LVTN-8930_How to improve listening skills for second – year English Majors at HPU

luận văn tốt nghiệp

BỘ GIÁO DỤC VÀ ĐÀO TẠO
TRƯỜNG ĐẠI HỌC DÂN LẬP HẢI PHÒNG
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ISO 9001 : 2015

KHÓA LUẬN TỐT NGHIỆP
NGÀNH: NGÔN NGỮ ANH

Sinh viên : ĐÀO THỊ MAI
Giảng viên hướng dẫn : ThS. BÙI THỊ MAI ANH

HẢI PHÒNG – 2019

BỘ GIÁO DỤC VÀ ĐÀO TẠO
TRƯỜNG ĐẠI HỌC DÂN LẬP HẢI PHÒNG
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HOW TO IMPROVE LISTENING SKILLS FOR
SECOND – YEAR ENGLISH MAJORS AT HPU

KHÓA LUẬN TỐT NGHIỆP ĐẠI HỌC HỆ CHÍNH QUY
NGÀNH: NGÔN NGỮ ANH

Sinh viên : ĐÀO THỊ MAI
Giảng viên hướng dẫn : ThS. BÙI THỊ MAI ANH

HẢI PHÒNG – 2019

BỘ GIÁO DỤC VÀ ĐÀO TẠO
TRƯỜNG ĐẠI HỌC DÂN LẬP HẢI PHÒNG
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NHIỆM VỤ ĐỀ TÀI TỐT NGHIỆP

Sinh viên: Đào Thị Mai

Mã SV: 1412401122
Lớp: NA1802

Ngành: Ngôn ngữ Anh
Tên đề tài: How to improve listening skills for second – year english
majors at HPU

NHIỆM VỤ ĐỀ TÀI

1. Nội dung và các yêu cầu cần giải quyết trong nhiệm vụ đề tài tốt nghiệp
(về lý luận, thực tiễn, các số liệu cần tính toán và các bản vẽ).
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2. Các số liệu cần thiết để thiết kế, tính toán.
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3. Địa điểm thực tập tốt nghiệp.
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CÁN BỘ HƯỚNG DẪN ĐỀ TÀI TỐT NGHIỆP

Người hướng dẫn thứ nhất:
Họ và tên: Bùi Thị Mai Anh
Học hàm, học vị: Thạc sĩ
Cơ quan công tác: Trường Đại học Dân Lập Hải Phòng
Nội dung hướng dẫn: How to improve listening skills for second – year
english majors at HPU

Người hướng dẫn thứ hai:
Họ và tên:…………………………………………………………………………………
Học hàm, học vị:………………………………………………………………………..
Cơ quan công tác:………………………………………………………………………
Nội dung hướng dẫn:………………………………………………………………….

Đề tài tốt nghiệp được giao ngày … tháng ….. năm …..
Yêu cầu phải hoàn thành xong trước ngày …. tháng ….. năm ……

Đã nhận nhiệm vụ ĐTTN Đã giao nhiệm vụ ĐTTN
Sinh viên

Người hướng dẫn

Đào Thị Mai

ThS. Bùi Thị Mai Anh

Hải Phòng, ngày …… tháng …… năm 2019
Hiệu trưởng

GS.TS.NGƯT Trần Hữu Nghị

CỘNG HÒA XÃ HỘI CHỦ NGHĨA VIỆT NAM
Độc lập – Tự do – Hạnh phúc

PHIẾU NHẬN XÉT CỦA GIẢNG VIÊN HƯỚNG DẪN TỐT NGHIỆP
Họ và tên giảng viên:
BÙI THỊ MAI ANH
Đơn vị công tác:
KHOA NGOẠI NGỮ
Họ và tên sinh viên:
ĐÀO THỊ MAI Chuyên ngành: Tiếng Anh
Nội dung hướng dẫn: How to improve listening skills for second – year english
majors at HPU

