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TEACHERS’ STRATEGIES IN TEACHING LISTENING TO STUDENTS OF SMP N 1 BANYUBIRU THESIS Partial in Submitted Fullfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Sarjana Pendidikan Ainul Yaqin 112009091 ENGLISH DEPARTMENT FACULTY OF LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE SATYA WACANA CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY SALATIGA 2013

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Page 1: THESIS Partial in Submitted Fullfillment of the

TEACHERS’ STRATEGIES IN TEACHING LISTENING TO STUDENTS OF

SMP N 1 BANYUBIRU

THESIS Partial in Submitted Fullfillment

of the Requirements for the Degree of Sarjana Pendidikan

Ainul Yaqin

112009091

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT

FACULTY OF LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE

SATYA WACANA CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY

SALATIGA

2013

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TEACHERS’ STRATEGIES IN TEACHING LISTENING TO STUDENTS OF

SMP N 1 BANYUBIRU

THESIS Partial in Submitted Fullfillment

of the Requirements for the Degree of Sarjana Pendidikan

Ainul Yaqin

112009091

Approved by:

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COPYRIGHT STATEMENT

This thesis contains no such material as has been submitted for examination in any course or accepted for the fulfillment of any degree or diploma in any university. To the best of my knowledge and my belief, this contains no material previously published or written by any other person except where due reference is made in the text. Copyright@ 2013. Ainul Yaqin and Dra.Martha Nandari M.A All rights reserved. No part of this thesis may be reproduced by any means without the permission of at least one of the copyright owners or the English Department, Faculty of Language and Literature, Satya Wacana Christian University, Salatiga.

Ainul Yaqin:

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PUBLICATION AGGREMENENT DECLARATION

As a member of Satya Wacana Christian University (SWCU) academic community, I verify that:

Name : Ainul Yaqin Student ID Number : 112009091 Study Program : PBI (Pendidikan Bahasa Inggris) English Department Faculty : Language and Literature Kind of Work : Undergraduate Thesis

In developing my knowledge, I agree to provide SWCU with a non-exclusive royalty free right for my intellectual property and the content therein entitled:

TEACHERS’ STRATEGIES IN TEACHING LISTENING TO STUDENTS OF

SMP N 1 BANYUBIRU

along with ant pertinent equipment. With the non-exclusive royalty free right, SWCU maintains the right to copy, reproduce, print, publish, post, display, incorporate, store in or scan into a retrieval system or database, transmit, broadcast, barter or sell my intellectual property, in whole or in part without my express written permission, as long as my name is still included as the writer. This declaration is made according to the best of my knowledge.

Made in : Salatiga Date : June 26, 2013

Verified by signee,

Ainul yaqin

Approved by :

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TEACHERS’ STRATEGIES IN TEACHING LISTENING TO STUDENTS OF

SMP N 1 BANYUBIRU

Ainul Yaqin

Abstract

Listening plays a significant role in daily communication and educational process. In spite of its importance, listening has long been the neglected skill in second language acquisition. The Indonesian government policy, not to include listening in English final eximination, has made the problem even worse. The study tried to find the teachers’ strategies in teaching listening to students of SMP N 1 Banyubiru. The participants of the study were 3 English teachers in SMP N 1 Banyubiru. An interview was mainly used as the only instrument to collect the data in this study. The study showed that teachers used mostly bottom up process activities in the listening class. The problems faced by the participants were the limited available listening materials and the low level of students’ basic English proficiency. To overcome those problems, teachers made their own listening materials and emphasized on the teaching of vocabulary as pre listening activities. Key words: listening, teacher strategies, listening activity.

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BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY.

International communication plays a more and more important role. The

evergrowing needs for fluency in English around the world have given priority to

finding more effective ways to teach English . As we all know, listening and speaking

are not the only important forms of communication, but also the most direct language

activities for people to convey information and express their ideas (Gurses &

Saricoban, 2009). Although once labeled a passive skill, listening plays an important

role in communication as it is said that, of the total time spent on communicating,

listening takes up 40-50%; speaking, 25-30%; reading, 11-16%; and writing, about

9% (Mendelsohn, 1994) as cited in (Gilakjani & Ahmadi , 2011)

Although the teaching of listening comprehension has long been somewhat

neglected and a poorly taught, (Mendelsohn, 1994) as cited in (Gilakjani and

Ahmadi, 2011) found that listening is now regarded as much more important in both

EFL classrooms and SLA research. Listening involves an active process of

deciphering and constructing meaning from both verbal and non-verbal messages,

(Nunan, 1998) cited in (Gilakjani and Ahmadi, 2011).

In most of junior high school states in Indonesia, learners have English

courses during their educational lives. Listening activities are also practiced;

however, as to the application of the procedures, it is seen that the students attending

those classes do not receive adequate information on how to listen or the way to learn

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how to listen. They only listen to the teachers reading the materials which are mostly

written in their coursebooks, and then comprehension questions are asked; such

activity is much more like practicing listening rather than teaching listening, (Field,

1998) cited in (Gurses and Saricoban, 2009). There is only very limited listening

activities in their coursebooks provided by Ministry of National Education for 7th, 8th

and 9th year classes. Therefore, the students do not have any chance to hear the

examples of native speech, as a result, learners get problems to develop their listening

skills. They simply study English grammar presented in reading passages and

dialogues, and try to do grammar exercises or write in the language they rarely hear.

