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As
teachers, we'd love our students to listen to authentic
native speaker intonation, rhythm and accent, but
we face the constant challenge of listening abilities
varying so widely in a single class. Is it better
to speak naturally and risk reinforcing the low self-esteem
of the less able, or enunciate so clearly that those
vital listening skills just don't improve?
VOICEbooks
level the playing field by providing listening exercises
that enable each student (individually or in pairs)
to work at their own pace, training their ears to
create links between sounds and written words, slowing
down or speeding up the sound they are listening to
and writing what they think they hear.
VOICEbooks
are an audio library of hundreds of hours of original
TV and radio recordings, and of celebrities including
Julia Roberts, Eminem, Michael Caine and David Beckham.
The audio files are played through the VOICEbooks
interface which provides various layers of help. (You
can slow down the recordings, look words up in a dictionary,
get hints and so on.) Learners listen to the extracts
as often as they like and simply have to write down
what the speakers are saying.
VOICEbooks
are based on success rather than on failure, as any
correct input from the listener (even just part of
a word!) is rewarded. Students at all levels find
it highly motivating to listen to real speech from
real people. Choose an i+1 level (i.e. just too difficult
for them to understand), sit back and watch their
listening skills improve.
| Titles: |
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| 1. |
Lifestyle |
7. |
Intermediate
2 |
| 2. |
News and
Politics |
8. |
Advanced
1 |
| 3. |
Sport and
Leisure |
9. |
Advanced
2 |
| 4. |
Elementary
1 |
10. |
Business
1 |
| 5. |
Elementary
2 |
11. |
Business
2 |
| 6. |
Intermediate
1 |
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