #1 and #2 is partners. At the same time, Student #3 and #4 will talk over their ideas.)
5.      Ask students to PAIR with their partner to discuss the topic or solution.
6.      Finally, randomly call on a few students to SHARE their ideas with the class.
Teachers may also ask students to write or diagram their responses while doing the Think-Pair-Share activity. Think, Pair, Share helps students develop conceptual understanding of a topic, develop the ability to filter information and draw conclusions, and develop the ability to consider other points of view.

PART IV.  STRENGTH AND WEAKNESSES OF THINK PAIR SHARE
Strength :
§  All students are engaged in the thinking process, including those quiet students
§  Students more comfortable and find it easier to get in a discussion with person next to them rather than a table group
§  Any topic could be a topic of discussion in this strategy
§   Active learning is a remarkable learning style for students
§  Shows the importance of having partnership or team work
§   Improves the communication skills
§   Help students fix the content of the lesson in their memories when the class has an hour duration
§  Develop skills in small-group discussion
§   Everyone has an equal opportunity to participate in learning activities
§  High degree of interaction and engagement between teachers and students
§  Students are motivated to learn as they enjoy the socializing component.        
Weaknesses :

§  Time consuming

§   Hard to assist all trainers during the discussion since they have so many groups

§  Can be very noisy

 

PART V. CONCLUSION

Based on the explanation above, we can conclude that Think Pair Share is a good technique of cooperative learning by providing students an opportunity to actively help each other build comprehension and skill. It is a learning strategy developed to encourage student classroom participation. Rather than using a basic recitation technique  in which a teacher poses a question and one student offers a response, Think-Pair-Share encourages a high degree of pupil response and can help keep students on task.


MURDER TECHNIQUE

MURDER TECHNIQUE 

PART I. DEFINITION OF MURDER TECHNIQUE
MURDER is one of the types of cooperative learning techniques. MURDER technique was introduced by Hythecker, Dansereau, and Rocklin. The word MURDER stands for Mood, Understand, Recall, Detect, Elaborate, and Review. This technique is done in pairs or group. Moreover Hythecker, Dansereau, and Rocklin say that the implementation of MURDER technique leads to better performance and more effective than that produced by students using their typical study methods. In this technique, the students can encourage themselves to process the content of material with different goals for each steps. MURDER study asks students to collaborate to perform the thinking tasks or summarizing and elaborating on reading material. The “M” in MURDER stand for “mood”, the first step in which the individual should attempt to find a time and place that set a positive mood. This will allow the individual to study more effectively, because an individual will usually not be able to read effectively if he or she is in an environment that is distracting or just generally irritating. The “U” in MURDER stand for “understand”, which the individual marks any information in the text that he or she does not understand by circling it, highlighting it, or simply drawing a question mark next to it. The “R” in MURDER stands for “recall” which the individual should attempt to paraphrase and note everything that he or she leaned from the section that he or she just went over. The “D” in MURDER stand for “digest/detect”, suggests that the individual should go back over each topic that he or she marked earlier and reread that material in an attempt to understand that material better. The “E” in MURDER stand for “expand/elaborate”, suggests that the individual should go back and start asking and attempting to answer questions about the specific topics that he or she still does not understand even after completing the digest step. The “R” in MURDER stands for “review” all of the material that the individual actually does understand in order to refresh material in the individuals mind .There are two objectives of the MURDER script. First, learners are supposed to acquire knowledge about text content. Second they are supposed to acquire text-learning strategies. These strategies include cognitive skills such as explaining and meta cognitive skills such as monitoring. In accordance with these objectives, MURDER increases learners‟ engagement in cognitive and meta cognitive activities. As an example for cognitive activities, learners are supposed to engage in explaining.

