The
Internet TESL Journal
Using CNN News Video in the EFL Classroom
Alan S. Mackenzie
mailto:asm@typhoon.co.jp?subject=ITESLJ
Article
Simul Academy of International Communication Tokyo
CNN at low levels? It can't be done. It is too difficult. The
reporters speak too fast, the content is too complex and the vocabulary is too
difficult. This is true for some TV news reports, but certainly not all of them.
With careful selection and some very simple techniques news reports can become
accessible to even the lowest levels. At Simul Academy in Japan, we successfully
use news reports at all levels from pre-interpreting to the falsest of false
beginners and we have found that generally it is not the report that matters so
much as the way that we use it. In this paper I present some ideas that anyone
can use at any level to stimulate interest, guide students to understanding,
encouraging them to try to listen to news programs in English and foster a more
global view of the world.
Programs
Why CNN? Well it is the most influential news source on the
face of the planet. The enormous impact of CNN on news media in recent years
cannot be underestimated. It has global recognition as a quality information
source, used by presidents and government ministers world wide. CNN programming
contains a huge variety of material on any topic and of any length that you
could ever wish to deal with in a classroom. Perhaps best of all, CNN provides
transcripts for most of its shows at
http://www.CNN.com/TRANSCRIPTS/index.html
Below I have listed some of the programs I find most useful with a general
description of the program content. More information can be found at the CNN
website:
http://www.cnn.com/
Program Content
Travel Watch
Profiles of different countries, places of interest and
general travel information. Pacing is slow and clear and the vocabulary level is
relatively low.
Future Watch
Deals with a huge variety of topics, all concerned with the
future of society in different parts of the world.
Business Asia
Focuses on Asian issues and the business community in
general. Gives good explanations of complex business situations.
CNN Headline News
Short, up to date reports on what is happening around
the world. Also has longer reports on breaking news and events as they happen.
Larry King
Interviews with a variety of people from Magic Johnson to
Hillary Clinton and Tom Cruise.
Entertainment Today
News and information on everything in the
entertainment field: movies, music, stars and gossip.
Earth Watch
Covers all things environmental. Often has longer reports
that can split into smaller sections. Topics include commercials, exercise
machines, hotels, restaurants and cleaning products. Fun for short listening
exercises.
Infomercials
Short pieces about how CNN works, the UN and its work and
mini-films about other organizations. Great for background information and short
listenings.
CNN Presents
Hour long programs with in-depth reports on the same theme.
Reports are generally ten to fifteen minutes long but can often be edited. These
programs would be useful to a theme-based or content-based course, or for more
extensive listening.
Crossfire
Fiery discussion program with highly opinionated
representatives from the right and the left. This program is useful for showing
students what a lively discussion is. They do not have to understand what is
being said, just watch the dynamic way in which the participants speak to each
other. Great for presenting pragmatics, interruption techniques, clarification
and other discussion skills.
Report Content
The content of the programs you use in class is important
and should depend primarily on your students interests and background knowledge.
The content of reports can be either a turn-on or a turn-off for the class. If
it is too far outside their experience, students may switch off. Students often
tell me they can't understand reports because they do not know anything about
the content. They feel more comfortable listening to content that is familiar
and that they can make predictions about. In linguistic terms, they need to have
schemata available to help them comprehend the information presented. Because of
this, it is worthwhile asking students about their interests, or giving them a
choice of which reports they would like to work with since this is a way of
having them predict report content and activate schemata before they watch, as
well as giving them some responsibility over course content (Cook, 1989).
Negotiating the content of the class in this way will ensure that interest is
piqued by the time you actually present the class with the report and will
ensure that the content of your class is more relevant to the learners (Nunan
1988). Given the choice, students are more likely to choose something that they
find very interesting, or already know something about rather than something
that is completely alien.
When one of my low-intermediate class were choosing a video recently, they
started to ask each other questions about what the videos could be about and
what content they might have. They were immediately engaged in the topic, they
were predicting the content of the video and were visibly excited by being given
the opportunity to choose their own listening material. When I played the video,
I noticed that they were concentrating very hard on the content. Despite the
difficulty of the report, the students engaged in prediction of content, gist
listening, listening for specific information and concluded the lesson with a
lively discussion on the topic at the focus of the report. I think that had I
not given them the choice, their involvement in the lesson may have been less
intense.