This condition happens because of the Education Ministry’s policy does not include

the listening skills in the Final examination (Ujian Akhir) and teachers have to follow

the Syllabus provided by the Ministry of Education.

Aim of the study

This situation has made the writer interested in knowing and deeply

observing the teachers’ strategies in teaching listening to the students. The writer

wanted to know how English teachers cope with very limited listening materials

available in the coursebooks provided by the government and how they teach

listening. The case study took place in SMP N 1 Banyubiru. The research questions to

be answered are:

1. What are the teachers’ strategies in teaching listening to students of

SMP N 1 Banyubiru?

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2. What are the problems found by the teachers in teaching listening and

how they overcome those problems?

Significance of the study

Hopefully the result of the study could inspire other teachers in Indonesia

especially in rural area such as in SMP N Banyubiru to develop the appropriate

strategies to teach listening to their students. Also, the writer also hopes that the

results of this study can be used by the teachers all over Indonesia to identify

problems in each of their schools and know how to overcome the problems.

Literature Review

A. Listening

According to Devine (1982) cited in Gilakjani and Ahmadi (2011) listening is

the primary means by which incoming ideas and information are taken in.

Underwood (1989) simplified the definition of listening to "the activity of paying

attention to and trying to get meaning from something we hear”. Mendelsohn (1994)

cited in Gilakjani and Ahmadi (2011) defines listening comprehension as the ability

to understand the spoken language of native speakers.'' O‘Malley, Chamot, and

Kupper (2001) cited in Karen (2003) offer a useful and more extensive definition that

listening comprehension is an active and conscious process in which the listener

constructs meaning by using cues from contextual information and from existing

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knowledge, while relying upon multiple strategic resources to fulfill the task

requirement. Purdy (1997) cited in Gilakjani and Ahmadi (2011) defined listening as

"the active and dynamic process of attending, perceiving, interpreting, remembering,

and responding to the expressed (verbal and nonverbal), needs, concerns, and

information offered by other human beings" . Listening comprehension is an

inferential process (Rost, 2002). Linguistic knowledge and world knowledge interact

as listeners create a mental representation of what they hear (Rost, 2002). From some

definitions from experts above, the writer wants to base his own research which is

about listening strategies used by teachers in SMP N 1 Banyubiru, on those theories.

Listening is the most frequently used language skill. Gilbert (1988) noted that

students from kindergarten through high school were expected to listen to 65-90

percent of the time. Both in and out of the classroom, listening consumes more of

daily communication time than other forms of verbal communication. Listening is

very much an active process of selecting and interpreting information from auditory

and visual clues , (Richards, 2008) cited in (Gilakjani and Ahmadi, 2011). In this

active process, students receive and construct information.The most surprising truth is

that although the significance of listening has been accepted and known very well, it

does not overlap what takes place in Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL)

classrooms. It has not received a great deal of attention until more recent times

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Anderson and Lynch in their study (1988) cited in Gilakjani and Ahmadi

(2011), argue that in successful listening, understanding is not something that

happens because of what a speaker says: the listener has a crucial part to play in the

process, by activating various types of knowledge, and by applying what he knows to

what he hears and trying to understand what the speaker means.

Rost (2002) defined listening as a process of receiving what the speaker

actually says, constructing and representing meaning, negotiating meaning with the

speaker and responding, and creating meaning through involvement, imagination and

empathy. To listen well, listeners must have the ability to decode the message, the

ability to apply a variety of strategies and interactive processes to make meaning, and

the ability to respond to what is said in a variety of ways, depending on the purpose

of the communication. Listening involves listening for thoughts, feelings, and

intentions. In other words, listening is a two ways communication between the

listeners and speakers where the listener needs to understand what the speakers

communicate, which can be indicated through the response that the listeners give to

the speakers.

The studies conducted by Coakley&Wolvin and Truesdale’s (Gilakjani and

Ahmadi,2011) indicated that efficient listening skills were more important than

reading skills as a factor contributing to academic success. However, Dunkel study

(1991) cited in Abbas and Muhammad (2011) reported that international students'

academic success in the United States and Canada relied more on reading than

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listening comprehension, especially for those students in engineering, psychology,

chemistry, and computer science. Thus, the importance of listening in classroom

instruction has been less emphasized than reading and writing. Nevertheless, it is

evident that listening plays a significant role in the lives of people. Listening is even

more important for the lives of students since listening is used as a primary medium

of learning at all stages of education.

Listening involves an active process of deciphering and constructing meaning

from both verbal and non-verbal messages (Nunan, 1998). Thus, the label of passive

skill applied to listening is a misnomer. This misunderstanding may appear from the

fact that superficially learners seem to only sit in a language lab quietly, listen to pre-

recorded dialogues, and write the answers to some questions related to the oral

stimulus. It is evident, then, that listening is not as passive as it has been claimed.