1. Tinh thần thái độ của sinh viên trong quá trình làm đề tài tốt nghiệp
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2. Đánh giá chất lượng của đồ án/khóa luận (so với nội dung yêu cầu đã đề
ra trong nhiệm vụ Đ.T. T.N trên các mặt lý luận, thực tiễn, tính toán số
liệu…)
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3. Ý kiến của giảng viên hướng dẫn tốt nghiệp
Được bảo vệ
Không được bảo vệ
Điểm hướng dẫn

Hải Phòng, ngày … tháng … năm ……

Giảng viên hướng dẫn

(Ký và ghi rõ họ tên)

QC20-18

CỘNG HÒA XÃ HỘI CHỦ NGHĨA VIỆT NAM
Độc lập – Tự do – Hạnh phúc

PHIẾU NHẬN XÉT CỦA GIẢNG VIÊN CHẤM PHẢN BIỆN
Họ và tên giảng viên: ………………………………………………………………………………
Đơn vị công tác:
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Họ và tên sinh viên:
ĐÀO THỊ MAI Chuyên ngành: Tiếng Anh
Nội dung hướng dẫn: How to improve listening skills for second – year english
majors at HPU
1. Phần nhận xét của giáo viên chấm phản biện
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2. Những mặt còn hạn chế
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3. Ý kiến của giảng viên chấm phản biện
Được bảo vệ
Không được bảo vệ
Điểm hướng dẫn

Hải Phòng, ngày … tháng … năm ……

Giảng viên chấm phản biện

(Ký và ghi rõ họ tên)
QC20-19
i

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

To fulfill this assignment, I have received a lot of help from supervisors,
family and friends.
First of all, I would like to show my sincere thank to my supervisor Mrs
Bui Thi Mai Anh, M.A who supports me with useful advice, valuable guide to
finish this study.
Second, my thanks also go to other teachers of Foreign Laguage
Department, HaiPhong Private University for their valuable lectures and
instructions during the four years, which help me much in completing my
research.
Next, special thanks send to all the second year students of English majors
at HPU for their enthusiasm in finishing the survey questionnaires and interview
questions.
Finally, I am grateful for my family and friends who have always been
beside and encourage me during the time I carried out this study.

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ABSTRACT

Listening skill is one of the most necessary skills to communicate in the
real life. In learning a foreign language, it is more and more important to learn
this skill. Everybody knows that to listen to a message is not as simple as
hearing it, so the listener has to understand the message and respond in the right
manner. The thesis will study how to improve Listening Skills for second year
English Majors. Therefore, I applied the qualitative and quantitative methods to
do the research. So the collecting data instruments like questionnaires,
interviews were used to do the study. The results of the research will help
improve listening skills for English Majors. More importantly, the study helps
me find out the causes of those difficulties so that I can work out the right
solutions to the problems. With the hope of improving students’ listening
competence, I have tried my best to do this thesis by my own experiences and
knowledge in English teaching methodology.