PART II. THE STEPS, LEVEL AND IMPLEMENTATION MURDER IN  LISTENING COMPREHENSION.
The MURDER technique can be used or can be collaborated into all the skill, they are reading, listening, speaking and writing. But I choose two skill to apply this technique, listening and reading.
1.      Listening.
Listening is the ability to identify and understand what others are saying. This involves understanding a speaker’s accent or pronunciation, his grammar and his vocabulary, and grasping his meaning. Listening is often confused with hearing. Hearing is simply the  act of perceiving sound by the ear. If you are not hearing-impaired, hearing simply happens. Listening,  however, is something you consciously choose to do. Listening requires concentration so that your brain  processes meaning from words and sentences. Listening leads to learning. While hearing is a biological process that can be scientifically explained, listening is a neurological cognitive regarding the processing of auditory stimuli received by the auditory system. Hearing is always occurring, most of the time subconsciously. Listening is the interpretative action taken by the listener in order to understand and potentially make meaning out of the sound waves.
Listening is the foundation of language. Listening is an integral part of the reading process. It helps to build vocabulary, increase fluency and aid in comprehension. Supporting reading through listening enables students to build skills and access curriculum at their grade level. We teach listening because listening is very important to improves relationships, improves our knowledge, improves our understanding, can save money, exchange information, enjoy yourself, and share the feelings. And we teach listening to prepare our students for these situations :
-          Attending a lesson or a lecture. The aim of this activity is to understand the main concept and to be able to distinguish the main information.
-          Listening to announcements, news and weather forecast. In this situation listener’s objective is to get relevant information.
-          Listening to live situation in which one takes no part. This type of situation is usually connected with eavesdropping. The person listening to the conversation is usually unaware of the context so that he or she cannot interfere into the conversation.
-          Listening to or watching plays, watching TV or listening to a radio for pleasure.
-          The aim of this activity is to entertain oneself.
-          Listening to someone giving a speech. The listener is often interested in views and attitudes of the speaker.
-          Following the instructions. The listener’s objective is to accomplish the task successfully .
For example in junior high school.
a.       In the implementation, teacher set the mood of students by relaxation and focused on the task group. Teacher giving interesting information about phenomena like earthquake. This activity is done at the beginning of the lesson or apperception. Teacher gives motivation to the students so that students’ enthusiastic be increased. Most of the students raise their hand and attempt verbal expression to the problems posed by teachers, because these problems indeed close to life day-to-day. This activity makes good the mood of students to participate in future learning. In addition, teachers also deliver learning objectives, so that students feel the material lessons learned have benefits for themselves.
b.      At the Understand stage, students given the opportunity to form understanding independently with listen the material that read by the teacher. This activity done by each pair of students. In this stage students are not only acts as a receiver of information in the learning activities, but students construct their comprehension about what they heard. And teacher gives exercises to the students and this stage students are actively exploring knowledge independently.
c.       In Recall activity each pairs of students discus about the exercises that given by the teacher before. One of students express their opinion and other write down the task. More interactive collaboration of students in the group, the results of student evaluations at the end learning even more good.
d.      In Detect, students are required to examine the delivery of responsive material and information carefully. In this stage the student may submit opinions or if there are questions.
e.       In the Elaborate stage, teachers provide an opportunity for group renderer to respond and provide objections related to the question of other group members in detect activity.
f.       The last stage of learning activities is Review stage. In this stage, students under the guidance of the teacher summarizes learning outcomes that have been studied.