Report Length
Using reports longer than 3-4 minutes is inadvisable with
lower level students. In fact longer reports are also frustrating for higher
level students. The problem seems to be that students concentrate a great deal
on news reports because of the information density and speed. This seems to take
a great deal of mental energy and they can't seem to keep this up for more than
a few minutes. Students do become frustrated when they can't understand all the
main ideas but there are several ways to deal with this.
Use Short Reports
Shorter does not automatically mean easier but using
shorter reports can help concentrate attention. CNN produces many reports that
are less than two minutes long. A lot of these reports are snippets of news
stories that are developing at the present time. Collected together, they can
make an interesting series of similar reports with minor differences. Students
can then be asked to spot the difference between the reports. Other short
reports contain entertaining stories that are often a little more quirky than
longer reports. These may be useful for younger learners, or as light relief
from an overly serious class.
Another kind of short report used is the CNN Headline-style group of very
short (one or two sentence) summaries of current international situations. Earth
Matters has a similar group of short reports called The Reel. These are useful
for gist viewing. The task of identifying the general news stories on one
playing and then identifying specifically what new developments are being
reported in a second and third playing can be a very satisfying experience in
itself and need only take fifteen or twenty minutes of class time.
Commercials can be used in a number of ways. I have found that playing them
without the picture (remove the yellow cord at the rear of the TV set) two or
three times and having students listen for what the product is, and then playing
it again with the picture for students to confirm their answers works well.
One of the main problems I have encountered with short reports is the lack of
context. They are often so short that students do not have enough information,
alternative vocabulary or visual information with which to comprehend the
report. Another problem is that the content of the reports can be vacuous. There
may be little in the report that can be used for follow-up activities, or little
useful information. This lack of practicality or connection to the rest of the
lesson can leave students with the feeling that they have done something
purposeless.
Break The Video Up Into Shorter Sections
Video news reports are highly
organized. There is a set, definable introduction that tells you the gist of
what you are going to watch. There is often an explanation of the history of a
problem, or a description of a problem and its causes. This can be followed by a
series of opinions on the subject and/or a description of a possible solution or
alternative solutions. Reports always have some closing remarks that explain the
outlook for the future or the attitude of the reporter. Identifying these
sections before you use a report in class and using only one section at a time
enables you present students with manageable chunks of listening material (Ur,
1984). This is particularly useful when you have a longer 7-15 minute report.
One way of identifying sections is to look for discourse markers (Cook, 1989).
Often groups of discourse markers occur together: time expressions when talking
about the history of a problem, cause and effect markers when describing a
problem and opinion markers when experts, or people in the street are
interviewed. Drawing students attention to these sections and markers can help
them follow the flow of the report.
Only Use Part Of A Report
News reports are patched together from many
different pieces of tape and are made to be easily edited. CNN often uses
different versions of the same report to fill up different time slots in their
programming schedule or to fit the purposes of different programs. In the class
we can do the same. You can use only the historical profile of a problem, only
the opinions given, or only the introduction to the report.
Set A Task Before Students Watch The Video
Asking questions after
watching the video is more like a memory test than a way of helping students
understand the content of the report. Setting the task before they watch enables
students to focus on particular words or ideas expressed. It is almost like a
treasure hunt: the students have to search for the answers while they are
listening (Ur, 1984).
Teach Note-Taking Strategies
Note-taking is a very useful skill for
students to acquire if they are going to do any kind of extensive listening. It
is essentially an aid to memory that helps students to remember what they have
listened to by keeping track of what words or ideas they have heard and noticed.
Having information in an accessible visual form using key words, abbreviations
and symbols organized in a meaningful way gives students added support when
dealing with material that they find difficult to hear.
Furthermore, if they become accomplished note-takers students may find that
they can write down representations of words that they have heard but do not
know the meaning of. This can be useful in self-study since they can then try to
access a dictionary or use the information given around the word to help them
understand its meaning.
Techniques and Activities
Ur (1984), Rost (1991) and Cooper and
Rinvolucri (1991) all provide a huge number of ideas for using audio and video
recordings. I will describe some that I have used in class that I think may be
useful to teachers starting out with television news in the classroom.