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TABLES OF CONTENTS

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
………………………………………………………………………… i
ABSTRACT ………………………………………………………………………………………….. ii
TABLES OF CONTENTS ……………………………………………………………………… iii
PART I: INTRODUCTION ………………………………………………………………….. 1
1.1 Rationale of the study
………………………………………………………………………… 1
1.2 Aims of the study …………………………………………………………………………….. 2
1.3 Research questions …………………………………………………………………………… 2
1.4 Scope of the study ……………………………………………………………………………. 2
1.5 Methods of the study ………………………………………………………………………… 3
1.6 The organization of the study …………………………………………………………….. 3
PART II: DEVELOPMENT………………………………………………………………….. 4
Chapter I: Literature review ……………………………………………………………………. 4
1.1 Listening skill: An overview ……………………………………………………………. 4
1.1.1 Definition of listening…………………………………………………………………….. 4
1.1.2 Nature of listening comprehension ……………………………………………………. 6
1.1.3 Significance of listening ………………………………………………………………….. 6
1.1.4 Types of listening ………………………………………………………………………….. 9
1.2 Difficulties in learning the listening skill …………………………………………… 9
1.2.1 What problems do students have with listening ?
……………………………….10
1.2.1.1 The class atmosphere
………………………………………………………………….. 10
1.2.1.2 Studens have problems with different accents
……………………………….. 11
1.2.1.3 Quality of Recorded Material. ……………………………………………………… 11
Chapter II: The Study ……………………………………………………………………………. 13
2.1 Participants ……………………………………………………………………………………13
2.1.1 The students
………………………………………………………………………………… 13
2.1.2 Teachers …………………………………………………………………………………….. 13
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2.2 The survey questionnaires ………………………………………………………………14
2.2.1 The interview.
………………………………………………………………………………. 14
2.2.2 Design of the survey questionnaires ……………………………………………….. 14
2.3 Data and analysis
……………………………………………………………………………14
2.3.1 Students’ attitude toward learning English in general and listening skill in
particular (Q1) ……………………………………………………………………………………… 15
2.3.2 The students’ assessment of learning the listening skill (Q2)………………. 17
2.3.3 Students’ opinions toward the role of listening skill (Q3) ………………….. 20
2.3.4 Studying on practicing listening skill of students (Q4)
………………………. 21
2.3.5 Difficulties students encounter when listening in class (Q5) ……………….. 22
2.3.5.1 The factors have influence in English listening skill (Q6)
………………… 24
2.3.6 Ways to Improve Listening Skills for students English Majors (Q7) ……. 25
2.3.7 The kinds of listening text which students expect to practice more (Q8) . 26
2.3.8 The activities students should do before and while listening class (Q9)
.. 27
2.4 Findings and discussion of findings
…………………………………………………29
2.4.1 Opinions of students about English listening skill.
…………………………….. 29
2.4.2. Current situation in teaching and learning English listening skill………… 29
2.4.3. Suggestions for improving English listening skill. ……………………………. 30
2.5 Recommendations techniques and tips to learn English listening
effectively …………………………………………………………………………………………….31
PART III: CONCLUSION .……………..….………………………………..33
1.1. Conclusion
…………………………………………………………………………………….33
1.1.1 Summary of the study
……………………………………………………………………. 33
1.1.2 Limitation of the study ………………………………………………………………….. 33
1.1.3 Suggestions for the further study …………………………………………………….. 34
1.2 Appendices ……………………………………………………………………………………..35
1.3 References ………………………………………………………………………………………38
1

PART I: INTRODUCTION

1.1 Rationale of the study
Nowadays, listening plays a vital role in daily lives. People listen for
different purposes such as entertainment, academic purposes or obtaining
necessary information. Of the four language skills-Listening, Speaking,
Reading, and Writing-that all language learners are supposed to acquire,
Listening is believed to be the most challenging due to the complex and subtle
nature of listening comprehension in a second or foreign language. As a
researcher, I would like to present “How to Improve Listening Skills for Second
Year English Majors at HPU ” for several reasons. First of all, listening is the
most important skill in communication in the real life. Moreover, in learning a
language, listening is a useful means of providing students with comprehensible
input, which is an essential component of the whole language learning proces.
Therefore, I would like to do this research to help students pay more attention to
listening skill. Secondly, learning listening skill is the most difficult in learning a
foreign language. Listening, like reading, is a receptive skill but it is often the
most daunting for students. When reading, a reader usually has more
opportunities to refer back to the text to clarify understanding, which a listener
can not do in most listening contexts such as TV programs, meetings,
discussion, lectures or conversations. That is the reason I would like to out
some suggestion so as to help teachers motivate their students to study listening
skill more excited and better. After studying at the Faculty of Foreign
Languages, Hai Phong Private University (HPU), for nearly four years, I realize
that the second-year students of English major still have many difficulties in
their listening skill. In the hope of finding out the solutions learning listening , a
study : “How to Improve Listening Skills for Second Year English Majors at
HPU” has been conducted because of all above mentioned reason.
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1.2 Aims of the study
The study is done with the following aims:
Firstly, the study is carried out in order to survey the real state of learning
English listening skill in HPU so that I could work out the solutions.
Secondly, most students find it difficult to learn listening skill so I would like to
find the common difficulties that the students face when they English listening
skill at HPU.
Finally, because of the difficulties, many students are not interested in learning
and practicing this skill in class, therefore the study would like to suggest some
possible solutions to improves listening skill. These solutions also aim to help
the students catch up with the speed of a normal conversation in the real life so
that they can improve their communication competence.