Effective language instructors show students how they can adjust their

listening behavior to deal with a variety of situations, types of input, and listening

purposes. They help students develop a set of listening strategies and match

appropriate strategies to each listening situation.

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B. Listening Strategies

Listening strategies are techniques or activities that contribute directly to the

comprehension and recall of listening input. Listening strategies can be classified by

how the listener processes the input. There are two subsuming cognitive processes:

bottom-up (data-driven) and top-down (conceptually-driven).

1. Bottom-Up processing strategy

The bottom-up processing involves constructing meaning from the smallest

unit of the spoken language to the largest one in a linear mode (Nunan, 1998). Thus,

the learners attempt to understand a spoken discourse by decoding a number of

sounds to form words. Next, words are linked to form phrases, which make up

sentences. These sentences build a complete text, the meaning of which is then

constructed by the listeners. In addition to the grammatical relationships, stress,

rhythm and intonation also substantially contribute to this data driven processing

(Van Duzer ,1997 as cited in Abbas and Muhammad, 2011). Learners can be trained

to perform this processing, for instance, by activities that require them to discriminate

two sounds or distinguish rising and falling intonations. There are exercises that

involve bootom-up listening ; retain input while it is being processed, recognize word

division, recognize key word in utterances, recognize key transition in a discourse,

use knowledge of word order patterns to identify constituent in utterances, recognize

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grammatical relations between key element in sentences, recognize the function of

word stress in sentences, and recognize the function of intonation in sentences.

2. Top-Down processing strategy

The top-down processing, on the other hand, refers to interpreting meaning as

intended by the speakers by means of schemata or structures of knowledge in the

mind (Nunan, 1998).Top-down strategies are listener based; the listener taps into

background knowledge of the topic, the situation or context, the type of text, and the

language. This background knowledge activates a set of expectations that help the

listener to interpret what is heard and anticipate what will come next. Top-down

strategies include listening for the main idea, predicting, drawing inferences, and

summarizing. There are exercises that are involved in Top-down listening; use key

words to construct the schema of a discourse, construct plans and schema from

elements of a discourse, infer the role of the participants in a situation, infer the topic

of a discourse, infer the outcome of an event, infer the cause of effect of an event,

infer unstated detail of a situation, infer the sequence of a series of event, infer

comparisons, distinguish between literal and figurative meanings, and distinguish

betwen facts and opinions.

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3. Interactive processing strategy

As the development of language teaching, the listening strategies are now

developing. The teacher or instructor combine the two listening strategies above to

teach the students, which is called Interactive processing. According to Peterson

(2001) Interactive processing is the combination of top-down and bottom-up data. In

this strategies the students are required to have brainstorming with other students or

partner, such as, discussing vocabulary realated to a topic, or invent a short dialogue

relevant to functions such as giving directions or shopping. In the process, they base

their information on their knowledge of life (top-down information) as they generate

vocabulary and sentences (bottom-up data). The result is a more integrated attempt at

processing. The learners are activating their previous knowledge. Also, according to

Richards, (1990) the success of listening strategies will depend on the combination of

the both, Top-down and Bottom-up Processing. Thus, the combination of the two

listening strategies will be very useful for the teacher to teach the Listening course.

C. Obstacle in listening

Underwood’s study(1989), mentions seven causes of obstacles to efficient

listening comprehension. First, listeners cannot control the speed of delivery. He

says,'' Many English language learners believe that the greatest difficulty with

listening comprehension is that the listener cannot control how quickly a speaker

speaks'' (Underwood, 1989, p. 16). Second, listeners cannot always have words

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repeated. This is a serious problem in learning situations. In the classroom, the

decision as to whether or not to replay a recording or a section of a recording is not in

the hands of students. Teachers decide what and when to repeat listening passages;

however, it is hard for the teacher to judge whether or not the students have

understood any particular section of what they have heard (Underwood, 1989, p. 17).

Third, listeners have a limited vocabulary. The speaker may choose words the listener

does not know. Listeners sometimes encounter an unknown word which may cause

them to stop and think about the meaning of that word and thus cause them to miss

the next part of the speech. Fourth, listeners may fail to recognize the signals which

indicate that the speaker is moving from one point to another, giving an example, or

repeating a point. Discourse markers used in formal situations or lectures such as

''secondly,'' or ''then'' are comparatively evident to listeners. In informal situations or

spontaneous conversations, signals are vaguer as in pauses, gestures, increased

loudness, a clear change of pitch, or different intonation patterns. These signals can

be missed especially by less proficient listeners. Fifth, listeners may lack contextual

knowledge. Sharing mutual knowledge and common content makes communication

easier. Even if listeners can understand the surface meaning of the text, they may

have considerable problems in comprehending the whole meaning of the passage

unless they are familiar with the context. Nonverbal clues such as facial expressions,

nods, gestures, or tone of voice can also be easily misinterpreted by listeners from

different cultures. Sixth, it can be difficult for listeners to concentrate in a foreign

language. In listening comprehension, even the shortest break in attention can

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seriously impair comprehension. Conversation is easier when students find the topic

of the listening passage interesting; however, students sometimes feel listening is

very tiring even if they are interested because it requires an enormous amount of

effort to follow the meaning. Seventh, students may have established certain learning

habits such as a wish to understand every word. Teachers want students to understand

every word they hear by repeating and pronouncing words carefully, by grading the

language to suit their level, by speaking slowly and so on. As a result, they tend to

become worried if they fail to understand a particular word or phrase and they will be

discouraged by the failure. It is necessary for students to tolerate vagueness and

incompleteness of understanding (Underwood, 1989)