Vocabulary And Schemata Generation
Before watching news videos it is
useful to generate a list of vocabulary, concepts, people, places and events
that are relevant to the report. If these are made salient before listening,
students have more of a chance of understanding what the report is about.
Brainstorming schemata is one way to do this. Introduce the general topic of
the report and have students generate all the vocabulary and other information
they know about the topic. Writing this information on the board helps share all
the information students generate and creates a pool of resources that can
support them when they come to listen to the report.
Playing the video without sound (remove the red and white cords from the rear
of the TV set or turn the volume down to zero) can also generate a lot of
vocabulary. Teachers can aid the process of vocabulary generation by asking
questions as students watch the pictures: Who is that? What are they doing? What
is this? What is happening here? Where is this? Why are they doing that?
Alternatively have students in pairs sit back to back: one watching the screen,
the other facing the back of the class. Have the watchers describe what is on
the screen to their partner. Play the video once or twice asking students to
improve on their description of the video each time. Pausing at important parts
or playing the video in slow motion can help by giving students more time to
think about vocabulary items and what they are going to say.
After a list of words and phrases has been generated have students listen to
the report and simply check off which words they actually hear. A further
listening could concentrate on which other words they hear. This can be an
introduction to note-taking skills.
When students are more familiar with news material, the introduction to the
report can be used to generate predictions about what the body of the report
contains. All news reports have an introduction. It can vary a lot in length,
but it usually tells either exactly what is in the report, or presents a teaser.
Both of these are useful for teaching purposes in that they can help students to
predict what the content of the report might be, activating schemata useful to
comprehending the report. Schemata unconnected to the report content may also be
generated. This presents an opportunity for another listening exercise: check
which of the items you have mentioned appear in the report. In effect students
generate their own true or false exercise.
Introductions are usually only two or three sentences long and generally use
vocabulary relevant to the report making them ideal for dictation or dictogloss
exercises. Dictogloss is a very simple text reconstruction technique where a
sentence is played once and students are asked to reconstruct it as close to the
original as possible. Working from pairs, then combining pairs into groups and
so on until the whole class is working on the reconstruction (Davis &
Rinvolucri, 1984). I have adapted this to deal with longer introductions by
playing the tape twice and having students discuss what they heard in between
playings. Introducing this kind of exercise helps to strike a balance between
top-down and bottom-up approaches to listening.
Gist Listening
With classes more used to news video, simply ask a
question like, What is the topic of this report?, What event is the focus of
this report?, Who is at the center of this report and why? This is a much more
hands-off approach but can generate a lot of discussion after just one viewing,
especially if students are aware of the importance of using the visual
information to help them understand the content. This should enable students to
get general idea of what the report is about before moving on to more specific
listening tasks.
Listening For Detail
Once students have done any of the above, they
should have a good idea of what the report is about and should be ready to move
on to some more focused listening.
Numbers
In reports that have a lot of numbers, have students divide
their page in two lengthwise, put the heading numbers on one side and refers to
on the other. Have students first listen for only the numbers, on a second
playing have them listen for what they refer to. For lower classes or faster
reports, stop the tape after the relevant part of the report and replay it if
necessary. If there is disagreement about which numbers appear in the report,
treat it as a discrimination exercise. Put the possible numbers on the board and
have students listen for which one is actually said.
Time Expressions
In chronologically ordered reports or sections of
reports that deal with the history of a situation, have students divide their
page in two and take notes on time expressions and event. Follow the same
procedure as for numbers above.
Opinions: Positive or Negative?
In reports that include opinions on the
topic of focus, have students indicate whether each opinion is positive or
negative. Subsequent listenings can deal with more detailed analysis if
necessary.
References
Some reports use a lot of references. If you have time, you
can isolate the parts of the report that contain them and make up a worksheet
exercise asking students to identify what they refer to. Again you can stop the
tape and replay sections or play the tape straight through depending on how much
support your students need.
Vocabulary
I am amazed at how often students say, I heard X. What does
it mean? A simple exercise is to play the tape and have students find words they
do not know. Students can guess how to spell these words using only the sound
and then can either use dictionaries to try to find out the meanings of the
words, try to work out what they mean from the context of the report, or ask the
teacher what they mean.