PART III. THE STEPS, LEVEL AND IMPLEMENTATION MURDER IN READING COMPREHENSION.
Reading.
Reading is the process of constructing meaning in transaction with texts and not simply the ability to recall what was directly stated in the text. Meanwhile comprehension is the goal of both reading and listening. Successful comprehension enables readers (or listeners) to acquire information, to experience and be aware of other worlds (including fictional ones), to communicate successfully, and to achieve academic success. Reading comprehension is a complex activity where the reader can get knowledge from the text both of information or message and new vocabularies; furthermore, to understand text the reader need to find out the meaning or the correlation between the sentences that establish in the whole text. They can retell again the information that they have read depend on their knowledge, culture and background. Finally, there are a lot of benefits that the reader can get from reading. If we read a lot of books, magazines, articles, and many things you can get a lot of knowledge and information from it. The habit of reading can add to the information available on various topics. It also helps the readers to stay in-touch with contemporary information and makes them sensitive to global issues and helps them catch in hand what is going on around them. Generally, reading texts are good sources and wealth choices for self improvement and motivation. They have a great contribution towards proficient achievement. In addition, they are informational and reliable for what we may query for a long time without satisfactory answers. Students need to read both complex text and a lot of text. According to Adams (2009), “To grow, our students must read lots, and more specifically they must read lots of „complex‟ texts that offer them new language, new knowledge, and new modes of thought”. Reading is like every other human activity in that the amount of practice really matters, especially the amount of reading done while reading proficiency is being developed. Ensuring that students are given example opportunities to read a variety of materials in a variety of ways increases their motivation because teachers can tap into students‟ interests and give students enough practice for reading proficiency to develop.
For example in Senior High School.
a.       Mood. The students are ask to set their proper mood. A pair of students sets a relaxed purposeful mood before beginning their work. They make sure they are clear on the procedure to follow and engage in a little chit-chat.
b.      Understand. The students are ask read silently each section for understanding the general idea of the text. A reading passage ( or section from a text ) has been divided into sections. ( The teacher can do this or students can use natural breaks in the passage, such as chapter sections ). Each student read the first section silently.
c.       Recall. The students (one member of the pair) are asked to recall the information or key ideas of the text  without looking at the text. Without looking at the text, one member of the pair acts as a recaller who summarizes the key ideas of the section.
d.      Detect. The other partner looks at the text, detect any errors, omissions, or unnecessary information in the summary and discusses these with the recaller. The role of recaller and detector rotate for the next section.
e.       Elaborate. Both students elaborate on the ideas in the section. The types of elaboration include the following :
1.      Connections with other things the students have studied.
2.      Links between the section and students’ lives.
3.      Addition of relevant information not included in the section.
4.      Agreements or disagreements with the views or ideas expressed the section.
5.      Reaction to the section such as surprise, gladness, or anger.
6.      Applications of the ideas and information.
7.      Questions either about things not understood or questions sparked by the section.
f.       Review. When the entire text has been completed, the pair combines their thought to summarize the entire text.

PART IV STRENGTH AND WEAKNESSES OF MURDER TECHNIQUE
This technique has strength and weaknesses when applying in teaching learning process.
-          Strength
1.      Making the students can work together to share what they have learned to their friend.
2.      Research on the MURDER technique suggests that they increase comprehension and recall. Several elements of the technique may account for this:
a.       working with someone else may help keep students on task,
b.      talking about the text may help recall and comprehension,
c.       identifying main ideas may help recall and comprehension,
d.      the detecting step gives an opportunity to correct misunderstandings,
e.       the elaborations may help connection the ideas in the texts with readers’ lives and give them an opportunity to raise questions,
f.       the review step may help put each section into a large overview,
g.      the repetition involved in the various steps may aid recall.
3.      This technique can be used for all the skills (reading, listening, speaking and writing) so all the skill can be taught.
4.      Small group (in pairs) can have quality discussion because if the students work in pair they will more focus in study and also each member of the group will pay attention to check his/her friend understanding.
5.      Making positive interdependence (sink or swim together) its mean that each group member’s efforts are required and indispensable for group success and also each group member has a unique contribution to make to the joint effort because we know everyone have difference skill, ideas so they can contribution what they know to make their group can  reach the goal.
The murder technique also has its weakness, such as:
1.      It can make the class little bit noisy because all the students have to speak with their partner alternately to summarize the key ideas of the reading passage in order his/her partner can detects any errors, omissions, or unnecessary information.
2.      This technique will take a longer because there are many steps that the students have to done such as: first read the reading passage and then the students as recaller to summarize the key ideas with the member, and the other member has to detect any error from what his/her friend said, and then elaborate the idea and the last the students have to combine their thoughts to summarize the entire text (write down the conclusion).
3.      The group setting should be heterogeneous based on the students’ characteristics, and it should be not too big of each group.
4.      The wrong choice of choosing the member of each group will make conflict among the members that will not promote better learning.
5.      The students will not succeed if they cannot work well together.
6.      The technique does not work due to students’ passivity.
PART V CONCLUSION
Based on the explanation above, we can conclude that MURDER  as an alternative technique in teaching learning process. It may improve the teacher’s capability to conduct teaching learning activity appropriately. Moreover, this technique will encouraged students to communicate with each others and with the teacher in the classroom. So, they can work together and it is useful for their socialization and communication. The students also will able to improve their ability. They can be more active in the class and be more skillful in understanding an English lesson because they have been trained to learn effectively using MURDER technique.













