THE ANALYSIS OF LISTENING STRATEGIES USED BY THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT STUDENTS OF FACULTY OF LANGUAGES AND ARTS OF UNIVERSITAS NEGERI PADANG

Milda Sari Hadi(1), Aryuliva Adnan(2), Delvi Wahyuni(3),
(1) English Department Faculty of Languages and Arts State University of Padang 
(2) English Department Faculty of Languages and Arts State University of Padang  Indonesia
(3) English Department Faculty of Languages and Arts State University of Padang  Indonesia

Corresponding Author
Copyright (c) 2017 Journal of English Language Teaching

DOI : https://doi.org/10.24036/jelt.v5i1.7304

Full Text:    Language : en

Abstract


The purpose of this research were to (1) see the listening strategies used by the students of English department UNP, (2) see the strategies used by the students with higher test score (successful listeners) and the strategies used by the students with lower test score (unsuccessful listeners). The design of this research was descriptive research with population were the second-year students who have taken the Listening 1 subject. The sample of this research was the K4 class with 19 members. The instrument used was the SILL questionnaire which has 50 statements. The result of this research showed that the strategies used by the students from the most to the least were metacogntive strategies, cognitive strategies, compensation strategies, affective strategies, social strategies, and memory strategies. Students with higher test score were shown to use metacognitive strategies with high intensity, followed by cognitive strategies, affective strategies, social strategies, memory strategies and compensation strategies. Students with lower test score were shown to use the metacognitive strategies in medium intensity, followed by affective strategies, compensation strategies, social strategies, cognitive strategies and memory strategies. What differ both students’ category was the intensity of the strategies usage


Keywords


listening strategies, successful listeners, unsuccessful listeners.

References


Buck, G. 2001. Assessing Listening. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Dini, H, F & Desmawati, R, & Refnaldi. 2014. The Correlation between Students’ Language Learning Strategies in Reading & Their Reading Comprehension at The Second Year Of English Department of the State University Of Padang. Journal of English Language Teaching, 2 (2) Serie B.

Ellis, Rod. 2012. Language Teaching Research and Language Pedagogy. West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Kassem, Hassan M. 2015. The Relationship Between Listening Strategies Used by Egyptian EFL College Sophomores and Their Listening Comprehension and Self-Efficacy. English Language Teaching; Vol. 8, No. 2.

Moghadam, Mahtab Babaei, Ghanizadeh, Afnaseh & Pazhouhesh, Mohammad. 2016. Scrutinizing Listening Strategies among Iranian EFL University Students. International Journal of Educational Investigations, Vol. 3, No. 3: 11-22.

Oxford, Rebecca L. 1990. Language Learning Strategy: What Every Teacher Should Know. Boston: Heinle & Heinle Publisher.

Vandergrift, L. 2008. Learning Strategies for Listening Comprehension. In Hurd, S & Lewis, T (eds.), Language Learning Strategies in Independent Settings. Bristol: the Cromwell Press Ltd.

Wu, Changbao, & Chen, Jiahua. 2006. Sampling and Experimental Design. Retrieved from http://sas.uwaterloo.ca/~jhchen/stat332/total.pdf


Article Metrics

 Abstract Views : 2100 times
 PDF Downloaded : 407 times

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2017 Journal of English Language Teaching

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.