Comprehension Problems Previous



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Teacher\'s practices and perceptions regarding listening strategies , and perceptions of difficulties likely to Arise in English listening comprehension lessons.

Utilization Problems


The findings for the last five items concerning utilization problems are presented in Table 3. The majority of participants in this study (83.1%) found it difficult to understand what they had listened to due to the unfamiliar themes of the material. Another very common problem (77.4%) was extracting details or supporting ideas. Not only did they find it difficult to get detailed information, 66.9% of them also experienced problems when listening for main ideas.
Meanwhile, approximately three-quarters of the participants believed that they did not grasp the intended message of the listening text although they were able to understand the meaning of words (74.5%). They also felt that they had failed to arrange the ideas in the listening text properly to establish the relationships between them (75.5%).
In short, a great number of the eleventh graders faced some utilization problems during their listening process such as unfamiliar topics, a failure to grasp the intended message of the listening text despite understanding the lexical meaning, difficulties in arranging the ideas in the listening text so as to establish any links between them, and confusion about identifying the main idea and/or details of the listening text.3

Chapter-2 The Teachers’ Perceptions and Suggestions about Learners’ Listening Problems


2.1 Perception problems
All the teachers affirmed that their students were confused about unfamiliar words or phrases in their listening process. Specifically, six interviewees believed their students were slow in recalling the meaning of some words or phrases in the listening texts, whereas unknown words really challenged the students. According to the teachers, due to the fixed curriculum, they did not have enough time to provide students with necessary listening strategies and ample vocabulary for the listening texts. Meanwhile, some others revealed that the main reason for paying less attention to listening skills in their classes was that listening was only a minor part of the end-of-term English test.
Additionally, based on the reports of seven teachers, the fast speech rate of the listening texts also hampered students’ listening comprehension. According to TI2, the listeners could not understand the content of the listening texts when the speech rate was too fast; for example, “[…] the speech rate of the listening texts usually is fast […] actually, this problem prevented my students from being able to grasp some parts of the listening texts.” On this issue, one of the teacher participants (TI5) stated, “Students often fail to listen to the texts because they do not practice their listening skills outside the classroom.” Another interviewee (TI3) added, “Students need real learning environments to improve their oral skills.”
The last perception problem in listening reported by the teacher participants was that the high school students often missed a later part of the text while they were thinking about the meaning of an earlier part. In general, the interviewees attributed the misunderstanding of listening texts to these perception problems. TI1 described this problem as follows:
While listening, my students tend to focus more on recalling vocabulary meaning in the earlier part instead of getting the points in the upcoming parts. Consequently, they often miss later important ideas. (TI1)
In short, teachers reported three core perception problems influencing their students’ listening comprehension, namely challenging lexical items, the fast speaking rate, and the distraction caused by earlier parts of the text.


Parsing Problems
The interview results indicated that the 11th graders in this setting encountered syntactic and semantic problems. In particular, the students were unable to comprehend the text to which they just listened. For example, TI8 stated:
After I had played a recording, I asked the students to check whether they understood the main idea. Unfortunately, most of them, except for a few excellent students, did not know what the speakers said.

In addition, the interviewed teachers addressed another parsing problem that commonly occurred during the listening process. The high school students had difficulty in dividing the auditory sentences into several smaller parts to aid comprehension, which had a direct impact on their understanding of the listening texts. As an illustration of this, TI7 stated the following:


My students often find it difficult to divide the whole listening text into smaller parts in order to understand it better. Consequently, their listening skills are problematic. (TI7)

To sum up, the teachers believed that their eleventh-grade students were unlikely to remember long phrases/utterances in the recordings or to break sentences into smaller segments for better understanding while listening.




Utilization Problems
The utilization problems agreed by all the interviewees were related to grasping details and/or main ideas during the listening process. TI2 pointed out that “it may be a lack of lexical knowledge and the fast speech rate of the listening texts that hindered the identification of specific information”.
In terms of the level of difficulty between identifying main ideas and listening for details, TI6 suggested the following reasons:
I think my students were able to give me the key points when I played the recording twice or three times. However, they could hardly understand the details of the listening texts due to […] many difficult words, […]
concentrating on one sentence, […] and the native speakers’ natural pronunciation. (TI6)

Apart from the above-mentioned issues, the teachers also revealed that although the students knew many of the words or phrases in the listening texts, they were stuck for the underlying meanings implied by the speakers. For example, TI5 described this problem as follows:


Actually, understanding what the speakers want to convey is tremendously difficult for my 11th graders because of their limited linguistic knowledge. In other words, the students only know the literal meaning of what is spoken. (TI5)

TI4 agreed with IT5 on this and added further that “[…] fortunately, most of the listening texts used for high school students are not really challenging in terms of semantic or pragmatic features.”


In general, according to the teachers, difficulty in identifying main ideas and/or details and comprehending the intended meaning of words/phrases were the two predominant causes of students misunderstanding the listening texts.

2.2 Perception Problems: Pronunciation-and-lexis-related issues


Both the teachers and the students agreed that the students frequently faced some perception problems that impeded their listening comprehension ability. First, the eleventh graders were incapable of understanding intonation, stress, and different accents in a natural speech stream and could not control the speed of the spoken material. This is because, in EFL classrooms, it is the teachers who make decisions on when and how to play and replay recordings even though it is hard for them to judge whether the students have understood what they have heard. This finding is in line with the study of Duong and Chau (2019) which identified the high speed of delivery and speakers’ pronunciation as causes of the listening problems of English majors. Underwood (1989), who considered this the most common problem, stated, “The greatest difficulty with listening comprehension is that the listener cannot control how quickly a speaker speaks.” (p. 16) Furthermore, pronunciation was identified as the predominant cause of the failure of Vietnamese high school students in English listening comprehension.
Too many unfamiliar words and/or expressions were found to be a second perception problem. The listeners had a limited lexical range for listening comprehension. This finding is in line with the result of Juan and Abidin (2013) who showed that the lack of prior knowledge of English vocabulary caused problems for Chinese undergraduate students in English listening comprehension. One consequence of a higher density of unknown words in a listening text and an inability to recognize known words is that listeners may stop and think about the meaning of that word in their mother tongue. This may result in a failure to understand the next part of the speech (Anderson, 1995; Darti & Asmawati, 2017; Goh, 2000).

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