1.3 Research questions
1. What are the real situations of learning English listening skill for the second-
year students in Faculty of Foreign Languages at HPU?
2. What are the difficulties of listening to English at HPU?
3. What are solutions to improve listening skills for the second-year students in
Faculty of Foreign Languages at HPU ?

1.4 Scope of the study

The study is about learning listening skill for second-year students in
Foreign Languages faculty at HPU. Because of the limitations of time and
knowledge, the shortage of reference materials, this study can not cover the
whole issue of listening skill. It only focus on solutions help students improves
listening skill. Moreover, the study could not touch upon all the students at
HPU. It is confined to the second-year students in English faculty at HPU only.

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1.5 Methods of the study

The study will be conducted using quantitative and qualitative methods.
The study includes survey questionnaires for both teachers and students,
interview questions for students only of K21 at the HPU. After getting the
results, the researcher will use the tables and charts for presenting the collected
data.

1.6 The organization of the study
The study includes 3 Parts mainly organize as follows:
Part I: Introduction
Part II: Development
Chapter 1: Literature Review
Theoretical background related to English listening skill
What problems do students have with listening
Solutions in English listening skill
Strategies of English listening skill
Chapter 2: The study
Discussion about the result of study
Suggestion improves listening skill
Part III: Conclusion
Summaries of the study
The limitations of the study
Suggestions for further studies

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PART II: DEVELOPMENT
Chapter I: Literature review

1.1 Listening skill: An overview
Beginning in the early 70’s, work by Asher, Dostoevsky, Winitz, and,
later, Krashen, brought attention to the role of listening as a tool for
understanding and emphasized it as a key factor in facilitating language
learning. Thus, listening has emerged as an important component in the process
of second language acquisition. (Feyten, 1991). Listening is the skill that
students will be judged most, in real life situation. It is important part of
everyday interaction. According to Howatt and Dakin (1974) listening in the
ability to identify and understand what other are saying. This process involves
understand a speaker’s grammar an vocabulary, and comprehension of meaning.