Selasa, 08 Juli 2014

Listening



                         NAME                        : NI WAYAN EKAYANI
                         NPM                           : 4512


LISTENING

 Listening is the ability to identify and understand what others are saying. This involves understanding a speaker’s accent or pronunciation, his grammar and his vocabulary, and grasping his meaning. Listening is often confused with hearing. Hearing is simply the  act of perceiving sound by the ear. If you are not hearing-impaired, hearing simply happens. Listening,  however, is something you consciously choose to do. Listening requires concentration so that your brain  processes meaning from words and sentences. Listening leads to learning. While hearing is a biological process that can be scientifically explained, listening is a neurological cognitive regarding the processing of auditory stimuli received by the auditory system. Hearing is always occurring, most of the time subconsciously. Listening is the interpretative action taken by the listener in order to understand and potentially make meaning out of the sound waves.

Listening is the foundation of language. Listening is an integral part of the reading process. It helps to build vocabulary, increase fluency and aid in comprehension. Supporting reading through listening enables students to build skills and access curriculum at their grade level. We teach listening because listening is very important to improves relationships, improves our knowledge, improves our understanding, can save money, exchange information, enjoy yourself, and share the feelings. And we teach listening to prepare our students for these situations :
-          Attending a lesson or a lecture. The aim of this activity is to understand the main concept and to be able to distinguish the main information.
-          Listening to announcements, news and weather forecast. In this situation listener’s objective is to get relevant information.
-          Listening to live situation in which one takes no part. This type of situation is usually connected with eavesdropping. The person listening to the conversation is usually unaware of the context so that he or she cannot interfere into the conversation.
-          Listening to or watching plays, watching TV or listening to a radio for pleasure.
-          The aim of this activity is to entertain oneself.
-          Listening to someone giving a speech. The listener is often interested in views and attitudes of the speaker.
-          Following the instructions. The listener’s objective is to accomplish the task successfully .