The Study

Context of the study

The setting of the study is SMP Negeri 1 Banyubiru, which is located in the

small town of Kabupaten Semarang, Central Java, Indonesia. English is not actively

used in the oral communication activities in this place. Learners rarely have

opportunities to communicate orally and directly with foreigners. The subject of this

small-scale study is the teachers of SMP Negeri 1Banyubiru. The school has five

hours English course each week. The New Language Laboratory was built and is

ready to use. The reason of choosing this School is due to the easiness of getting the

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data because the writer has already known the participants and the school conditions

are appropriate with the needs of the writer’s study.

Participants

The participants of this study were three teachers of SMP Negeri 1 Banyubiru.

The first teacher graduated from a Private University in Salatiga, majored in

Education, and she has been teaching there for thirteen years. The second teacher

graduated from another Private University in Salatiga and also majored in Education,

she has been teaching there for ten years. Moreover, the third teacher was also

graduated from a State University in Semarang and mainly majored in Literature, he

has been teaching English there for eight years.

Instruments of data collection

To get the data, the writer interviewed English teachers’ of SMP Negeri 1

Banyubiru by using semi structured interview. Semi-structured interviewe or

“interview guided approach” (Patton, 1990) is similar to structured interview but it

allows for greater flexibility. The flexibility includes changing the order of the

questions to provide opportunity for follow-up questions. The interviews took 15-20

minutes each on the average and were recorded and transcribed.

Data Analysis

After the main data were collected, the result of the interview was transcribed

and the data were analyzed qualitatively. The writer uses Holistic-content analysis,

that means to decide on a major theme ( Brown, 2001; Brown and Rodger, 2002) that

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is to know the teachers’strategies in teaching listening in SMP N 1 Banyubiru and

how they coped with the problems especially regarding the limited readily avilable

listening materials. The writer focused on the whole interview transcript (which can

be seen in the Appendix 2) for each participant because there were a small number of

participants.

DISCUSSION

The strategies that the teacher used in teaching listening

To find out the kind of strategies the teachers used to teach listening in class,

the writer gave a list of activities or techniques as listed in the table below and asked

the teachers to choose the ones they used. The activities include 9 in-class techniques

which are based on bottom-up process and 9 other techniques which are based on top-

down process. The result are presented in the table below.

Table of list of listening activities used by teachers at SMP N 1 Banyubiru

No Exercise (BOTTOM UP) A B C

1 identify the reference of pronouns used in conversation √

2 Recognize if sentence passive or active

3 Identify major constituents in a sentence, such a subject and object, verb and adverb.

√ √

4 Distinguish between sentences with and without auxiliary verb

5 Recognize the use of word stress to mark the information focus of a sentence

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A : 1st Teacher B : 2nd Teacher C : 3rd Teacher

From the table, it was revealed that most of teachers in SMP N 1 Banyubiru

tend to use Bottom-Up activities in teaching listening. They used Bottom-Up

activities because they considered the level of the students in SMP N 1 Banyubiru.

6 Recognize the time reference of a sentence √ √ √

7 Distinguish between positive and negative statement √ √

8 Recognize sequence marker √ √

9 Distinguish between Yes/ No and Wh-questions.

NO Exercise ( TOP DOWN) A B C

10 Listen on part of coversationand infer the topic of the conversatiton

11 Look at the picture and then listen to conversation about the pictures and match them with the picture

12 Listen to conversation and identify the setting √

13 Read a list of key points to be covered in a talk and then number them in sequence while listening t talk.

14 Read information about the topic, then listen to a talk on the topic and check weather the information was mention or not.

15 Read one side of the telephone converstation and guess other speaker ‘s responses, then listen to the telephone conversation

16 Look at pictures of people speaking and guess what might be saying or doing; then listen in their actual conversation

17 Complete a story, the listen to how story really ended

18 Guess what news headlines might refer to, then listen to news broadcests about the event refered.

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Grammar exercises such as identifying pronoun reference, identifying the subject,

object, verb and adverb, recognizing time reference and other bottom-up exercises are

the most frequently used exercises by the teachers. As for the the pre-teaching

activities one teacher mentioned about providing vocabulary to the students. The

following statement was quoted from one of the participants.

“...I prefer to give vocabulary to the students in the beginning of the lesson…”

The reason behind this strategy was due to the lack of vocabulary that

students’ have related to the materials or topic of the lesson. Besides, the students of

SMP N 1 Banyubiru had also low enthusiasm in learning English, especially in the

listening subject. Moreover, this strategy is used to familiarize the students with the

topic of the listening activity because through this strategy, the teachers can activate

students’ awareness toward the topic of the lesson.