1.1.1 Definition of listening
Listening is considered as one of the most important skills in acquiring
both a native language and a second or foreign language. It is being paid more
and more attention to. So far, there have been a number of definitions of
listening by different linguists such as Howatt and Dakin (1974); Wolvin and
Coakley (1982); Pearson (1983); Hirsch (1986); Scarcella and Oxford (1992);
Bentley and Bacon (1996), Brown (2001), Gary Buck (2001), Scott Shelton
(2008).
Howatt and Dakin (1974) defined listening as the ability to identify and
understand what others are saying. This involves understanding a speaker’s
accent or pronunciation, his grammar and his vocabulary, and grasping his
meaning.
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Wolvin and Coakley (1982) regarded listening: “the process of receiving,
attending to and assigning meaning to aural stimuli”.
Pearson (1983) stated “Listening involves the simultaneous organization
and combination of skills in Phonology, Syntax, Semantics, and knowledge of
the text structure, all of which seem to be controlled by the cognitive process.
Thus it can be said that though not fully realized, the listening skill is essential
in acquiring language proficiency”.
Hirsch (1986) gave another definition: “Listening as an aspect of skills:
involves neurological response and interpretations of sounds to understand and
to give meaning by reacting, selecting meaning, remembering, attending,
analyzing and including previous experience”.
Bentley and Bacon (1996) stated that listening, an important part of the
second language learning process has also been defined as an active process
during which the listener constructs meaning from oral input.
According to Brown (2001), listening is “not merely the process of
unidirectional receiving of audible symbols”. He supposed that one aspect of
listening comprehension which is “the psychomotor process of receiving sound
waves through the ear and transmitting nerve impulses to the brain”. Hence,
listening comprises of three elements: the sender, the message and the listener.
Scott Shelton (2008) thinks that listening effectively is a demanding and
involving process. One must be able to deal with different accents or
pronunciation, unfamiliar lexical items and syntactic structures, competing
background noise, and also make a conscious effort to not switch off or become
distracted while listening. All of this must be achieved and dealt with more or
less simultaneously in order to identify and understand the meaning in any
given message.
To sum up, all of definitions are given with a view to clarifying the nature
of the listening skill which is necessary in the process of acquiring a native
language or a foreign one.
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1.1.2 Nature of listening comprehension
Since listening is, according to Wang Shouyuan (2003), the most
important component in the five aspects of overall English competence he
suggests as listening, speaking, reading, writing and translation, it deserves
particular attention. Educators must actively explore the nature and process of
listening comprehension and study the theory and methodology of listening
comprehension in order to improve listening teaching outcomes and make
students recognize that listening comprehension is the crucial aspect of English
learning.
From the point of view of constructivist linguistics, foreign language
teaching should focus on language form and structure, thus, listening teaching is
undertaken in each of the four aspects of language form. When students are
taught to understand a passage of text, teachers first let them discriminate
between the pronunciation of vowels and consonants, then understand sentence
vocabulary, sentences and discourses. The goals of this listening teaching model
from the “bottom-up” is to help students understand the meaning of vocabulary
by discriminating sounds, to understand sentence meaning, and to monitor and
control the meaning of discourses by understanding sentence meaning.
Since the 1970s, with the development of functional language theory,
there has been an emphasis on the research of language function in society.
Functional linguistic experts recognize language as a communicative tool, but
not an isolates structure system. Consequently the learning of listening is not
simply intended to make students hear a sound, a word or a sentence, rather, the
goal is to cultivate students‟ abilities to understand speakers‟ intentions
accurately and communicate with each other effectively.

1.1.3 Significance of listening
We just find out definitions of authors about listening and part know more
what listening is. And entering to this part, we can know how meaningful is
listening to our daily communicate and language learning?
Language learning depends on listening since it provides the aural input
that serves as the basic for language acquisition and enables learners to interact
in spoken communication.
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Listening is the first language mode that children acquire. It provides the
foundation for all aspects of language and cognitive development, and it plays a
life-long role in the process of communication. A study by Wilt (1950), found
that people listen 45% of the time they spend communicating. This study is still
widely cites (e.g., Martin, 1987; Strother, 1987).Wilt found that 30% of
communication time was spent speaking, 16% reading, and 9% writing. That
finding confirmed what Rankin discovered in 1928, that people spent70% of
their walking time communicating and that three-fourths of this time was spent
listening and speaking.
According to Bulletin (1952), listening is the fundamental language skill.
It is the medium through which people gain a large portion of their education,
their information, their understanding of the world and of human affairs, their
ideals, sense of values, and their appreciation. In this day of mass
communication, much of it oral, it is of vital importance that students are taught
to listen effectively and critically.
Basing on second language acquisition theory, language input is the most
essential condition of language acquisition. As an input skill, listening plays a
crucial role in student‟s language development. Krashen (1985) argues that
people acquire language by understanding the linguistic information they hear.
Thus language acquisition is achieved mainly through receiving understandable
input and listening ability is the critical component in achieving understandable
language input .Given the importance of listening in language learning and
teaching, it is essential for language teachers to help students become effective
listeners. In the communicative approach to language teaching and learning, this
means modeling strategies and providing listening practice in authentic
situations: precisely those that learners are likely to encounter when they use the
language outside the classroom. Therefore, we should establish “listening-first”
as fundamental in foreign language teaching and learning.