Teacher’s difficulties in teach listening are :
-          For a student of a foreign language, accurate and intelligent listening is a necessity, and the teacher is responsible to help his / her learners to acquire this skill which provides the very foundation for learning and functioning in a language. That the teacher can observe and isolate the errors in speaking, but could not in listening is a difficulty.
-          Helping the learners to distinguish sounds, teaching to isolate significant content and informational items for concentration may be provided by controlled listening exercises. One exercise is to give him certain performance objectives -to give him general informational questions that he should be able to answer after he listens the material for the first time.
Students’ difficulties in learning listening are :
-          Problems caused by pronunciation. One of the most common problems encountered by students is the way English words are pronounced but unfortunately this aspect of English cannot be overlooked. Students can find it difficult to comprehend with the fact that there are different ways how to pronounce the same sound. Students can encounter a difference between sound and spelling.
-          Problems caused by the lack of control of a speaker’s speech speed. Many students feel that one of the greatest difficulties they have to deal with during listening exercises in comparison with reading exercises is the lack of possibility how to control the speed of speakers’ speech. Students believe that during the listening they can miss important information and in contrast to reading they cannot re-listen to it. Some students can be busy with the meaning of certain words from the first part that they miss important information from the second part or they can stop listening as they are not able to select the correct information so quickly’
-          Problems caused by the inability to get things repeated. Another problem connected with listening is the fact that listeners cannot always make the speaker repeat what they have just said. If the recordings are under the students’ control they can be played over and over again but this is not possible in everyday classroom environment where the teacher decides whether they will listen to the recording again or not.
-          Problems caused by the listeners’ limited word stock
For listeners who do not know all vocabulary used by the speaker, listening can be very stressful as they usually start thinking about the meaning and as a result of this. They miss the following information.
-          Problems caused by the failure to concentrate
There are many factors influencing learners concentration e.g. selection of a good topic is very important as it is easier for students to concentrate if the topic is appealing for them.
-          Problems caused by the language
A majority of recordings played in the classrooms contain language that is slower, formal and speakers speak clearly but the listening outside of the classrooms does not possess these qualities and contains informal colloquial phrases and teachers preparing their students for real-life listening should know about these features.
-          Problems caused by the lack of visual support
In real life listening is not only about hearing some information but also about seeing the other people e.g. their gestures and body language. But in classroom environment teachers usually use audio not video recordings and this can cause problems to some learners since they must focus only on what they hear, which can be restricting for them.

As a teacher, we can help our students to understand a listening text by :
-          Grade listening materials according to the students’ level, and provide authentic materials rather than idealized, filtered samples. It is true that natural speech is hard to grade and it is difficult for students to identify the different voices and cope with frequent overlaps.
-          Design task-oriented exercises to engage the students’ interest and help them learn listening skills subconsciously.
-          Provide students with different kinds of input, such as lectures, radio news, films, TV plays, announcements, everyday conversation, interviews, storytelling, English songs, and so on.
-          Try to find visual aids or draw pictures and diagrams associated with the listening topics to help students guess or imagine actively.
-          Make students aware of different native-speaker accents
-          Select short, simple listening texts with little redundancy for lower-level students and complicated authentic materials with more redundancy for advanced learners
-          Provide background knowledge and linguistic knowledge, such as complex sentence structures and colloquial words and expressions, as needed.
-          Give, and try to get, as much feedback as possible. Throughout the course the teacher should bridge the gap between input and students’ response and between the teacher’s feedback and students’ reaction in order to keep activities purposeful. It is important for the listening-class teacher to give students immediate feedback on their performance. This not only promotes error correction but also provides encouragement. It can help students develop confidence in their ability to deal with listening problems. Student feedback can help the teacher judge where the class is going and how it should be guided.

Types of listening exercises
Types of listening exercises can be divided into four main groups listening with no respond, with a limited respond, with a long respond and with an extended respond

A.    Listening without any respond
Listening without any respond involves these activities:
-          A written text- this type contains reading a text and listening to it at the same
time. The advantage of this activity is that students can acquire the
pronunciation of different phrases and words but on the other hand students   will not develop strategies for listening comprehension without any text support.
-          Listening to book based materials- this is mainly based on students’ previous
knowledge about well known stories. Although it is quite difficult to find out
how good or bad the students were in the listening comprehension this type of
activity is useful as hearing a familiar material certainly has value as a sort of
easy transition between listening for perception and listening for comprehension
-          Listening with visual support- the visual support involves pictures, graphs,
maps and so on. While listening to a listening passage students have to follow
the visual aid.
-          Listening for pleasure- such activities contain listening to songs, stories
watching films and TV programs. The advantage of these activities is that
students will enjoy them and the target language is presented in different way
but on the other hand students can just listen for pleasure without any
willingness to understand it .