However, in certain occasions the teachers also used Top-Down listening

activities while they were teaching listening, such as, providing the students with

pictures related to the material before the main listening activity. The aim of using

this activity was to increase the students understanding or comprehension toward a

certain topic of the listening.

From the activities that teachers’ used, it was obvious that the teachers in

SMP N 1 Banyubiru tended to use Bottom- Up activities in listening class rather than

Top- Down Activities. The tendency of using Bottom-Up activities could raise

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students perception that they should comprehend or understand every single word

that was used in the listening activity.

Problems in applying the activities

In applying the activities in listening class, it was revealed that the teachers

had quite similar responses one to another. For example,

“...The most difficult thing is to find out the material... “

The problems are basically from the material that is not available in the

language laboratory. One participant mentioned, that she cannot find any additional

material which is going to be used in teaching listening in the language laboratory.

Besides, another obstacle which appeared during the listening activity was

also stated by another participant.

“...The difficulty is on the students who have low level on their English basic proficiency...”

This obstacle may have coused the teachers to use more bottom-up activities

which focus on the teaching of language components rather than the top-down

process activities which deal with listening to the main idea, predicting, inferring and

other meaning interpretation exercises. Additionally, during the interview one of the

participants mentioned that the students seem not to be enthusiastic following the

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listening activities which can increase the burden to the teachers. Such kind of

condition may frustrate the teacher while they are teaching listening.

Solutions the problems

Considering the problems that the teachers found in listening class, they

proposed some solutions to overcome the problems. To overcome the problems in

finding materials for listening class, one participant mentioned that she overcomes

the problems by creating her own materials or recordings by herself.

“...I construct my own conversation if there is no material the in laboratory...”

The books or disc used in the English classes or laboratory may not include

any listening materials but it should not discourage the teachers to search for and find

listening materials. In fact, it is not difficult and it does not take too much time to find

listening materials in such an era in which the technology and internet play very

important roles. There is also information and guidelines on how to use those

materials, or which strategies can be used in these materials. The only issue is the

enthusiasm of the teacher and this is also strengthened when the teachers see the

eagerness and excitement of the learners. Unfortunately only one teacher made use of

the materials they could find in the internet.

Another problem was that the students have low level of basic English

proficiency. To overcome the problem, the following statement was the response

from one of the teachers.

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“...I am emphasizing on the vocabulary...”.

Vocabulary seems to be the most important language component for

understanding the material. That is why the teachers provided a solution by

emphasizing the teaching of vocabulary before the main listening activity was started.

The reason of using such kind of strategy in teaching listening was to prepare the

students before they come in the main listening activity so that they will not get

confused with the materials they will learn.

The last problem which was related to the students’ enthusiasm toward the

listening activity in the class was still under consideration. Here is the statement from

the teacher.

“…for this problem I still find the solution..”

Based on the interview result above, the teacher revealed that they had not

found the solution of how to increase the students’ motivation and enthusiasm toward

the listening activity in the class.

The overall discussion shows that the teachers in SMP N 1 Banyubiru tend to

use the Bottom-Up listening strategies in teaching listening. The use of Bottom- Up

listening strategies due to the available materials and the low level of students ability

in vocabulary. Moreover, the discussion reveals that the problems that the teacher

found when they are appliying the strategies are mostly on the material which are

limited, the students’ low level of vocabulary, and the students’ enthusiasm in the

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listening class. To overcome those problems the teachers proposed some sollution,

such as creating materials by their own and emphasizing the use of vocabulary.

CONCLUSION AND SUGGESTION

This study is conducted to answer these research questions which are about the

teachers’ strategies in teaching listening to students of SMP N 1 Banyubiru and also

the problems found by the teachers in teaching listening and how they overcome

those problems.

The aim of this study is to find out the listening strategies used by the teachers

in teaching listening, to find out the problems found by the teachers in applying the

strategies and the solutions to overcome those problems. Also, the writer hopes that

the result of this study can inspire other teachers in Indonesia, especially in rural area

such as SMP N 1 Banyubiru to develop the appropriate strategies to teach listening to

their students. Moreover, the result can also be used by the teachers all over Indonesia

to identify problems in each of their schools and know how to overcome the

problems.

The present study reveals the SMP N 1 Banyubiru’s teachers, especially

English teachers who teach listening class. The finding show that the teachers in SMP

Negeri 1 Banyubiru tend to use the Bottom Up strategy in their listening activity. The

strategy is used to adjust with the students low ability in English. To avoid the

impression that listening should be done by listening to every single word, the

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teachers are encouraged to include more top-down process activities in teaching

listening. Because of the limitations in the listening materials, the teachers should

find additional material, for the teaching of listening or even made the materials by

themselves. The writer suggest that teachers make use of the materials available in

the internet.

Since the writer is still a beginner researcher, the study may still have

weakness. The only weakness may be on the amount of the participants which may

seem to be small participants (only consists of 3) and it may lead to the validity of the

data.