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* The importance of listening skill
Listening is one of the necessary life skills which are defined as “skills
which can provide you with a better perspective on life, skills which can allow
you to maintain a higher awareness of both yourself and the world around you”.
It is one of the most vital ways that human beings feel the life and live.
Everyone, in the real life, often listens more than speaks, reads or writes. We
listen everywhere and every time. We listen to everything and everybody. For
instance, at home, we listen to the news, watch films or talk with others. At
school, students listen to the lecturers teaching. At a meeting, the staff listens to
the new plan from the director, etc. It is obvious that listening is really
important in the real life.
As it is mentioned in the differences between hearing and listening,
hearing is a part of five senses (hearing, smelling, tasting, touching and looking)
but listening is a choice to hear and understand it. As an integrative skill,
listening plays an important role in the process of language learning or
acquisition and facilitating the emergence of other language skill. According to
Nord (1980, p.17), listening is the way of learning the language. “It gives the
learner information from which to build up the knowledge necessary for using
the language”. When this knowledge is built up, the learner can begin to speak.
Failing to understand spoken language, people may miss important information
presented to them or respond in a funny way. So training in listening is really
necessary. It helps students make the transition from classroom English to the
real-life English more easily and effectively.

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1.1.4 Types of listening
According to some authors, namely Nguyen Thi Van Lam and Ngo Dinh
Phuong (2006), there are two ways of listening in the real life. They are casual
listening and focused listening depending on the purpose of listening.
One type of listening, casual listening, means listening without a
particular purpose. When we listen, we do not pay much or even any attention
to the information unless there is something that interests us. Therefore, we
hardly remember the content of what we hear. Normally, we do this kind of
listening when we listen to music, or listen to news on the radio or TV while
doing some housework or chatting to a friend.
Another type of listening is focused listening. That is when we listen for
a particular purpose to find out information we need to know. It happens quite
popularly in the real life. In here, we listen with much more concentration and
try to get as much information as possible. However, we do not listen to every
word. We know beforehand what we are going to listen so we only catch the
most important information from the speech or the lecture. In classroom,
learners also use this type of listening.

1.2 Difficulties in learning the listening skill
Another point of view has been expanded by Willis (1981, p.134) who
lists a series of skills for listening dealing with problems, which she calls
‘enabling skills’. To quote a few are:

 Predict what people are going to talk about.

 Guessing at unknown words or phrases without panicking.

 Using one’s own knowledge of the subject to help one understand.

 Understanding inferred information.
My personal classroom experiences and those of many writers that I have read
on the subject seem to suggest that difficulty in listening come from four
sources: i) the message to be listened to, ii) the speaker, iii) the listener, and iv).
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Most students find it difficult to listen to a message than to read the same
message written in their text book, or elsewhere. Since they can not control the
speed of listening, it becomes a problem, whereas, they can take their time with
reading, stopping and going back over the message at will. They can even
consult a dictionary if they so choose. Giving dictations or having the students
dictate to each other, I find there are some specific areas of vocabulary that give
special problems. Students have problem hearing the past tense of regular verbs
ending in voiceless sounds such as, ‘work, wish, or watch’. The final /t/ sound
of ‘ed’ sound is usually omitted when taking dictation so that the sentence, “I
worked hard yesterday.” Comes out as “I work hard yesterday.” The students
fail to hear the final voiceless ‘t’. Another problem is liaison (the linking of
words in rapid speech). “What are you going to do tonight”? sounds like,
/Whadiyagunnadotanight?/ For the untrained ear liaison presents an awesome
problem.
Up to this point, I have dealt with problems students have with listening.
It is now time to turn to suggesting techniques for helping them develop more
effective listening skills. Foreign–language students usually devote more time to
reading than to listening, and so lack exposure to different kinds of listening. It
is tiring for students to spend much of their listening time on interpreting
unfamiliar words and sentences for long periods of time.

