Instructional strategies and activities for recognizing key elements of a model; listening for key information, combining key elements, and summarizing content. Includes fillable worksheets and
Auditory discrimination plays a large part in listening comprehension. These listening strategies and activities can be used to practice auditory and listening skills. Includes recognizing same and d
...ifferent, number of sounds and syllables, word association, listening comprehension, and listening for fact or opinion.
There are 3 main types of listening: 1) informational; 2) critical; and 3) empathetic. These listening strategies can be used to introduce or reinforce recognizing fact or opinion, responding to "Wha
...t would you do if…?" questions, and making choices based on personal preference and experience.
These activities focus on the hierarchy of auditory development beginning with the easiest- detection- then moving to attention, localization, discrimination, identification, and finally comprehension
.... Activities include discriminating same and different; discriminating minimal pairs, sounds dominoes; and creating rhymes.
These instructional strategies and activities address sound words or onomatopoeia. Words are used in literature to more precisely describe sounds such as human voices, animal noises, and environmental
... sounds. Consider the differences in a growl and a hiss; a giggle and a belch; a splash and a spray; a clang and a thud. You will find strategies for teaching such words and a sound bingo game that can be used with beginning and more advanced listeners.
Listening and following directions are important skills that require practice. Activities for listening accuracy include Copy what I Say which will help to reveal listening strengths and needs and f
...ollowing precise directions to create a picture.
Listening comprehension is more than just hearing a sound or what is said. It is the understanding of the message. This includes awareness of the meaning and language structure of the words used as we
...ll as the meaning derived from tone of voice, phrasing, rhythm, and inflection. Good listening comprehension is important for reading comprehension and for verbal and written expression of thoughts and feelings. Activities include Listen and Do, Listen and Use, prediction, labeling, and listening for details.
Use vocabulary that is age and language appropriate for the child. Begin with one syllable words and a total sequence of 4 items. Once the child has 100% for 10 sequence sets, consider adding several
...2 syllable words. If that is mastered, increase the number to 5 items in the sequence. For older students, use specific names of items such as birds – robin, cardinal, seagull, crow.
Duration, in the context of listening, consists of an awareness of the length of sounds. Duration awareness impacts every aspect of listening. These instructional strategies include ways to support d
...uration awareness.
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