As a final suggestion for the further studies, another researcher who are

interested in conducting on the same topic, they should have more teachers as their

participants.

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

I would express my thankfulness to those who have become part of finishing my

thesis and study. Firstly, I would like to express my gratitude to Allah for always

giving me strength and answering my prayers. My appreciation also goes to my

supervisor, Ibu Martha Nandari, M.A who has kindly give me guidance to do my

thesis, and also my examiner, Ibu Sesilia Rani M. Hum who has also spared her

precious time to read and examine my thesis. My student advisor, Ibu Suzana Maria

and other English Department lecturers who have been kindly sharing their

knowledge during my study in ED. My lovely family; my parents (Rika and Asrofi) ,

who has been patiently and wisely giving me supports and courages, The Pendowo

Brothers (Malik, Tajudin, Kasan, and Begundal Messi),My sister-in-law (Rovi, Eny,

and Titik),My Beloved Winda, and my NTC brothers ( Wahyu, Yustian, Deo, Deri,

Adi, Topik, Cyr, Felix, Yusuf), who have helped me a lot in finishing my study in

ED. Thank You.

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References Abbas , P.G., & Muhammad, R.A. (2011) A Study of Factors Affecting EFL Learners' English Listening Comprehension and the Strategies for Improvement. Journal of Language Teaching and Research , 2(5), 977-988. Anita, Y.K.P. (2011). Integrative-Narrative Method: The Role of Narratives, Integrated Skills and Cognitive Strategies in the Teaching of English, The Asia-Pacific Education Researcher 20:3. 477-488 Brown, J.D., & Rodgers. T. S (2002). Doing second language research. New York:

Oxford University press. Field, J. (1998). Skills and Strategies: Towards a new methodology for listening. ELT

Journal, 52 (2), 110-118

Gilbert, M. B. (1988). Listening in school: I know you can hear me--But are you listening? Journal of the International Listening Association, 2, 121-132.

Karen , A. C., (2003). Improving High School English Language Learners’ Second Language Listening Through Strategy Instruction. Bilingual Research Journal, 27:3.

Nunan, D. (1998). Approaches to Teaching Listening in the Language Classroom. Paper presented at the Korea TESOLConference, Seoul. 109-156.

O,Malley, J. M., Chamot, A. U., Stewner-Manzanares, G., Kupper, L., & Russo, R. P.

(1985). Learning strategies used bybeginning and intermediate ESL students. Language Learning, 35, 21-46.

Oxford, R. L. (1990). Language learning strategies: What every teacher should

know. Boston: Heinle&Heinle. Patton, M.Q. (1990). Qualitative evaluation and research methods. Newbury Park,

CA: Sage Publications, Inc Peterson , P. W. (2001). Skills and strategies for proficient listening. In M. Celce-

Murcia (ed.) Teaching English as a Second or Foreign Language. Boston, MA :

Heinle & Heinle.

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Pinar, G., & Arif, S. ( 2009). Developing Listening Skills of the 9th Year Students at

Cubuk Imam Hatip High School, Ekev Akademi Dergisi, 2, 40.

Rost, M. (2002). Teaching and Researching Listening. London, UK: Longman. Underwood, M. (1989).Teaching listening. New York: Longman.

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Appendix

These questions are for teachers to know the strategies in teaching listening and ways

coping the difficulties in teaching listening.

1. What kinds of activities do you use in your pre-listening activities?

2. Do you use any strategies as mention below? What is your purpose of using

each of the activity?

No Exercise (BOTTOM UP) Response

1 identify the reference of pronouns used in conversation

2 Recognize if sentence passive or active

3 Identify major constituents in a sentence, such a subject and object, verb and adverb.

4 Distinguish between sentences with and without auxiliary verb

5 Recognize the use of word stress to mark the information focus of a sentence

6 Recognize the time reference of a sentence

7 Distinguish between positive and negative statement

8 Recognize sequence marker

9 Distinguish between Yes/ No and Wh-questions.

NO Exercise ( TOP DOWN)

10 Listen on part of coversation and infer the topic of the conversatiton

11 Look at the picture and then listen to conversation about the pictures and match them with the picture

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3. What difficulties do you find in applying such activities in teaching listening? 4. How will you overcome those difficulties?

12 Listen to conversation and identify the setting

13 Read a list of key points to be covered in a talk and then number them in sequence while listening talk.

14 Read information about the topic, then listen to a talk on the topic and check weather the information was mention or not.

15 Read one side of the telephone converstation and guess other speaker ‘s responses, then listen to the telephone conversation

16 Look at pictures of people speaking and guess what might be saying or doing; then to listen in their actual conversation

17 Complete a story, then listen to how story really ended

18 Guess what news headlines might refer to, then listen to news broadcests about the event refered.

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Appendix II

These are the results of the interview from three teachers in SMP N 1 Banyu Biru.

Teacher A :

A : Selamat pagi bu, saya Ainul mau interview tentang learning process di kelas listening. Sebelumnya aktifitas yang ibu gunakan dalam pre list apa saja?

