Developing L2 listening comprehension through extensive and intensive
listening
OmarKarlin & SayakaKarlin
Toyo University | Japan Women’s College of Physical Education
Abstract
In the fall semester of 2020, 269 Japanese university students
were compared in a quasi-experimental study to determine whether extensive and
intensive listening interventions yielded significant gains in L2 listening
comprehension. At the beginning of the study, 269 students took a 100-item L2
listening exam, and were randomly placed into an extensive
(n = 135) or intensive listening group
(n = 134). After each group completed five assignments based on
extensive or intensive listening principles, students took another 100-item L2
listening exam. Paired-sample t-tests of raw scores and Rasch person ability
estimates indicated that the extensive listening group significantly improved in
raw scores, t(134) = −7.44, p = .00, but not
in Rasch person ability estimates t(134) = −1.86,
p = .07, while the intensive listening group significantly
improved in both raw scores, t(133) = −9.48,
p = .00, and Rasch person ability estimates,
t(133) = −3.58, p = .00.
Amongst the language skills of reading, writing, speaking, and listening,
listening may be the most important (Flowerdew
& Miller, 2010; Vandergrift, 2012; Vandergrift & Goh, 2012), with some suggesting that
listening accounts for 40–50% of communication time, significantly more than the
other three language skills (Gilman & Moody,
1984; Nunan, 1998). However,
despite the importance of listening, there has been a tendency for educators to
assess listening rather than teach listening
(Brown, 2011; Schmidt, 2016; Vandergrift & Goh, 2012).
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