A Review of the Theoretical Development and Practical Application of Listening Teaching Models
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.61173/sr53ar23Keywords:
multimodal theory, listening teaching model, English listening teachingAbstract
Enhancing the listening comprehension skills of second language learners represents one of the most pressing and persistent educational challenges within the field of second language acquisition today. As a fundamental core component of successful linguistic communication, the effectiveness with which listening skills are acquired directly impacts learners' overall language proficiency and communicative competence. To systematically address this significant challenge, researchers have actively developed and implemented diverse listening instructional models over time. This comprehensive paper critically reviews three particularly representative mainstream pedagogical approaches: traditional listening instruction, task-based listening instruction, and contemporary multimodal listening instruction. Through an in-depth analysis and comparison of each model's theoretical underpinnings, distinct operational characteristics, inherent strengths, and notable limitations, this study specifically seeks to identify their relative applicability across varied learner profiles (e.g., age, proficiency levels), diverse instructional objectives (e.g., phoneme discrimination, detail extraction, gist comprehension), and contrasting teaching environments (e.g., classroom time constraints, technological resource availability). The ultimate research goal is to provide educators with clearer theoretical frameworks and actionable, practical guidance for pedagogical implementation, thereby enabling more effective improvement of students' L2 listening comprehension performance and overall proficiency development.