B : mmm....kalau pre listening saya lebih ke topiknya dulu, misal tentang text diskriptive, tentang suatu tempat maka saya biasanya pre-nya membahas kosa katanya dulu. Biasanya saya explore: what they know about this place. Supaya nanti waktu mereka mendengarkan listening itu, text itu. Maka mereka akan punya semacam gambaran. “ohh, tadi saya sudah mendengar ya, kata ini waktu pre.” Jadi pre-listening sebenarnya untuk “to bridge” the.......what’s it? Student knowledge to the topic.

A : Jadi dengan memberikan vocabulary itu untuk menambah pengetahuan siswa tentang topik.

B : Memberi gambaran apa yang dibicarakan.

A : Kalau dibawah ni kan ada beberapa aktivitas beserta contoh strategi yang sudah sya tuliskan disini, apakah ada yang ibu gunakan? Seperti ini :

Identify the referent of pronoun used in conversation, seperti menunjukan contoh excercise.

Atau recoqnize if sentence is passive or active, contohnya(menunjukan ke contoh yang disiapkan)ini. Active sentense itu kalau the subject of the sentence perform the action atau passive. The subject of the sentence has an action done...

B : Ya ...itu kan kembali ke topik tadi, kan ita harus lihat, kalo kita bicara tentang text report , maka saya pasti akan bicara tentang passive , memberi background knowledge, kalo anak-anak nya denger was done, maka tau itu kalimat pasiv.

A : Kalo mencari major constituent in a sentence, seperti mencari subject , verb yang mana, direct object yang mana?

B : Ya tadi kan baru pre ya, kita masih bicara Pre ya?

A : Iya

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B : Saya lihat dulu text nya , dalam text , apa dulu yang harus saya berikan kepada anak sebelum listening. Yeah, So I have to identify what might be the difficulties in the text , right? Ya jadi kan itu topical juga kan? Nah , kita mau memperdengarkan apa di diskriptive , itu kan ada adjective kan noun phrase , maka, so I will talk about adjective and Noun Phrase, supaya anak tau kan, kayak its beautiful city, so they knw its noun prhase

A : Dari berbagai macam strategi atau exercise ini bisakah ibu memberikan tanda tentang apa saja yang ibu berikan atau gunakan? Bisa ibu memberikan tanda , terus.. untuk sementara itu dulu bu..

(rekaman pause, memberikan kesempatan Ibu Ambar memberikan tanda di kolom yang telah di sediakan)

A : Dari strategi yang Ibu gunakan atau pilih tadi, selanjutnya apakah ada kesulitan dalam menerapkan dalam kelas listening ? dalam kelas listening, apakah dari classroom atau dari siswa nya?

B : Kalo kebanyakan , kita materinya dulu, yaa....yang paling sulit adalah materi,hehe, kalo pas saya listening itu kebetulan nemu materi yang apa yaa.. yang applicable, ya student lavelnya gitu a, cocok gitu ya, biasanya hambatanya.. materi yang sesuai ke anak juga kesulitan adalah mereka jarang di berikan listening practice.

A : Oh ,,,yaaa...

B : Kenapa jarang? Ya itu tadi berubungan dengan materi yang sesuai dengan anak , kami punya multimedia dengan listening activity yang very good ya..tapi sayang, pronounciation nya itu gak representative itu lho.

A : Untuk anak kelas tertentu gitu ya bu

B : Karena itu gak native.

A : hmmm..

B : Jadi kalo saya kalo ngasih contoh ga bener atau gak seperti yang di harapkan juga untuk apa?

A : Tidak memenuhi dalam materi tersebut gitu ya bu.

B : Jadi pronounciation nya bagus kayak greeting gitu ya, apa itu ... tapi pronounciation nya indonesian .

A : Terus untuk mengatasi masalah tersebut gimana bu?

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B : Saya biasanya ini “construct my own” , what is it? Ya kalo conversation nya saya minta tolong sama pak wohono untuk...kan biasanya conversation cowok sama cewek ya, supaya tau bedanya, “ ow, bariki iki, mau iki”, yah simple dialog aja, minta tolong sama lagi nanti, setelah di perdengarkan, wah kok masih sound Indonesianjuga gitu lho, karena kita kan juga bukan native , kalau kita cari di internet itu, ada sih beberapa, apa yaa... mereka native ya terutama dari ESL learning.. Listening for ESL disitu banyak sekali...mm...kadang ya gak sesuai dengan daftar tema kita, jadi kesulitan nya pertama materi, kalo seandainya ada buku, kita punya kanguru, nah setelah kita punya kanguru, itu baru apa.... temuan bahasa apa...materinya sudah sesuai dengan KTSP. Saya punya bukunya jadi setelah iu sering memberikan kelas listening.

Teacher B:

Lisna Hasana.

A : Selamat pagi bu, saya Ainul mau interview tentang learning process di kelas listening. Sebelumnya aktifitas yang ibu gunakan dalam pre list apa saja?

