Fluent listening is not passive — it is an active, strategic process of constructing meaning from spoken text. In VCE English, listening comprehension is particularly relevant when engaging with audio, audio-visual or spoken sources to deepen your understanding of a set text.
The VCAA study design explicitly requires students to:
- Listen to spoken texts relevant to the wider study of a text
- Use listening strategies to develop understanding of historical context and social/cultural values
- Engage with audio and audio-visual sources alongside print texts
Stressed words carry meaning weight — speakers emphasise key terms, names and turning points. Train yourself to notice:
- Which words receive stress or emphasis
- Changes in volume or pace that signal importance
- Pauses that create space for reflection or signal a shift in argument
Discourse markers signal the structure of spoken text:
| Marker Type | Examples |
|---|---|
| Sequencing | First, then, finally, subsequently |
| Contrasting | However, on the other hand, yet |
| Exemplifying | For instance, to illustrate, such as |
| Summarising | In other words, to sum up, ultimately |
| Cause/effect | As a result, consequently, therefore |
Recognising discourse markers allows you to follow the logic of what you hear, not just the content.
Schema activation: Before listening, activate what you already know about the topic, speaker or context. This creates a framework onto which new information can be attached.
Inferencing: Spoken texts rarely state everything explicitly. Use:
- Prior knowledge of the text under study
- Understanding of the speaker’s purpose and context
- Tonal cues (irony, enthusiasm, hesitation) to infer unstated meaning
Effective notes capture:
- Key claims (not every word)
- Evidence and examples cited by the speaker
- Structural markers (first… then… however…)
- Questions triggered by what you hear
Use abbreviations, symbols and visual layouts (arrows, brackets) to keep pace with spoken delivery.
If you lose the thread:
- Note the point of confusion
- Continue listening — context may clarify
- Return to the confusing section if re-listening is possible
- Cross-reference with printed material if available
Beyond comprehension, critical listening means:
- Evaluating the credibility of the speaker
- Identifying perspective and bias in how ideas are framed
- Noticing what is foregrounded versus marginalised
- Questioning assumptions embedded in the speaker’s language choices
When listening to an audio/audio-visual source related to your set text (e.g. a lecture, podcast, documentary or filmed interview with the author):
APPLICATION: When listening to a source related to your set text, focus on how the speaker frames the text’s historical and social context. Look for moments where their interpretation aligns with or diverges from your own — this tension is analytically valuable.