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Skills and sub-skills
In order to use language skills competent users of a language need a number of sub-skills for processing the language that they use and are faced with. If we look at the receptive skills (reading and listening) we can see that there are many sub-skills that we can call upon. The way we listen for general understanding will be different from the way we listen in order to extract specific bits of information. The same is true for reading, of course. Sometimes we read in order to interpret, sometimes we read in order to transfer the information to another medium. People who use language skills and the sub-skills that go with them are able to select those sub-skills that are most appropriate for their task. If they only want a certain piece of information from a radio programme they will select a way of listening which is different from the way they listen to a radio play. If they read a text for the purposes of literary criticism they will select different sub-skills from those they would select if they were ‘reading’ a dictionary to look for a word. It is because they have these sub-skills that they are able to process the language that they use and receive. We can summarise the difference between skills (sometimes called macro skills) and sub-skills (sometimes called micro skills) in the following way: Reading/Listening Reading/ listening reading/ listening for general for interpretation understanding reading/ listening reading/ listening for detailed for extracting specific understanding information reading/ listening for information transfer
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