B : Yang sering digunakan adalah meberikan vocabulary ( kata-kata sukar) sebelum aktifitas listening. List-list atau daftar vocabulary yang akan muncul dalam aktifitas Listening dibahas dan di tulis d depan kelas terlebih dahulu. Sehingga nantinya siswa dapat memahami atau mengetahui isi percakapan di dalam listening.

A : Bu lisna bisa memilih strategi atau aktifitas yang di gunakan?

B : Aktifitas yang saya gunakan adalah,

1. Memberikan vocabulary. 2. Recognize the time reference of a sentence 3. Distinguish between positive and negative statement 4. Recognize sequence marker 5. Listen to conversation and identify the setting

A : Apakah tujuan dari aktifitas itu bu? B : Tujuanya adalah agar siswa paham dengan materi yang akan diberikan,

karena sebelumnya sudeah diberikan knowledge sebelum Listening.

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A : kesulitan yang bu lisna hadapi dalam pengajaran listening? B : Kesuliatan yang di temukan adalah vocabulary (kosakata) yang minim dari

siswa , sehingga Ibu Lisna harus memberikan penekanan pada kosakat. Materi yang tersedia di LAB ,kadang tidak sesuai KTSP, jadi harus mencari

materi sendiri d Internet. Selain itu, antusias yang renadh dalam belajar bahasa inggris.

A : bagimana mengatasinya ? B :Untuk mengatasi vocabulary (kosakata) yang minim dari siswa, maka Ibu

Lisna menekankan pada vocabulary, sehingga lebih mudah untuk anak memahami isi dalam percakapan. Kalo motivasi, belum ditemukan solusinya.

Selain itu, harus sering mengajak siswa ke LAB supaya terbiasa mendengar native speaker.

Teacher C:

Sebelum wawancara, bapak Wahono, di berikan sebuah kertas berisikan macam-macam aktivitas, dan memilih beberapa aktivitas yang beliau pernah digunakan dalam kelas.

A: selamat pagi pak, saya ainul, ini akan menanyakan atau interview tentang pre listening.

Disini ada lab multimedia pak?

B : ada

A : tersedia untuk kelas listening ya pak ya, terus, berapa kali dlam sebulan anak-anak masuk ke kelas listening?

B: Ya, kalo kelas 8 saya sesuaikan dengan materi, kebetulan tidak banyak , kalo materinya memang membutuhkan listening , saya masukkan ke Lab Bahasa.

A : O,,ya pak.. jadi sesuai kebutuhan (materi).. terus ... dalam kelas listening itu pak ... aktivitas yag digunakan dalam pre teaching oleh pak wahono apa?

B : ya misalnya kalo di kelas, greeting ( menyapa) di kelas anak-anak di Lab juga saya gunakan, terus terutama persiapan untk menggunakan alat-alat tetep saya pantau siswanya.

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A : itu juga kalo menggunakan strategi nya yang bapak pilih tadi , tujuannya menggunakan itu apa pak?

B : biar anak-anak makin paham tentang context materi , membaca atau penulisanya saja tapi bentuk pengucapan , jadi mereka bisa mendengarkan bentuk kalo di ucapkan gimana jadi mereka ta gitu, oh seperti itu yaa.

A : ini saya ingin tau dari beberapa yang bapak pilih adalah identify the referent of pronoun, identify the major constituent, distinguish between positive and negative statement. Terus.. look at picture,..listen one side of telephone conversation, nah dalam strategi-strategi itu apa bapak mengalami kesulitan?

B : kalo kesulitan pasti ada ya, contoh nya kalo , paling gampang itu ya.. postive dan negative itu ya, contoh nya “ Can”, kalo anak anak peke can not udah tau, nah kalo di singkat, katakanlah, “Can’t” ada yang “ Cannt”, itu di tekankan dengan mendengar dari penjelasan sebelum listening material, nanti bisa membedakan “Can” positive gimana. “can’t” negative gimana pengucapanya dari itu bisa tau.

A : jadi sebelum aktifitas listening bapak itu memberikan penjelasan terlebih dahulu sesuai materi ?

B : penjelasan singkat, nanti supaya ..ya...apa...pre listening , nanti kalo materi ksih bahan dan mencocokan apa yang di dengar dan di baca ,di usahakan sama.

A : dari pre teaching juga bapak memberikan knowledge , materi yang akan muncul dalam list gitu ya pak? Tujuananya apa pak?

B : ya biar, .. saya kan kalo ngajar kalo materi tidak anak-anak tidak tau, nanti kan anak-anak malah bingung.

A : jadi biar, biar anak-anak lebih tahu atau paham materinya seperti itu ya pak ya, kan ada kesulitan dalam itu. Mengajarkan list, mengatasinya gmana pak?

B : itu kalo listening mau gak mau harus mengulang-ulang latihan. kalo anak-anak pronounciationya kan kadang-kadang.. kalo di bawa ke Lab bahasa nanti kan tau..oh..pengucapanya kayak gini to seharusnya..gitu.. kalo di kelas kan mereka Cuma baca , kalo di Lab nanti kan bisa di bedakan materi yang di pegang sama yang didengarkan di Lab, tau bagaimana cara bacanya

A : ya pak , itu saja pertanyannya dari saya.

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