Connections Between Ideas
Isolating key terms from the report and asking
students to make connections between them is a useful way of having students
focus on the structural expressions between content words. Alternatively,
provide the linking words and have students fill in the key vocabulary form the
report.
Have Students Generate Their Own Questions
What do the students want to
know? What did they have difficulty hearing? Ask them. Students can generate a
list of up to ten questions that may or may not be answered in the report. On a
first listening for this exercise, have students say whether each question was
answered or not. On the second have them search for answers to the questions,
and check answers that they have already. These questions might be open or
closed, content based or language based. Students might also be encouraged to
ask more detailed questions like What did the woman who was interviewed say?
This exercise can keep going with students generating ideas until they have
extracted all the meaning they needfrom the report.
Follow-Up Activities
With news material, it is important to have some
kind of follow-up to listening. Presenting the material as is without some kind
of examination of the issues presented does not give students a chance to think
about the issues for themselves. Furthermore, every news station has an
editorial policy and individual reporters have beliefs that come through in
their reports. Because of this, issues such as bias and tone of the report can
and should be discussed as a follow-up where possible.
Is the report pessimistic or optimistic? Uplifting or depressing? How did the
reporters speak? Were they sarcastic, serious, belittling, genuine or reverent?
In a report with two sides, how much time was given to each side? What kind of
images were used in the report? What message did they give? What kind of
language was used in the report? Was it strong or moderate? Was music used in
the report? What effect did it have?
Summarizing or Retelling The Report
Having students retell or summarize
the report is a useful way of checking comprehension and closing the lesson with
a holistic activity that brings together all the information they have heard and
all the exercises completed. Alternatively, use the video with picture only, and
have the students add a sound track to it. To encourage attention to detail you
can play this in slow motion or to encourage speed of delivery, play at normal
speed. Giving students control of the speed is another option but often
difficult to accomplish.
Reacting To The Report
Students written or spoken reactions to the
report should tell you if they comprehended what they were listening to. More
controversial reports can generate a lot of discussion and may even lay the
foundation for longer term projects. Providing a list of discussion questions,
or asking students to ask each other questions about the issues presented in the
report can encourage students to use and expand on what they have just listened
to.
Debates using the controversy in a report to have students can help students
examine the issues in more detail. Divide the class into the different parties
represented in the report and have them represent those views as a role-play or
formal debate. You may wish to have students research the issues behind the
report more before debating the issues.
Conclusion
CNN reports and programming from other TV news broadcasters
can be used in the EFL classroom with a little thought on the part of the
teacher as to how to support students and how to make the material accessible to
them. It is easy to find, manageable, timely and interesting. Because news is
constantly changing and goes out of date quite quickly, it is more useful for
teachers to learn techniques and activities to use with a wide variety of
reports rather than making labor intensive worksheets which may be unusable next
time around. Teaching students how to deal with the barrage of information
presented in news reports through schemata activation, prediction, confirmation,
note-taking and a combination of top-down and bottom-up exercises can help to
increase students confidence in their ability to understand TV news and may even
stimulate them to access this huge resource by themselves.
A Note On Copyright
Different countries have different laws. Some are
stricter than others so you should check on the details in your own country
before using any recorded material such as movies, news media, songs, or other
audio recordings. In Japan, the general rule appears to be that you can use
copyrighted material, as long as by doing so you are not taking money away from
the original producers. The law is vague and can be interpreted in a number of
ways. To be sure that you are not infringing copyright laws, you should consult
a lawyer. (Simons 1995)
References
- Cook. G. (1989). Discourse. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Cooper, R., Lavery, M. & Rinvolucri, M. (1991). Video. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
- Davis, P. & Rinvolucri M. (1988). Dictation: New methods, new
possibilities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Nunan D. (1988). The learner centered curriculum. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
- Rost, M. (1991). Listening in action. Hemel Hempstead Prentice Hall
International.
- Simons, J.D. (1995). _Copyright law and video in the classroom._ In C.
Casanave & J. D. Simons (Eds.), Pedagogical Perspectives on using films in
foreign language classes (pp. 78-90). Keio University, SFC, Institution of
Languages and Communication.
- Ur, P. (1984). Teaching listening comprehension. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
The Internet TESL Journal, Vol. III, No. 2, February
1997
http://www.aitech.ac.jp/~iteslj/