B.     Listening with a limited respond
Listening with limited respond contains these activities:
-          Following the instructions- students are supposed to act according to the
instructions either by physical movements, drawing a picture this task is more
suitable for beginners.
-          Ticking of the words they heard- students are usually provided with a list of
words or phrases and they must tick them of when they hear them. This activity
is suitable for beginners especially for vocabulary practice.
-          True or false activities- students have to decide whether the information was
true or false.
-          Spotting the difference- students listen to a text and when they hear wrong
information they make a response.
-          Guessing- teachers or students describe somebody or something and the class
guesses what it can be.
-          Describing - in this type of an activity students are given a set of pictures, maps
and so on and they are supposed to either order the pictures or identify the main
features .

C.     Listening with a long respond
Listening with long respond involves these activities:
-          Summarizing, paraphrasing and translating- for these activities students are
demanded to either to summarize the main ideas of the text or retell the story in
their own words in the target language or in their mother tongue.
-          Gap filling- during the listening students are supposed to fill in missing
information according to what they heard.
-          Answering questions- students are asked to answer questions according to the
listening text. The most common form of this exercise is a multiple choice
exercise where only one answer is the correct one. This activity represents one
of the most difficult ones as the listener has to store the information from the
recording for a long time .

D.    Listening with an extended respond
Listening with an extended respond involves these activities:
-          Problem solving- students listen to a text where a problems is mentioned after
listening to the recording they have to discuss the issue and try to find an
appropriate solution to it.

Some technique in teaching listening are :
-          Interpersonal Activities
One effective and nonthreatening way for students to develop stronger listening skills is through interpersonal activities, such as mock interviews and storytelling. Assign the students to small groups of two or three, and then give them a particular listening activity to accomplish. For example, you may have one student interview another for a job with a company or for an article in a newspaper. Even a storytelling activity, such as one that answers the question "What was your favorite movie from last year?" can give students the opportunity to ask one another questions and then to practice active listening skills.
-          Group Activities
Larger group activities also serve as a helpful method for teaching listening skills to students. You can begin with a simple group activity. For the first part, divide students into groups of five or larger and instruct them to learn one hobby or interest of at least two other group members. Encourage them to ask clarifying questions during the activity, and you may allow them to take notes if helpful. However, as time passes and their skills grow, you should limit students to only writing notes after the completion of the first part of the group activity. For the second part, have the students sit in a large circle, and then have each individual student share the name and the hobby or interest of the group members that she or he met. This second part of the group activity can also lend itself to additional listening exercises. For example, you may ask students to name a number of the hobbies and interests identified during the sharing session.
-          Audio Segments
You can also teach listening skills through audio segments of radio programs, online podcasts, instructional lectures and other audio messages. You should model this interactive listening process in class with your students, and then instruct them to repeat the exercise on their own. First, instruct students to prepare for listening by considering anything that they will want to learn from the content of the audio segment. Once they have written down or shared these ideas, then play the audio segment, allowing the students to take notes if helpful. Once they have gained confidence and experience, repeat this activity but instruct students to not take notes until the completion of the audio segment. You can use shorter or longer audio segments, and you can choose more accessible or more challenging material for this type of exercise.
-          Video Segments
Another helpful resource for teaching listening skills are video segments, including short sketches, news programs, documentary films, interview segments, and dramatic and comedic material. As with audio segments, select the portion and length of the video segment based on the skill level of your students. With your students, first watch the segment without any sound and discuss it together. Encourage the students to identify what they think will be the content of the segment. Then, watch the segment again, this time with sound, allowing students to take notes if helpful for their skill level. After the completion of the video segment, you can have students write a brief summary of the segment, or you can take time to discuss as a group how the segment compares with the students' expectations.
-          Instructional Tips

Whatever method you use for teaching listening, keep a few key instructional tips in mind that will help both you and your students navigate the learning process. One, keep your expectations simple, as even the most experienced listener would be unable to completely and accurately recall the entirety of a message. Two, keep your directions accessible and build in opportunities for students not only to ask clarifying questions, but also to make mistakes. Three, help students navigate their communication anxiety by developing activities appropriate to their skill and confidence level, and then strengthen their confidence by celebrating the ways in which they do improve, no matter how small.