10 Awesome Listening Activities For Teaching Young Learners (Adaptable For Both Virtual and Regular Classes)
Despite its obvious importance to language proficiency, listening can be one of the hardest skills for teachers to teach their students, especially children during the era of COVID-19 virtual classes.
Listen and draw a story
The teacher reads or makes up a story and as the students listen they draw the different scenes. You can help them by explaining which scene to draw. This can be done individually or in small groups on larger paper. This really helps you to see if the students are understanding and they will often ask questions if they don’t understand (because they’ll be so keen to draw the picture!)
Drawing Adjectives
After teaching various adjectives (big, small, long, short, tall, high, low, etc.) give each student a piece of paper. The teacher says an adjective/noun combination and the students have to draw it (e.g draw a long snake, draw a big house, etc.). It is fun to make silly words (draw a small elephant). The teacher should also draw so he/she can compare with the students’ pictures at the end.
Blindfold walk
This is really fun. Teacher, tell the students to go forward, go backward, (3) steps, turn right / left. Then place a blindfold on a student and direct him/her around the room to eventually pick up a flashcard or object (e.g. “Go forward 3 steps, turn right, go forward 5 steps, now go backward 2 steps, turn left, etc.). Finally, have students work in pairs – one blindfolded and one giving directions.
Listening with flashcards
Scatter a lot of flashcards that students have already leaned around the room and have the students sit on the floor. Make up a story and incorporate all of the flashcard pictures … as you say the flashcard word the student nearest that card must touch it. For example, if students have learned lots of animal vocabulary the story could start “Once upon a time there was a farmer who had some cows (touch), sheep (touch) and pigs (touch). One day he was surprised to see lots of new animals on his farm. Next to the gate was a zebra (touch) and in the pond was a hippo (touch …), etc, etc.”.
Secret Message
Make two teams and have each stand in a line (parallel with each other). Take two students from the front of each line outside the classroom and whisper a sentence to them (e.g. “Tonight it is going to rain and tomorrow it is going to be sunny”). Then the students come back and whisper the sentence to the next student, who in turn whispers it to the next, and so on down the line. The student at the end either writes the correct sentence on the board or says the sentence to the teacher (depending on the level of the class). Points are awarded: 2 points for a perfect sentence, 1 point for nearly perfect, and a bonus point if the team finished first and got the sentence right. Then do it again with two new students.
Guess what
Put students into teams of 3 or 4. Then everyone sits and listens carefully to the teacher for a description of something or someone (e.g. “This is an animal which lives in Africa and Asia loves taking baths. It flaps its ears to keep cool. It has a really long nose” – answer: elephant). Then each team discusses what they think it is before giving an answer. You can give the description sentence by sentence, encouraging the students to guess each time, until one group wins. You can start off with easy clues and slow speech but then progressively choose more difficult words and speak more quickly so the students really have to concentrate.
Put them in order
Put your students in teams and have them sit together. Give each group around 10 objects, comic strip cartoons or picture flashcards – each team must have the same things. The teacher now says all the words for items in front of the students … the students listen but mustn’t touch the objects. Finally, the teacher says “Put the objects in the correct order” and the teams have to put in order the objects in the order that the teacher said them. Make sure you write down the order as you say it or else you’ll forget!
Listening dialogs
Before class, prepare some dialogs based on the lesson theme. Also, prepare some comprehension questions based on the dialogs. In class, have two students read the dialog and the other students have to listen and then answer the questions. In higher-level classes, make groups and give each group 15-20 minutes to write a dialog and questions (questions on a large sheet of paper). Then each team reads their dialogs while the rest of the class answers the questions which have been taped to the blackboard
The Benefits of Reading and Storytelling For Young Learners
Number / Word bingo
Playing bingo requires students to listen carefully. You can use either numbers or words that they have been learning. Creating the bingo sheets and words takes a bit of time but once done can be used with other classes, time and time again.
Spelling Messenger
Put students in teams of three. S1 is given a word on a piece of paper and mustn’t show it to his/her teammates. He/She stands at the end of the room furthest from the board facing the wall. S3 is at the board facing the board. S2 acts as the messenger. S1 whispers the first letter to S2 who then runs and whispers it to S3, who in turn writes it on the board. S2 goes back and forth until the word is written on the board. All the teams compete – they have different words but all with the same number of letters. The first team to complete the word correct wins a point.
Well, I hope that you found some activities that you feel would benefit you, your classes and your students.
Good luck and good teaching.
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