1.2.1 What problems do students have with listening ?
1.2.1.1 The class atmosphere
Sometimes inconvenience of classrooms affects students listening
comprehension. In the large classrooms students who are sitting on the back
rows may not hear the recording as students sit in front. Students who prefer to
stay next to the windows also effected by the noise that come from outside. As a
teacher we have to take into account all this conditions in a body. The size of the
classroom also makes difficult for teacher to manage the all class in group
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activity or to get feedback from students. The temperature of class can be
counted as a factor that makes listening comprehension difficult. The class that
does not have air conditioner or heater may be too hot in summer or too cold in
winter.

1.2.1.2 Studens have problems with different accents
Munro and Derwing (1999) expressed that too many accented speech can
lead to an important reduction in comprehension. According to Goh (1999),
66% of learners mentioned a speaker’s accent as one of the most significant
factors that affect listener comprehension. Unfamiliar accents both native and
non-native can cause serious problems in listening comprehension and
familiarity with an accent helps learners’ listening comprehension. Buck (2001)
indicated that when listeners hear an unfamiliar accent such as Indian English
for the first time after studying only American English will encounter critical
difficulties in listening. This will certainly interrupt the whole listening
comprehension process and at the same time an unfamiliar accent makes
comprehension process and at the same time an unfamiliar accent makes
comprehension impossible for the listeners.

1.2.1.3 Quality of Recorded Material.
In some classes, teachers use some recorded materials that do not have
high quality. The quality of sound system can impact the comprehending of
learners’ listening
 Chapter I has show the introduction of the study. In the next
chapter, I will present the focus of the study containing literature review on the
understanding of listening skill and the survey questionnaires for the second-
year student situation of learning English major at HPU which help examine the
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real situation of learning English listening skill. Besides, chapter II also
introduces some ways can be applied to improve student’s listening skill.
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Chapter II: The Study

This chapter, the researcher will give the full analysis of data collected
through the survey questionnaires for students second year english majors at
HPU , interview students on the factors affecting English listening skill and
solutions for the second-year students. It shows an attempt to answer the eight
survey questions posed at the beginning of the study.

2.1 Participants
2.1.1 The students
The research was undertaken with the participation of 43 second-year
students in Faculty of Foreign Languages. They age from 20 to 22. The subjects
of the study were 43 second-year students K21 when they were in the second
semester of their academic year 2018- 2019 at HPU. A large numbers of them
have learnt English for 7 years ( 4 years at secondary school and 3 years at high
school). However, their English backgrounds are quite similar because most of
them come from different rural areas in the North and under being influence of
curriculum of English for high schools students in the past, students did not have
many chances to practice English skills. Thus, when entering HPU, their English
levels were limited and they have to face up with many difficulties in studying.

2.1.2 Teachers
The Faculty of Foreign Languages consists of 20 teachers. Their ages are
from 30 to 44. Majority of them graduated from the faculty of foreign languages
of Hanoi National University or Hanoi University.

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2.2 The survey questionnaires
2.2.1 The interview.
An interview is carried out with three students in two classes of K21 in
Faculty of Foreign Languages at Hai Phong Private University . All of them
agree to help the researcher helpfully and comfortably. This aims to collect
students’ ideas about the factors affecting the English listening skill and
suggestions to improve it. After the interview, the researcher based on the
interview results to analyze the data. The interview results will be recorded
carefully. The interview data analysis will be presented with the collected data
from the questionnaire in each part.

2.2.2 Design of the survey questionnaires
The survey questionnaires consist of 9 questions for 43 second year
students in order to study the reality of learning listening skill in class and out
class in English major at HPU. Students were asked to tick the most suitable
answers which correspond with their option. The questionnaires are designed as
below:
Question 1, 2 and 3: studying on students attitude toward learning English
in general and listening skill in particular.
Question 4: studying on practicing listening skill of students.
Question 5, 6: difficulties students encounter when listening English.
Question 7, 8, 9: students’s expectation to improve their listening skill.

2.3 Data and analysis
Data collection procedures.
The data collection in the study is derived from students who are in the

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