Chapter 5. Listening comprehension in translation and interpreting programs
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Enrique Cerezo Herrero
Abstract
This chapter seeks to show the specificity and uniqueness of listening comprehension in interpreter training. Although foreign language courses are aimed at enhancing students’ linguistic competence so that translation and interpreting tasks can be subsequently tackled, these courses often adhere to general foreign language principles, disregarding the specific linguistic needs of these students. In this chapter, listening comprehension is addressed with a view to elucidating the cognitive demands and nature of this linguistic skill for interpreting. A proposal of sample activities to enhance listening comprehension will also be presented to help language lecturers understand the essence of this skill and how it can best be approached when the goal is to train prospective interpreters.
Abstract
This chapter seeks to show the specificity and uniqueness of listening comprehension in interpreter training. Although foreign language courses are aimed at enhancing students’ linguistic competence so that translation and interpreting tasks can be subsequently tackled, these courses often adhere to general foreign language principles, disregarding the specific linguistic needs of these students. In this chapter, listening comprehension is addressed with a view to elucidating the cognitive demands and nature of this linguistic skill for interpreting. A proposal of sample activities to enhance listening comprehension will also be presented to help language lecturers understand the essence of this skill and how it can best be approached when the goal is to train prospective interpreters.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- List of abbreviations viii
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Theory-oriented approaches
- Chapter 1. Basic translation competence 12
- Chapter 2. Advantages of cognitive linguistics in the teaching and learning of foreign languages in TI programmes 23
- Chapter 3. Foreign language teaching in translator and interpreter training 40
-
Part II. Practice-oriented approaches
- Chapter 4. Free voluntary reading as a language and knowledge enhancement tool and its impact on interpreting students’ self-perceived B language fluency 54
- Chapter 5. Listening comprehension in translation and interpreting programs 76
- Chapter 6. Combining subtitle creation and subtitle alignment in foreign language teaching 97
- Chapter 7. Redefining English language teaching in translator training through corpus-based tasks 112
- Chapter 8. The scaffolded language emergence approach in translation programs 138
- Chapter 9. Teaching contrastive legal grammar for translators 156
- Chapter 10. Task-based L2 skill development for TI trainees 177
- Chapter 11. Do translators need a different knowledge of their target language? 196
- Chapter 12. Foreign language acquisition writing exercises fostering translation trainees’ language and translation competence 215
- Chapter 13. Using action-oriented methods in foreign language classes to enhance translation competence 240
- Chapter 14. Developing translation sub-competences by implementing Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) 263
- Index 287
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- List of abbreviations viii
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Theory-oriented approaches
- Chapter 1. Basic translation competence 12
- Chapter 2. Advantages of cognitive linguistics in the teaching and learning of foreign languages in TI programmes 23
- Chapter 3. Foreign language teaching in translator and interpreter training 40
-
Part II. Practice-oriented approaches
- Chapter 4. Free voluntary reading as a language and knowledge enhancement tool and its impact on interpreting students’ self-perceived B language fluency 54
- Chapter 5. Listening comprehension in translation and interpreting programs 76
- Chapter 6. Combining subtitle creation and subtitle alignment in foreign language teaching 97
- Chapter 7. Redefining English language teaching in translator training through corpus-based tasks 112
- Chapter 8. The scaffolded language emergence approach in translation programs 138
- Chapter 9. Teaching contrastive legal grammar for translators 156
- Chapter 10. Task-based L2 skill development for TI trainees 177
- Chapter 11. Do translators need a different knowledge of their target language? 196
- Chapter 12. Foreign language acquisition writing exercises fostering translation trainees’ language and translation competence 215
- Chapter 13. Using action-oriented methods in foreign language classes to enhance translation competence 240
- Chapter 14. Developing translation sub-competences by implementing Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) 263
- Index 287